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Apple Japan itself stopped offering tourist consumption-tax exemption in June 2023. Bic Camera, Yodobashi, and Yamada Denki still run the instant tax-free counter, and with JPY weakness the effective tourist price in 2026 often lands below Hong Kong for mid-range configurations.
Effective tourist savings of around 10% at Bic Camera or Yodobashi via consumption-tax-free checkout
Across the products we track in Japan, third-party retail pricing closely tracks Apple's reference pricing. Most savings come from promotional windows and bundle stacking rather than persistent retailer undercutting. Prices were last refreshed today.
We track 12 Apple retailers across Japan, 12 of them officially Apple-authorized. The mix includes one official Apple Store, nine multi-brand electronics chains, and two online marketplaces.
Foreign visitors can recover roughly 10% of the purchase price through Japan's tourist VAT refund scheme, processed at airport departure with passport-tagged invoices. The refund covers most of the standard VAT, less the refund operator's processing fee.
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MacBook Pro 14-inch M5 512GB Apple M5 · 512GB Est. price:¥223,800 Apple Store Japan+1 more Refund:¥20,345 After refund:¥201,420 2 stores comparedView details | |||||
MacBook Pro 14-inch M5 512GB Apple M5 · 512GB Est. price:¥279,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥25,436 After refund:¥251,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() MacBook Pro 14-inch M5 Pro 15C/16C 1TB Apple M5 Pro 15C/16C · 1TB Est. price:¥369,800 Yodobashi Camera Refund:¥33,618 After refund:¥332,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() MacBook Pro 16-inch M4 Pro 14C/20C 512GB Apple M4 Pro 14C/20C · 512GB Est. price:¥338,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥30,800 After refund:¥304,920 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() MacBook Air 13-inch M4 512GB Apple M4 · 512GB Est. price:¥184,800 Yamada Denki Refund:¥16,800 After refund:¥166,320 View details | |||||
![]() MacBook Air 13-inch M4 512GB Apple M4 · 512GB Est. price:¥184,800 Yamada Denki Refund:¥16,800 After refund:¥166,320 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MacBook Air 13-inch M5 512GB Apple M5 · 512GB Est. price:¥184,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥16,800 After refund:¥166,320 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPhone 17 256GB A19 · 256GB Est. price:¥129,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥11,800 After refund:¥116,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPhone 17 Pro 256GB A19 Pro · 256GB Est. price:¥179,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥16,345 After refund:¥161,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPhone 17 Pro Max 256GB A19 Pro · 256GB Est. price:¥194,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥17,709 After refund:¥175,320 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPhone 16 128GB A18 · 128GB Est. price:¥114,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥10,436 After refund:¥103,320 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPhone 16 Plus 128GB A18 · 128GB Est. price:¥129,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥11,800 After refund:¥116,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
i iPad Pro Est. price:¥128,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥11,709 After refund:¥115,920 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPad Pro (M5) — 11-inch Est. price:¥356,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥32,436 After refund:¥321,120 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iPad Air (M4) — 11-inch Est. price:¥98,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥8,982 After refund:¥88,920 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iMac 24-inch M4 (2-port) 256GB Apple M4 · 256GB Est. price:¥198,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥18,073 After refund:¥178,920 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Mac Mini M4 256GB Apple M4 · 256GB Est. price:¥94,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥8,618 After refund:¥85,320 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Apple Watch Ultra 2 Est. price:¥71,980 Sofmap Refund:¥6,544 After refund:¥64,782 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AirPods Max (2nd generation) Est. price:¥89,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥8,164 After refund:¥80,820 View details | |||||
| Product | Cheapest at | Est. price | VAT refund | After VAT refund | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AirPods (4th generation) Est. price:¥21,800 Apple Store Japan Refund:¥1,982 After refund:¥19,620 View details | |||||
For Indian visitors planning an Apple shopping trip to Japan: tourist visa required (Japan e-visa available for Indians since 2023). Flights run ₹35,000–₹55,000 round-trip economy for 9h30m direct Mumbai–Tokyo. Rule of thumb: stacked multi-product purchases above roughly ₹75,000 in savings clear break-even. Stacking the roughly 10% tourist VAT refund on top of any retailer discount is the foundation of the math here.
For Indian buyers comparing Japan prices to home: INR/JPY hovers around 1.85 JPY per ₹1, with the yen meaningfully weaker against USD across 2022–2026. Yen weakness is the structural reason Japanese Apple pricing is competitive in 2026. Future BOJ rate moves could compress this advantage.
Apple Japan used to offer instant consumption-tax exemption to tourists - and stopped in June 2023. Since then, Japan has created a two-tier tourist market where big-box electronics retailers (Bic Camera, Yodobashi) are 10% cheaper than Apple's own stores for foreign visitors, which is economic exactly backward from every other Apple market in the world.
Japan occupies an unusual position in global Apple pricing. The yen has weakened dramatically against the dollar since 2022 - falling from ¥115/USD to hovering around ¥150-160/USD through 2024-2026 - which mechanically made Japanese-yen-denominated Apple prices one of the best values for foreign buyers converting from stronger currencies. A 16-inch MacBook Pro that costs $2,499 in the US retails around ¥398,800 in Japan - converted at ¥150/USD that's $2,658, modestly higher than the US pre-sales-tax price. For Indian buyers converting INR at ~1.85 JPY/₹1, this same Mac is ~₹2,15,000 - roughly ₹30,000 cheaper than Apple India's ₹2,49,900 even before tax-free shopping.
The catch: Apple's own retail (Ginza, Shibuya, Marunouchi, Shinjuku, Omotesando, and apple.com/jp) stopped offering tourist consumption-tax exemption to tourists in June 2023. Apple Japan now only supports the deferred refund process - meaning you'd pay 10% tax up front and claim it back at the airport, but Apple's specific refund flow isn't practical for most visitors. Third-party authorized retailers (Bic Camera, Yodobashi, Yamada Denki, Edion, Joshin) continue to offer instant duty-free checkout at a tax-free counter - you show your passport and entry stamp, and they sell you the product at the ex-tax price directly.
The practical consequence: for foreign visitors, the right Japanese store matters more than it does in any other market. Buying the same MacBook at Apple Ginza vs Bic Camera Shinjuku changes the price by exactly the 10% consumption tax. For everything else - Apple Watch, iPhone, iPad, AirPods, accessories - the big-box electronics stores (Bic, Yodobashi) are also typically 1-3% cheaper at sticker than Apple Japan before tax savings.
Bic Camera is the go-to for foreign Apple buyers. 40+ flagship stores nationwide, the largest concentration in Tokyo (Shinjuku West, Yurakucho, Ikebukuro, Shibuya) with dedicated Apple sections and instant tax-free counters. Staff in Shinjuku Bic Camera in particular speak English, Chinese, and Korean fluently. Pricing runs 1-3% below Apple Japan on sticker, with Bic Camera's house points program adding another 3-10% in store credit for future purchases.
Yodobashi Camera is Bic's direct competitor. The Yodobashi-Akiba flagship (just outside Akihabara Station) is a multi-floor electronics destination, and the Yodobashi-Shinjuku West branch directly competes with Bic Camera Shinjuku West across the street - the two stores adjust pricing against each other daily. Yodobashi generally ties with Bic on Apple pricing; its points program is similar. The Akihabara store has the widest accessory selection in Japan.
Yamada Denki is Japan's largest electronics chain by store count (500+ locations) but lower density in central Tokyo. Yamada stores in suburban and regional cities often have better Apple inventory than central Tokyo branches because competition is less intense. Tax-free counters available at all major Yamada stores.
Apple Japan operates 10 Apple Stores (Ginza, Marunouchi, Shibuya, Shinjuku, Omotesando in Tokyo; Kyoto, Nagoya Sakae, Fukuoka, plus two more) and apple.com/jp. These are Apple's premium retail experience - the Ginza store in particular is architecturally distinct - but they're not tax-free for tourists anymore and rarely run retail discounts. Buy here if you want the Apple retail experience and are comfortable paying 10% more than Bic/Yodobashi.
Edion and Joshin are regional chains (Edion is Osaka-based, Joshin is Osaka/Kansai-focused) - cheaper than Bic/Yodobashi by 0-2% at sticker but thinner Apple inventory, limited English support, and tax-free counters available only at larger branches. Worth checking if you're shopping in Osaka or Nagoya.
Rakuten and Amazon Japan are the e-commerce alternatives. Rakuten runs its own points program stacking on top of retailer points; Amazon Japan runs Apple sales occasionally and ships same-day in Tokyo. Neither offers tax-free for tourists - these are for Japanese residents.
Rate. 10% national consumption tax (shōhizei), applied to all Apple products
Japan's consumption tax is 10% and is normally included in displayed prices. Foreign tourists on short-term visas (under 6 months) can claim the tax back via two mechanisms:
1. Instant tax-free checkout (at participating retailers): Show your passport and landing permission stamp at the tax-free counter; the retailer sells you the goods at the ex-tax price directly. Minimum single-invoice purchase of ¥5,000 tax-excluded for consumables, ¥5,000 tax-excluded for general goods like Apple products. This is what Bic Camera, Yodobashi, Yamada Denki, Edion, Joshin, and most large electronics chains offer. No airport visit needed.
2. Deferred refund (what Apple Japan now uses since June 2023): You pay full tax up front, keep the receipts, and claim the refund after leaving Japan via a refund operator. This flow rarely makes financial sense for individual purchases because of processing fees and the need to physically mail documentation back after departure.
For Apple products specifically: buy from Bic/Yodobashi/Yamada on the tax-free counter, not Apple Japan.
Example. MacBook Pro 14 M4 16GB/512GB at Bic Camera Shinjuku: ¥318,800 tax-included = ¥289,818 tax-excluded. At the tourist tax-free counter, you pay ¥289,818 directly - saving ¥28,982 (~₹15,700) versus the Apple Japan retail price of ¥318,800. Add Bic Camera points (~5% of ex-tax price, usable for accessories on the same trip) for an additional ~₹7,800 effective value.
| Event | Month | Typical discount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Year fukubukuro (lucky bags) | Early January | Variable - lucky bag contents | Bic Camera and Yodobashi sell mystery electronics bundles starting Jan 2. Apple-specific fukubukuro are rare but do occasionally appear. |
| Golden Week sales | Late April – Early May | 2-5% at big-box retailers | Modest discounts, but this is peak tourist season. Prices rarely move on Apple flagship. |
| Summer bonus season sales | June-July | 3-7% on electronics | Japanese salarymen receive their summer bonus in June; retailers run promotions. Modest Apple discounts. |
| Winter bonus season sales | December | 3-7% on electronics + year-end promos | Parallel to summer - Japanese winter bonus drives retail promotion. Slightly deeper Apple discounts than summer. |
| Back-to-school (new academic year) | March-April | 5-10% on Macs/iPads + bundled AppleCare | Japan's academic year starts in April. Apple Japan and Bic Camera run student bundles. |
Japan doesn't have dramatic sale windows like India's Diwali or Vietnam's Black Friday. The consumption-tax-free pricing at Bic/Yodobashi is the constant 10% saving - seasonal promos add 2-7% on top during bonus windows, but most buyers shop Japan year-round on tax-free alone.
Japanese retail culture is the most formalized in Asia - negotiation is essentially non-existent at Apple resellers. What you see on the sticker is what you pay, and asking for a discount is generally considered slightly impolite (though with foreign tourists, staff will politely decline rather than take offense). The one exception is points accumulation: Bic Camera, Yodobashi, Yamada, and Rakuten all run points programs that give you 3-10% of purchase value in store credit. For a one-time Apple buyer, this is dead weight; for someone making multiple purchases on the same trip, points stack meaningfully (buy the MacBook first, use accumulated points to get the case free).
English support varies dramatically by location. Tokyo's Shinjuku / Akihabara / Ginza Apple retail ecosystem has world-class English (often better than China or Vietnam), with many staff members also fluent in Mandarin and Korean. Outside Tokyo and Osaka, English becomes sporadic - Kyoto, Fukuoka, Sapporo have English-capable staff at tier-1 stores; smaller cities may require translation apps.
Payment culture matters for tourists: Japan is the most credit-card-friendly Asian market after Hong Kong. Visa and Mastercard work everywhere; JCB is the locally preferred card. Cash is still common and some small stores only accept cash, but Apple retail is 100% card-capable. Tipping is not practiced and can occasionally cause confusion - just don't do it.
One cultural nuance: Japanese retailers prioritise the purchase experience heavily. Packaging is immaculate, the staff will ceremonially bag your MacBook, and the tax-free counter process feels almost like an airport check-in. For foreign buyers used to Amazon-speed transactions, budget 25-40 minutes for a single tax-free Apple purchase at Bic Camera Shinjuku - it's slower than you expect, but the process is reliable.
The yen's multi-year weakness against the dollar has made Japan structurally cheaper for foreign Apple buyers over the 2022-2026 period. USD/JPY moved from roughly ¥115 in early 2022 to a sustained ¥145-160 range through 2024-2026. This effectively created a ~20-25% devaluation of yen-denominated prices for anyone converting from USD, INR, HKD, or THB.
For Indian buyers, INR/JPY has hovered at 1.75-1.90 JPY per ₹1 in 2024-2026. The Japan arbitrage: a MacBook at ¥318,800 converts to roughly ₹1,70,000 at 1.87 JPY/₹1. After 10% consumption-tax exemption at Bic Camera, the effective price drops to ~₹1,55,000 - versus Apple India's ₹2,49,900 for the identical configuration. That's a ₹95,000 gap on one MacBook, which pays for a return flight from Mumbai twice over.
The risk: if the yen strengthens (and the Bank of Japan has signalled it may raise rates further), the Japan arbitrage could compress by 5-10% over the next 12 months. For 2026 specifically, the math still heavily favours Japan purchases from India, Vietnam, or any stronger-currency origin.
Mumbai-Tokyo (Narita NRT or Haneda HND) round-trip economy in 2026 runs ₹35,000-₹55,000 with 45-60 day advance booking on ANA, JAL, Air India, or via connections on Cathay/Singapore. Flight time is 9h30m direct (Air India) or 11-13h with a one-stop connection through Bangkok/Hong Kong/Singapore. Delhi-Tokyo is similar; Bangalore-Tokyo typically ₹5,000-10,000 more.
Budget for 4 nights in Tokyo: mid-range hotel in Shinjuku/Shibuya area runs ¥18,000-30,000/night (₹10,000-17,000); budget business hotels ¥10,000-15,000/night; hostels from ¥4,000. Tokyo subway day passes ¥800. Meals: ramen ¥900-1,500, sushi ¥2,500-8,000, convenience store ¥600. A 4-night 2-person Tokyo-focused Apple shopping trip lands at roughly ₹1,80,000-₹2,50,000 all-in.
Break-even: for Japan trips to make financial sense on Apple alone, total Apple savings need to clear ~₹75,000 - achievable with one MacBook Pro 16 + iPhone Pro Max + a few accessories, or with two Macs across a group. Japan is primarily a destination for travellers who also want to experience Japan; Apple savings cover ~40-60% of the trip cost but rarely pay for the whole trip on their own.
No significant below-Apple discounts right now.
No Indian-buyer trip reports for Japan yet. If you've shopped Apple here, share your trip — products bought, total saved, store experience. Your data point helps the next traveller decide whether the trip is worth it for them.