Tipping culture only natives know
The only 2 situations where tipping exists is this!
Ryuichi Matsuno
Japan
The only 2 situations where tipping exists is
Luxury ryokan (traditional inns)
It's called okokorozuke — a quiet gesture of appreciation
given discreetly in an envelope
if you don’t have one, hand it subtly without showing the cash
→ tipping here is not payment, but respect
Private guides / special personal service
you can give cash directly
this is the most natural “tipping-like” moment in Japan
→ a personal thank-you for extra care
No tipping is the norm in Japan
・restaurants (cheap to luxury)
no tip needed — ever
you can leave one, but it’s not expected and not considered rude
→ because in Japan, great service is not “extra”
it’s the standard
what makes Japan different
in many countries, you tip for good service
in Japan, good service is already built in
you’re not paying more for kindness
you’re experiencing a culture where it’s assumed
>native insight
the highest level of hospitality in Japan is quiet, precise, and invisible
that’s why tipping never became a system
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