Before you fly
Before you fly: the vegan traveller's Japan prep guide

Japan is far more vegan-friendly than its reputation suggests — and a little prep turns nervousness into anticipation. Here's everything to do before you board.
1. Learn the one trap: dashi
If you remember one thing, make it this: dashi, a stock often made from bonito (fish), hides in 'vegetable' soups, simmered dishes and sauces. Kombu (kelp) dashi is plant-based; bonito is not. Knowing this single word prevents 90% of surprises — see is ramen vegan?.
2. Save your phrases (offline)
Download or screenshot a few lines before you go, so you can show staff even without signal. Our phrasebook gives the exact Japanese for 'I'm vegan — no meat, fish, egg, dairy or dashi.' Politeness opens every door here.
3. Build a loose food map
Note a few vegan spots near your hotel and stations in advance — our verified vegan restaurants and the Vegan Japan hub are a good start. You won't follow it rigidly, but knowing options removes the 'hungry and stuck' panic.
4. Know your fallbacks
Konbini (24/7 convenience stores) and supermarkets carry soy milk, edamame, fruit, nuts and more; our where-to-buy guide lists brands and shops. You will never truly be without options.
5. Pack a little, expect a lot
A few snacks for travel days and an open, curious mind are all you need. Japan rewards the prepared and the gracious — and shojin (temple) cuisine proves plant-based food here can be sublime.
Go gently, ask kindly, and enjoy. You've got this — and you're doing good while you're at it (see your impact).
Sources
FAQ
- Is it hard to be vegan in Japan as a tourist?
- Less than you'd fear. Learn one word (dashi/fish stock), save a phrasebook offline, note a few vegan spots and konbini fallbacks, and you'll eat well. Cities have dedicated vegan restaurants, and soy foods are everywhere.
- What should I prepare before a vegan trip to Japan?
- Learn about hidden dashi, screenshot key Japanese phrases, bookmark verified vegan restaurants and a where-to-buy guide, know your konbini/supermarket fallbacks, and pack a few travel-day snacks. Then relax and enjoy.