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Kitchen & Crafts

Japanese knives, chopsticks, bento boxes, and ceramics.

Kai Seki Magoroku Chef's KnifePremium

kitchen

Kai Seki Magoroku Chef's Knife

Professional-grade Japanese steel knife. A kitchen treasure to bring home.

Japanese knives are considered the finest in the world, forged from centuries of samurai sword-making tradition. This Kai Seki Magoroku chef's knife is made in Seki City, the knife capital of Japan. It's a functional work of art that will last a lifetime.

Price Range¥7,000 ~ ¥9,000
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Premium Wooden Chopsticks Set

kitchen

Premium Wooden Chopsticks Set

Beautiful handcrafted chopsticks. Perfect as gifts.

Beautiful handcrafted chopsticks make the perfect Japanese souvenir — practical, elegant, and uniquely Japanese. This premium set comes in a gift box, making it ready to give as a present or keep as a lasting memory of your trip.

Price Range¥2,500 ~ ¥4,000
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Traditional Bento Box with Dividers

kitchen

Traditional Bento Box with Dividers

Authentic Japanese lunch box with compartments. Microwave safe.

The Japanese bento box is a cultural icon. This authentic box with dividers lets you pack beautiful, organized lunches just like the Japanese do. Microwave safe and leak-proof — perfect for train rides and picnics in Japanese parks.

Price Range¥1,500 ~ ¥2,000
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Handmade Japanese Ceramic Mug

kitchen

Handmade Japanese Ceramic Mug

Handmade in traditional Japanese style. Each piece is unique.

Each handmade Japanese ceramic mug is unique — slight variations in glaze and shape give them a warm, artisanal character. Perfect for enjoying Japanese green tea at home and remembering your trip with every sip.

Price Range¥1,500 ~ ¥2,500
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KAI Seki Magoroku Nail Clipper

kitchen

KAI Seki Magoroku Nail Clipper

Japanese precision steel. Curved blade for clean cuts. Made in Seki city.

Made in Seki City — Japan's capital of blade craftsmanship since the samurai era. This nail clipper cuts with surgical precision, leaving a clean edge with zero jaggedness. You'll never go back to a regular nail clipper after using a Japanese one.

Price Range¥800 ~ ¥1,200
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Kutani Ware Japanese Tea Cup

kitchen

Kutani Ware Japanese Tea Cup

Kutani ware yunomi tea cup. Hand-painted floral design. Made in Japan.

Kutani ware is one of Japan's most prestigious pottery styles, originating from Ishikawa Prefecture. These hand-painted tea cups feature vibrant floral designs that make every cup of tea feel like a ceremony. A truly special souvenir.

Price Range¥2,000 ~ ¥4,000
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Sushi Making Kit with Bamboo MatPopular

kitchen

Sushi Making Kit with Bamboo Mat

Bamboo mat, rice paddle, molds. Make sushi at home. Fun souvenir.

Bring the sushi experience home! This kit includes a bamboo rolling mat, rice paddle, molds, and chopsticks — everything you need to make maki, nigiri, and onigiri. A fun, interactive souvenir that lets you recreate your Japan food memories.

Price Range¥2,000 ~ ¥3,500
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Matcha Tea Ceremony Set (Chasen & Bowl)Great Souvenir

kitchen

Matcha Tea Ceremony Set (Chasen & Bowl)

Traditional chasen whisk + bowl. Authentic tea ceremony at home.

A traditional bamboo matcha whisk (chasen) and bowl set — the authentic way to prepare matcha just like in a Japanese tea ceremony. Hand-crafted from a single piece of bamboo. This is the souvenir that turns your daily matcha into a mindful ritual.

Price Range¥2,500 ~ ¥4,000
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Ceramic Sake Cup Set (5 pieces)

kitchen

Ceramic Sake Cup Set (5 pieces)

5 ceramic cups, each different design. Wabi-sabi aesthetics. Gift box.

Beautiful ceramic sake cups (ochoko) in a gift set — drink sake the way it's meant to be enjoyed. Each cup is slightly different in design, reflecting Japanese wabi-sabi aesthetics. A classy souvenir that you'll actually use for years.

Price Range¥2,000 ~ ¥3,500
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Compact Japanese Rice CookerPremium

kitchen

Compact Japanese Rice Cooker

Fuzzy logic, perfect rice every time. Compact 1-2 cup model.

Japanese rice cookers produce the fluffiest rice in the world — it's a technology Japan has perfected. This compact 1-2 cup model is designed for small kitchens and is surprisingly affordable. Makes perfect rice every time with fuzzy logic technology.

Price Range¥4,000 ~ ¥6,000
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Japanese Donabe Clay Pot

kitchen

Japanese Donabe Clay Pot

Japanese clay pot for nabe hot pot. Superior heat retention.

A donabe (clay pot) is the heart of Japanese home cooking — used for nabe (hot pot), rice, soups, and stews. The heat retention of Japanese clay creates flavors you can't replicate in metal pots. A beautiful, functional piece of Japanese culinary culture.

Price Range¥3,000 ~ ¥5,000
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Japanese Tamagoyaki Egg Pan

kitchen

Japanese Tamagoyaki Egg Pan

Rectangular pan for layered Japanese omelette. Works on all cooktops.

The rectangular tamagoyaki pan is essential for making the sweet, layered Japanese omelette found in every bento and sushi restaurant. The unique shape lets you roll the egg in layers, creating that signature spiral pattern. An affordable gateway to Japanese home cooking.

Price Range¥2,000 ~ ¥3,000
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Onigiri Rice Ball Mold

kitchen

Onigiri Rice Ball Mold

Perfect triangle rice balls every time. BPA-free, dishwasher safe.

Make perfect triangle onigiri (rice balls) every time — no more messy hand-shaping. Fill with your favorite Japanese ingredients: salmon, tuna mayo, umeboshi, or pickled vegetables. Onigiri are Japan's ultimate comfort food and now you can make them at home.

Price Range¥500 ~ ¥1,000
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productNames.iwachu-nanbu-tetsubin-arare-smallPopular

kitchen

productNames.iwachu-nanbu-tetsubin-arare-small

productDescs.iwachu-nanbu-tetsubin-arare-small

Price Range¥8,000 ~ ¥14,000
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productNames.iwachu-tetsubin-kikkoh-medium

kitchen

productNames.iwachu-tetsubin-kikkoh-medium

productDescs.iwachu-tetsubin-kikkoh-medium

Price Range¥8,000 ~ ¥15,000
View DetailsBuy on Amazon Japan
productNames.iwachu-tetsubin-arare-ih-medium

kitchen

productNames.iwachu-tetsubin-arare-ih-medium

productDescs.iwachu-tetsubin-arare-ih-medium

Price Range¥8,000 ~ ¥12,000
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productNames.kitsusako-nanbu-tetsubin-800ml

kitchen

productNames.kitsusako-nanbu-tetsubin-800ml

productDescs.kitsusako-nanbu-tetsubin-800ml

Price Range¥8,800 ~ ¥14,800
View DetailsBuy on Amazon Japan
productNames.issucido-nanbu-tetsubin-brushstroke

kitchen

productNames.issucido-nanbu-tetsubin-brushstroke

productDescs.issucido-nanbu-tetsubin-brushstroke

Price Range¥8,000 ~ ¥14,000
View DetailsBuy on Amazon Japan

The Complete Kitchen & CraftsBuyer’s Guide for Japan Travelers

Japanese kitchen tools are one of the quieter souvenir categories — not as photogenic as a Shibuya haul, but the kind of purchase that repays itself every time you cook for the next decade. Japanese knives in particular have a reputation that is entirely deserved: the steel is harder, the edge geometry is sharper, and the craftsmanship is higher than nearly any equivalent you can buy in a Western kitchen store at comparable prices.

This category focuses on the kitchen items tourists realistically carry home: a good chef's knife or santoku, a traditional grater or mandoline, sharp scissors, a tamagoyaki pan for Japanese-style rolled omelets, and the small handmade accessories (rice paddles, chopstick rests, donburi bowls) that turn a Western kitchen into one with a Japanese accent.

What to Look for When Buying

  • Knives: choose shape, then brand. The santoku (all-purpose) and gyuto (chef's knife) cover 90% of home cooking. A petty knife is nice for small tasks. Choose the shape based on how you already cut, not the brand marketing. Most well-known Japanese brands make excellent versions of each shape.
  • Steel hardness vs maintenance. Japanese knives often use harder steels (60+ HRC) that hold an edge longer but are more brittle. If you are not comfortable honing and resharpening a knife yourself, or if you share the kitchen with casual users, a slightly softer stainless steel is more forgiving.
  • Handle shape. Japanese knives come with either Western-style (full-bolster, double-bevel) or Japanese-style (octagonal wood, single-bevel) handles. Western is more familiar for most travelers; Japanese-style is traditional and slightly lighter but takes getting used to.
  • Check airline rules. Knives must go in checked luggage, never carry-on. Wrap them securely with the blade guard and pack them in the middle of your suitcase. Declare them at customs only if your home country specifically requires it.

How to Compare Your Options

Santoku vs gyuto: santoku is shorter with a flatter edge, easier for chopping vegetables in small kitchens. Gyuto is longer with a curved edge, better for rocking-motion cutting of meat and herbs. If in doubt, go gyuto — it handles more tasks.

Stainless vs carbon steel: stainless is easier to maintain, does not rust, and is perfect for beginners. Carbon steel holds a sharper edge for longer but will rust if you leave it wet. Casual cooks should choose stainless.

Handmade vs factory: factory-made knives from reputable Japanese brands are excellent value and consistent in quality. Handmade knives are beautiful and carry a story but cost 3-5x more. Both are legitimate choices.

Amazon Japan Hotel Delivery for This Category

Kitchen items ship well from Amazon Japan. Knives are individually boxed with cardboard blade guards, ready to pack directly into checked luggage. Order 2-3 days before your departure so the package has time to arrive at your hotel. Email the hotel in advance — some front desks treat knife-shaped parcels a bit more carefully, and a heads-up smooths the handover.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I bring a Japanese knife home in my luggage?
Yes, in checked luggage only. Never in carry-on. Wrap the blade with the included guard and pack it securely in the middle of your suitcase.
Which knife should a beginner buy first?
A stainless-steel santoku, 165–180mm blade length. It is the most versatile first knife and the easiest to maintain.
How do I care for a Japanese knife?
Hand wash only (never dishwasher), dry immediately, and hone regularly with a ceramic rod. Sharpen on a whetstone every 3-6 months of regular use.
Is a traditional Japanese pan worth buying?
A tamagoyaki rectangular pan is the most useful if you want to make Japanese-style rolled omelets. Otherwise, a quality non-stick pan from home works for most Japanese home cooking.
Are prices on Amazon Japan competitive with Japanese kitchen stores?
Very close for factory-made knives, sometimes better for accessories. Specialty knife shops in Tokyo (Kappabashi) will have more variety and knowledgeable staff, but you pay for the experience.

Browse the picks above for the knives and tools we most often recommend. Remember: knives in checked luggage only, and email your hotel when ordering a knife-shaped parcel.