Japanese food has gone from niche to mainstream almost everywhere — and increasingly, people buy it online. Behind that demand is a fast-maturing global network of Japanese-food e-commerce sites: century-old import houses, venture-backed startups, and one-family operations shipping hand-packed boxes worldwide. This is a guide to where the world buys authentic Japanese food, and which players matter most.
Walk through a suburb of London, Sydney, Lima or Dubai and you will find someone who wants real Japanese rice, a specific brand of soy sauce, a bottle of junmai sake, or a box of regional snacks they saw on TikTok. This guide maps the e-commerce landscape that now serves them. It is also a map of opportunity: for Japanese makers — especially small, regional producers who have never sold abroad — these platforms are the on-ramp to global markets. That is the lens Japonity reads the market through, and we return to it at the end.
The four kinds of seller
Across every region, Japanese-food e-commerce falls into four recognizable types. Knowing which is which tells you what to expect on price, range, and shipping.
- Legacy B2B importers with a web store — the giants that physically supply restaurants and supermarkets (JFC, Wismettac, Foodex, Mutual Trading). Deepest catalogs, often trade-first.
- Supermarket and department-store online arms — established Japanese or premium grocers that digitized (Mitsuwa, Don Don Donki, Meidi-Ya, city’super, ISETAN).
- Digital-native e-grocers — venture-backed, direct-to-consumer, curation-led (Weee!, Bokksu, Umamicart, Japanese Taste).
- Category specialists — sake, tea, wagyu, or snack boxes, deep in one lane (Tippsy/Palate Project, Yunomi, Crowd Cow, TokyoTreat).
One pattern runs through all of it: shipping range is the great divider. Most of these stores deliver only inside their own country. The products that truly cross borders are the light, shelf-stable ones — snacks and tea — and the subscription boxes built for it. Sake (licensing) and wagyu or fresh fish (cold chain and quarantine) tend to stay regional.
If you want it shipped almost anywhere
Start here if you are not in a major market. These ship worldwide.
| Service | Based | Ships | What it is |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bokksu | New York | 100+ countries | Premium curated snack subscription that tells the story of small heritage makers; also runs an à-la-carte market. (Now under Hashi Brands after a 2025 asset sale.) |
| TokyoTreat / Sakuraco | Tokyo (ICHIGO Inc.) | 120+ countries | The two best-known boxes — TokyoTreat for trend snacks, Sakuraco for traditional wagashi, tea and handmade homeware. |
| Japanese Taste | Amagasaki, Japan | 100+ countries | A Japan-based store shipping premium groceries and snacks direct from its own warehouse, with country-specific storefronts. |
| Yunomi.life | Japan | 90+ countries | A marketplace of artisanal Japanese tea connecting 200+ small family farms directly to the world. |
| Ippodo Tea (一保堂) | Kyoto | Worldwide | A Kyoto tea house since 1717; ships matcha, gyokuro and sencha globally, with a dedicated US/Canada site. |
Snacks and tea travel; sake and fresh food usually don’t. A handful of sake specialists do ship across borders — Japan-based Kurashu to 14+ countries, and Hong Kong’s Sakaya.co to a short list including Australia, Singapore, Taiwan and the UK (but not the US, Canada or mainland China) — so always check the destination list before you fall in love with a bottle.
Europe
Europe is the most developed market outside Japan, and the UK is its center of gravity.
United Kingdom
- WASO (和想) — London. The UK’s largest online Japanese (and East Asian) grocer, delivering fresh, frozen and ready-to-cook meal kits nationwide, with same-day delivery in London. Founded by a former investment banker who began by cooking and hand-delivering bento himself; the company reports tens of thousands of customers and 2,000+ products. Runs a B2B arm, Japan Wholesale Market.
- Japan Centre — London. The original (since 1976) and still the best known, with 3,000+ products online, three London stores, and the Ichiba food hall — a joint venture with Japan’s government-backed Cool Japan Fund.
- Tazaki Foods / Yutaka — the UK arm of sake giant Takara; supplies hundreds of restaurants and runs the Yutaka consumer brand.
- Sake specialists — Tengu Sake (the UK’s first dedicated sake shop), More Sake, Sake Collective.
Continental Europe
- France — Le Marché Japonais and KIOKO (ship France plus neighbors), iRASSHAi, and the Paris institution Workshop Issé.
- Germany & DACH — NANUKO, 1mal1japan (50,000+ customers), the premium MYCONBINI (Berlin), sake specialist Jsake, plus Switzerland’s UENO Gourmet and shizuku.
- Elsewhere — Eat in Japan (Belgium, organic/vegan), Tjin’s Toko (Netherlands), Pong Market (Sweden), Asia Market (Ireland, since 1981), Japa Foods (Czechia), Goyo-Ya (Portugal), Soya Athens (Greece, since 1999), and more across Italy, Spain, Austria and the Nordics.
Europe-wide B2B
- Foodex Group (Takara-owned) supplies 10,000+ trade customers from warehouses in nine countries.
- Japan Food Express (Mitsubishi-backed) airfreights fresh fish and wagyu weekly to Michelin-starred kitchens across eleven countries.
North America
The US splits cleanly into legacy distributors, digitized supermarkets, and venture-backed newcomers.
Buy groceries online (US)
- Weee! — the largest online Asian grocer in America, with the deepest Japanese assortment among e-grocers; it has raised over $800M and reports a $1B+ revenue run-rate.
- Umamicart — East Coast, next-day delivery and recipe kits.
- Bokksu Market — the à-la-carte side of Bokksu (premium ramen, snacks, pantry).
- Supermarket chains online — Mitsuwa, Nijiya (ships nationwide; founded 1986), Tokyo Central / Marukai (Don Quijote group).
Legacy importers (mostly B2B)
- JFC International (Kikkoman-owned) — the backbone, 15,000+ products, part of a group operating in 24 countries.
- Wismettac / Nishimoto — serves the US and Canada.
- Mutual Trading — since 1926; the deepest sake importer, with a consumer face at MTC Kitchen.
Category specialists
- Sake — Palate Project (formerly Tippsy), North America’s largest online sake retailer; True Sake (since 2002).
- Tea — Yunomi, Ippodo (US-stocked site).
- Wagyu (US-only, cold chain) — Crowd Cow, Holy Grail Steak Co. (authentic certified Kobe), Wagyuman, The Wagyu Shop.
Canada: Konbiniya ships nationwide; Ozawa (Toronto) supplies most of the city’s Japanese restaurants; plus Fujiya, Sanko, and Suzuya in BC.
Asia-Pacific
Here the model is often a local supermarket or importer that went online.
- Australia & New Zealand — JFC Online (Kikkoman group, AU + NZ, 5,000+ lines), Ichiba Junction (Melbourne), Maruyu (Sydney’s longest-running Japanese supermarket), and New Zealand’s Tokyo Food Co. / Japan Mart, which supplies the country’s major supermarkets.
- Singapore — Zairyo (air-flown fresh fish and wagyu), Meidi-Ya (a long-standing institution), the sake specialist The Art of Sake, and tea specialist Tealife (which also ships worldwide).
- Southeast Asia — Don Don Donki (the Don Quijote group’s 24/7 mega-stores, with a cross-border online store), Shojikiya (Malaysia’s leading chain, since 2006), ISETAN The Japan Store (Kuala Lumpur), Sakuko and FUJI Market (Vietnam), Nishikiken (Manila), MaKoRu (Bangkok).
- East Asia — city’super (Hong Kong & Taiwan, premium), WARAYA (Hong Kong direct-from-Japan), PECOPECO (Taiwan), and Korea’s Ichibanhouse (consumer) and Nihonmart (foodservice wholesale).
Middle East
Halal compatibility is the differentiator, and sake is largely restricted to licensed channels.
- UAE — Summit Webstore (Abu Dhabi/Dubai, which runs its own Japanese restaurant too) and JapanSouq (UAE + GCC, sourcing brands like Ito En, Calbee and S&B).
- Saudi Arabia — Japanese Food Store KSA (Jeddah, consumer and wholesale).
- Israel — Go Japan (full food, drink and lifestyle range).
- Big chains like Carrefour also carry Japanese lines across the Gulf.
Latin America & Africa
- Peru — Super Nikkei (Lima, since 1996), a subsidiary of LA’s Mutual Trading, serving one of the world’s largest Nikkei communities.
- Brazil — a dense field of Japanese-Brazilian family stores online (Kampai, Loja Miki, Hachi8, Asia Shop) shipping nationwide.
- Mexico / Argentina / Chile / Colombia — Sake House (MX), Gochiso (AR), Casa Japonesa (CL), Mercado Japonés (CO).
- South Africa — Sun Sun Asian Food Market carries a substantial Japanese range.
Quick reference by category
| Category | Where to buy | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Sake & shochu | Palate Project, True Sake (US); Tengu Sake, Jsake (Europe); The Art of Sake (SG); Kurashu, Sakaya.co (cross-border) | Shipping limits vary by state and country |
| Tea & matcha | Yunomi.life, Ippodo (worldwide); Tealife (SG + worldwide) | Travels well across borders |
| Wagyu & premium beef | Crowd Cow, Holy Grail, Wagyuman (US) | US-only, frozen cold chain |
| Snacks & discovery boxes | Bokksu, TokyoTreat, Sakuraco, Japan Candy Box, Freedom Japanese Market | Worldwide shipping |
| Full-range groceries | WASO, Japan Centre (UK); Weee! (US); JFC Online (AU/NZ); Don Don Donki (SE Asia) | Mostly domestic delivery |
For B2B buyers and importers
If you are a restaurateur, retailer or distributor sourcing Japanese product at scale, the names to know are the importer-wholesalers: JFC International (Kikkoman) and Mutual Trading in North America; Foodex (Takara) and Japan Food Express (Mitsubishi) in Europe; JFC Online in Australasia; and regional houses like Wismettac, Ozawa (Canada), Tokyo Food Co. (NZ) and Nihonmart (Korea). Many run trade portals alongside their consumer stores.
This is exactly the seam Japonity works in. If you are looking to source a specific category or connect with a Japanese supplier, our business-matching service can help you find the right counterpart.
What this means for Japanese makers
The most interesting businesses on this list are not the biggest — they are the ones built to give small Japanese producers a way out to the world. Yunomi.life began by rescuing a single Kyoto tea farm that couldn’t crack export markets and turned it into a platform for hundreds. ICHIGO sources from regional confectioners and mom-and-pop shops, including government-referred makers. Japanese Taste proves a maker can reach a hundred countries from a warehouse in Kansai without a foreign distributor.
For a Japanese food company that has never sold abroad, the lesson is that the channels now exist — curated marketplaces, subscription boxes, and export-first retailers actively looking for authentic regional products with a story. The bottleneck is no longer logistics. It is being discovered. That is the gap Japonity exists to close.
FAQ
Which Japanese-food sites ship worldwide?
The most reliable worldwide shippers are subscription boxes (Bokksu, TokyoTreat, Sakuraco) and Japan-based specialists (Japanese Taste, Yunomi.life for tea, Ippodo). Most grocery stores ship only within their own country.
Where can I buy authentic Japanese groceries in the UK?
WASO and Japan Centre are the two largest online options, both delivering nationwide; Tazaki’s Yutaka brand is a third.
Can I buy Japanese sake online internationally?
Sometimes. Alcohol is the most restricted category. Within the US, Palate Project (formerly Tippsy) is the largest online sake retailer. For cross-border, Kurashu (Japan) and Sakaya.co (Hong Kong) ship to selected countries — always check the destination list, as the US, Canada and others are often excluded.
Who supplies Japanese food to restaurants?
The major importer-wholesalers: JFC International (North America), Foodex and Japan Food Express (Europe), JFC Online (Australia/NZ), and regional distributors elsewhere.
Landscape as of May 2026. Availability, ownership and shipping ranges change — verify current details with each retailer before ordering. Japonity is a Japan discovery and business-matching platform; we are not affiliated with the companies listed.
Interested in Japanese business opportunities?
Whether you're looking for technology partners, engineering talent, or market insights — we can help connect you with the right Japanese organizations.
Get in Touch →


