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Japanese drugstore makeup and cosmetics products arranged in a flat lay

Japan Drugstore Makeup Guide 2026: 12 Best Buys at Matsumoto Kiyoshi & Sundrug

Updated May 2026 · 14 min read

Japan Shop Helper Editorial

Tokyo-based · prices & fees verified on real orders

Walk into a Matsumoto Kiyoshi in Shibuya and you’ll face four aisles of Japanese makeup, nearly all of it labeled in katakana. Here’s what actually belongs in your basket: 12 drugstore makeup products across every category — from BB cream to lash curler — that Japanese beauty editors and professional makeup artists reach for themselves, most priced between ¥500 and ¥1,800.

Japanese drugstore cosmetics aren’t just cheap alternatives to department-store brands. They’re engineered for Tokyo’s 35°C, 80%-humidity summers — the same conditions you’ll face walking 20,000 steps a day as a tourist. That’s why long-wear setting powders and waterproof eyeliners from brands like Canmake, Kate, and Cezanne outperform many Western prestige formulas when the heat index climbs.

Why Japanese Drugstore Makeup Outperforms in Humidity

Most Western foundations and powders are tested in climate-controlled labs at around 20–22°C and 40% relative humidity. Japanese drugstore brands test under what Kanebo’s R&D team calls “real summer conditions” — 32–36°C with 70–85% humidity. The result is formulas loaded with sebum-absorbing silica, sweat-resistant polymers, and ultra-fine milling that keeps powder from caking on damp skin.

Professional makeup artists working on outdoor fashion shoots in Osaka and Tokyo routinely use Cezanne UV Ultra Fit Base and Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder on models — not because the budget is tight, but because these products genuinely survive 8-hour days in direct sunlight. That insider knowledge rarely makes it into English-language beauty blogs.

If you’re visiting between June and September, humidity-proofing your makeup isn’t optional. Even in spring and fall, indoor-outdoor temperature swings (freezing department stores to warm streets) cause condensation on skin that melts standard foundation. Japanese formulas account for this.

Where to Buy: Matsumoto Kiyoshi, Sundrug & Don Quijote Compared

Three store chains dominate Japanese drugstore makeup shopping for tourists. Each has a different strength, and knowing which to hit first saves you time.

StoreBest ForTax-Free?Typical DiscountLocations
Matsumoto KiyoshiWidest Canmake & Kate rangeYes (¥5,000+ per visit)Up to 15% off with app coupon1,700+ nationwide
SundrugLowest base pricesYes (¥5,000+)5–10% member card1,200+ nationwide
Don QuijoteLate-night shopping (open until 3–5 AM)Yes (¥5,000+)Varies; bulk deals common600+ nationwide
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Pro Tip

Download the Matsumoto Kiyoshi app before you arrive. The tourist coupon (available in English) stacks with tax-free savings, giving you roughly 25% off total. Show the coupon barcode at checkout — staff are used to it.

If you’re short on time, prioritize Matsumoto Kiyoshi in tourist areas like Shinjuku or Dotonbori — they stock dedicated “tourist bestseller” shelves with English signage that group the exact products below. For a deeper look at stocking up on beauty and snack essentials during your trip, see our Tokyo travel essentials guide.

The 12 Best Drugstore Makeup Buys in Japan, Category by Category

Below are 12 picks spanning every makeup category you’d need. Prices listed are standard retail in 2026 (tax included). All are available at Matsumoto Kiyoshi and most Sundrug locations.

1. BB Cream / Cushion Foundation — Cezanne Cushion Foundation

Cezanne released a new thin-film cushion foundation in early 2026 that’s already trending on @cosme. It delivers medium coverage with a dewy-but-not-greasy finish, dries down in about 15 seconds, and lasts 10+ hours in 30°C weather according to user reviews. At ¥1,078, it costs roughly one-eighth of a comparable Lancôme cushion.

Cezanne Cushion Foundation
Cezanne Cushion Foundation¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500
Cezanne’s Cushion Foundation — the thin-film cushion reviewed above. Medium coverage with a dewy-but-not-greasy finish that sets in seconds and holds through long humid days. Around ¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500 on Amazon Japan (¥1,078 at the drugstore shelf).

Prefer a traditional liquid foundation over a cushion? Cezanne’s Lasting Cover Foundation is the drugstore sleeper hit in that category.

Cezanne Lasting Cover Foundation SPF50+ PA+++
Cezanne Lasting Cover Foundation SPF50+ PA+++¥800 ~ ¥1,200
A thin, blendable liquid that builds to medium-full coverage with a natural semi-matte finish — and it carries SPF50+ PA+++ built in, so it doubles as daytime sun protection. It clings well on combination and oily skin through humid afternoons, though very dry skin will want a hydrating base underneath. At under ¥1,000 on the drugstore shelf, it routinely beats foundations three times its price in @cosme wear tests.

2. Setting Powder — Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder

This is the single most repurchased setting powder in Japan, period. Canmake sells roughly 2 million compacts per year. The micro-fine powder absorbs sebum without looking chalky, and the compact is slim enough to fit in a back pocket for midday touch-ups. At ¥1,034, stocking up on two or three for gifts is painless.

Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder
Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder¥900 ~ ¥1,000
Canmake’s Marshmallow Finish Powder blurs pores and soaks up sebum for a soft-matte finish that holds through humid sightseeing days, with a slim mirrored compact made for midday touch-ups. Around ¥900 ~ ¥1,000.

If you want your finishing powder to pull double duty as sun protection, Cezanne’s cult-favorite UV Silk Cover Powder is the pick to grab instead.

Cezanne UV Silk Cover Powder SPF50 PA+++ (Pressed Powder)
Cezanne UV Silk Cover Powder SPF50 PA+++ (Pressed Powder)¥700 ~ ¥1,000
A silky pressed powder with SPF50 that smooths pores and tones down shine without ever looking cakey — the finish is closer to soft-focus skin than flat matte. It layers cleanly over foundation for midday SPF top-ups, which is exactly what you need on 20,000-step sightseeing days. Oily and combination skin get the most out of it; drier skin should keep application light. At well under ¥1,000, it has held a spot on @cosme’s powder rankings for years.

3. Eyeliner — Cezanne Superfine Liner EX Plus

Cezanne launched a new black shade for this ultra-thin liquid liner in March 2026 (previously online-only, now in stores). The 0.1mm brush tip draws lash-hugging lines that look like individual lash hairs rather than a thick stripe. Smudge tests on @cosme show it surviving 12 hours on oily lids without feathering — a result most ¥3,000 liners struggle to match.

At ¥748, buy the brown-black shade for everyday and classic black for evenings. Both fit easily in carry-on makeup bags.

Cezanne Superfine Liner EX Plus
Cezanne Superfine Liner EX Plus¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500
Cezanne’s Superfine Liner EX Plus — the 0.1mm brush-tip liquid liner itself. Draws lash-hugging lines that survive 12 hours on oily lids, and weighs almost nothing in a makeup bag. Around ¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500 on Amazon Japan (drugstore shelf price is ¥748 if you’d rather grab it in person).

4. Eyeshadow Palette — Canmake Silky Souffle Eyes

Four-pan palettes with a mousse-like texture that blends with fingers — no brushes needed, which is ideal for hotel-room makeup. Each palette weighs just 15g and retails at ¥825. The “04 Sunset Daze” palette (warm coral and brown) is the current @cosme top-rated shade. Pigment payoff is surprisingly strong for the price: one swipe equals the intensity of two swipes from many mid-range Western brands.

Canmake Silky Souffle Eyes
Canmake Silky Souffle Eyes¥700 ~ ¥900
Canmake’s Silky Souffle Eyes — the mousse-textured four-pan palette reviewed above. It blends with fingertips, so you can skip packing brushes entirely, and the 15g compact disappears into a carry-on. Around ¥700 ~ ¥900 on Amazon Japan (¥825 at the drugstore shelf).

Want to shrink your makeup bag even further? Fujiko’s Multi Easy Palette is the 2026 it-item for exactly that — one compact that covers eyeshadow, cheek, and highlight, and it’s been so popular that Loft shelves are constantly picked clean.

Fujiko Multi Easy Palette
Fujiko Multi Easy Palette¥1,500 ~ ¥2,000
One palette, three jobs: eyeshadow, cheek color, and highlight in a single compact, which is why it’s become the 2026 it-item for travel-light makeup. The shades are designed to layer with fingertips, so it pairs naturally with a brush-free hotel-room routine. It sells out constantly at Loft, so ordering on Amazon Japan is often the more reliable way to get one. Around ¥1,500 ~ ¥2,000.

5. Brow Pencil — Kate Designing Eyebrow 3D

Kate (by Kanebo) dominates the brow category in Japanese drugstores. The Designing Eyebrow 3D is a powder palette with three gradient shades and an angled brush — you mix to match your hair color. It’s been Japan’s #1 brow product on @cosme for multiple consecutive years. Price: ¥1,210. One palette lasts roughly 4–5 months of daily use because the powder is pressed densely.

Kate Designing Eyebrow 3D
Kate Designing Eyebrow 3D¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500
Kate’s Designing Eyebrow 3D — the three-shade gradient brow palette itself. Mix the powders to match your hair color, and the densely pressed pans stretch to roughly 4–5 months of daily use. Around ¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500 on Amazon Japan (¥1,210 at the drugstore).

If you prefer a pencil, pair it with the Cezanne Ultra Slim Eyebrow at ¥550 for hair-stroke detail.

Cezanne Ultra Slim Eyebrow
Cezanne Ultra Slim Eyebrow¥500 ~ ¥600
The pencil companion to the Kate palette: Cezanne’s Ultra Slim Eyebrow has a 0.9mm retractable tip that draws individual hair-stroke lines where powder alone looks soft. At around ¥500 ~ ¥600 it’s an easy add-on for a natural, fluffy brow finish.

6. Mascara — D-UP Perfect Extension Mascara

D-UP is the lash-obsessed brand that Japanese makeup artists keep in their kits. The Perfect Extension formula uses ultra-fine fibers that add 2–3mm of visible length per coat without clumping. It’s a tubing mascara, meaning it slides off cleanly with warm water — no harsh remover needed. That’s crucial when you’re doing quick onsen-ready removal at a ryokan.

At ¥1,650, it’s one of the pricier drugstore picks, but still less than half the cost of Lancôme Lash Idôle. @cosme gave it a best-of-2025 award, and it remains a top seller into 2026.

D-UP Perfect Extension Mascara
D-UP Perfect Extension Mascara¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500
D-UP’s Perfect Extension Mascara — the fiber tubing formula reviewed above. Adds visible length without clumping, then slides off with just warm water for quick onsen-ready removal. Around ¥1,000 ~ ¥1,500 on Amazon Japan.

If sheer length is your priority over easy removal, Majolica Majorca — Shiseido’s playful drugstore line — makes the mascara Japanese lash forums have sworn by for over a decade.

Majolica Majorca Lash Expander Long Long Long EX Mascara
Majolica Majorca Lash Expander Long Long Long EX Mascara¥1,200 ~ ¥1,600
The Lash Expander Long Long Long EX lives up to its ridiculous name: fine fibers on a slim comb wand stretch even short, straight lashes several millimeters past their natural tip. The waterproof formula holds a curl through humidity all day, though that durability means you’ll want a proper oil cleanser at night rather than warm water. Priced in the same range as the D-UP, it’s the stronger pick if dramatic length matters more to you than easy removal.

7. Lip Tint — Canmake Juicy Lip Tint

Canmake’s ¥660 lip tints outsell products three times their price. The formula stains within 30 seconds, so you can eat ramen without leaving a lip print on the bowl — it holds up even against a rich tonkotsu broth. Shade “06 Pomegranate Sangria” is the 2026 bestseller. Each tube lasts about 3 months of daily use.

Canmake Juicy Lip Tint
Canmake Juicy Lip Tint¥500 ~ ¥700
Canmake’s Juicy Lip Tint sets to a ramen-proof stain in about 30 seconds while keeping a glossy, non-drying finish — one slim tube covers a whole trip’s worth of touch-up-free days. Around ¥500 ~ ¥700.

If you want more of a glassy, wet-look finish than a straight stain, CipiCipi — the influencer-born brand that jumped from social media to drugstore shelves — makes one of the hottest J-beauty lip launches of the year.

CipiCipi Dewy Film Tint
CipiCipi Dewy Film Tint¥1,500 ~ ¥2,000
CipiCipi’s Dewy Film Tint sets into a thin, glassy film that keeps gloss-level shine while the tint stains underneath, so the color outlasts drinks and touch-ups. It costs more than the Canmake above, but the film finish is the look all over Japanese beauty social media right now, and stock in tourist-area drugstores moves fast. Around ¥1,500 ~ ¥2,000 on Amazon Japan.

8. Blush — Canmake Glow Fleur Cheeks

A five-shade petal-shaped blush compact at ¥880. Swirl the brush across all five pans for a multi-dimensional flush, or use individual shades for highlight and contour on cheeks. The texture is finely milled enough that it blends into skin rather than sitting on top — critical for photos at Kinkaku-ji where harsh blush lines show up in every shot.

Canmake Glow Fleur Cheeks
Canmake Glow Fleur Cheeks¥700 ~ ¥1,000
Canmake’s Glow Fleur Cheeks — the five-shade petal compact itself. Swirl across all five pans for a multi-dimensional flush that blends into skin with no harsh edges in photos. Around ¥700 ~ ¥1,000 on Amazon Japan (¥880 at the drugstore).

9. Highlighter — Cezanne Pearl Glow Highlight

At ¥660, this is possibly the best highlighter-to-price ratio on the planet. The champagne gold shade (“01”) gives a wet-look glow without visible glitter particles. It went viral on TikTok in 2024 and has stayed in stock at most Matsumoto Kiyoshi locations since — though the Shibuya flagship still sells out on weekends by mid-afternoon. Pick one up at a less-trafficked suburban branch if you can.

Cezanne Pearl Glow Highlight
Cezanne Pearl Glow Highlight¥600 ~ ¥800
Cezanne’s Pearl Glow Highlight in 01 Champagne Beige — the wet-look, no-glitter glow reviewed above. Around ¥600 ~ ¥800 on Amazon Japan (¥660 at the drugstore shelf), and ordering ahead spares you the weekend sell-out scramble at the Shibuya flagship.

10. Makeup Base / Primer — Cezanne UV Ultra Fit Base N

Cezanne’s makeup base acts as primer, sunscreen (SPF36 PA++), and pore blurrer in one step. The 2026 reformulation specifically targets “makeup collapse prevention” (化粧崩れ防止) — Cezanne’s marketing for their anti-melt technology. One 30ml tube costs ¥748 and lasts about 6 weeks of daily use. Apply a pea-sized amount after moisturizer, wait 60 seconds, then layer foundation.

This is the product that professional MUAs on Japanese variety shows use on talent before outdoor segments. If you buy only one base product in Japan, make it this one.

11. Makeup Remover — Kiss Me Speedy Cleansing Oil

Kiss Me’s cleansing oil dissolves waterproof mascara and long-wear foundation in about 20 seconds of gentle massage. It emulsifies with water into a milky rinse, leaving zero oily residue — which matters when your next step is a Japanese-style double cleanse at an onsen. A 230ml bottle at ¥1,100 lasts roughly 2–3 months. The pump design means no spillage in luggage.

If you’re traveling with mostly tubing mascara and light makeup, Cezanne’s face-wash-removable cosmetics (labeled 洗顔料で落とせる) skip the remover step entirely. Check the packaging for that phrase.

12. Lash Curler — D-UP Eyelash Curler

D-UP’s eyelash curler is designed with a flatter, wider curve that matches East Asian eye shapes better than the steep-arced Shu Uemura or Shiseido curlers. Beauty expert Megumi Kanzaki recently collaborated with D-UP on a new curler model launching June 2026, which @cosme has already spotlighted. The standard model runs about ¥1,650 and grips lashes at the root without pinching skin — something many tourists struggle with using Western curlers.

Replace the rubber pad every 2–3 months (spare pads included in box) to maintain crimp. One curler easily lasts 2+ years with pad swaps.

All 12 Picks at a Glance

Use this table as your shopping checklist. Screenshot it before you walk into the store.

#CategoryProductBrandPriceKey Strength
1BB/CushionCushion FoundationCezanne¥1,078Thin-film, 10hr wear
2Setting PowderMarshmallow Finish PowderCanmake¥1,0348hr oil control, SPF26
3EyelinerSuperfine Liner EX PlusCezanne¥7480.1mm tip, 12hr smudge-free
4EyeshadowSilky Souffle EyesCanmake¥825Mousse texture, finger-blend
5BrowDesigning Eyebrow 3DKate¥1,2103-shade gradient palette
6MascaraPerfect Extension MascaraD-UP¥1,650Tubing, warm-water removal
7Lip TintJuicy Lip TintCanmake¥660Survives eating, 30s stain
8BlushGlow Fleur CheeksCanmake¥8805-shade petal compact
9HighlighterPearl Glow HighlightCezanne¥660Wet-look glow, no glitter
10Primer/BaseUV Ultra Fit Base NCezanne¥748SPF36, pore-blurring, anti-melt
11RemoverSpeedy Cleansing OilKiss Me¥1,10020-sec dissolve, pump bottle
12Lash CurlerEyelash CurlerD-UP¥1,650Flat curve, pinch-free

Total cost for all 12 items: approximately ¥12,093 (around $80 USD at current rates). That’s less than the price of a single Tom Ford lipstick.

How to Read Japanese Makeup Packaging (Without Speaking Japanese)

Four phrases appear on virtually every Japanese makeup product. Memorize these kanji combinations and you’ll shop with confidence:

ウォータープルーフ (wōtāpurūfu) = Waterproof — look for this on eyeliner and mascara
皮脂テカリ防止 (hishi tekari bōshi) = Sebum/shine prevention — found on primers and powders
洗顔料で落とせる (senganryō de otoseru) = Removable with face wash — no special remover needed
色持ち (iro mochi) = Long-lasting color — common on lip products and blush
SPF/PA — same as international; higher + signs = more UVA protection

Many Canmake and Kate products now include small English descriptions on the back. Cezanne packages remain mostly Japanese-only, but the color swatches on the front are universally readable. When in doubt, use Google Lens — point your phone camera at the label for instant translation.

Shade Matching Tips for Tourists with Different Skin Tones

Japanese drugstore foundations and BB creams typically offer 2–4 shades, skewing toward light-to-medium with yellow undertones. This is the most common concern non-Asian tourists have. Here’s how to handle it:

Light to medium skin (Fitzpatrick I–III):Most Canmake and Cezanne shades work directly. Go with the “natural” or “ochre” variant. The Cezanne cushion’s shade 01 (Light) suits skin that typically wears NC15–NC25 in MAC terms.

Medium to deep skin (Fitzpatrick IV–VI):Foundation shade range is limited, but the real value for these skin tones lies in products that are shade-agnostic — setting powders, primers, eyeliners, mascaras, lip tints, and lash curlers. Eight of the 12 picks above work on every skin tone. For foundations, consider Kate’s wider shade range or check Don Quijote for Maybelline Japan exclusives that include deeper shades.

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Heads Up

Testers are available at most Matsumoto Kiyoshi locations. Swatch foundations on your jawline, not the back of your hand. If the store doesn’t have testers (some smaller branches don’t), the staff can usually open one for you — just ask “tester arimasu ka?” (テスターありますか).

Packing Makeup in Your Luggage: Customs & Carry-On Rules

Tax-free makeup purchases are sealed in a special bag at checkout. Japanese customs technically requires you to take these items out of the country unopened, though enforcement is inconsistent. To be safe, keep tax-free bags sealed until you board your outbound flight.

Liquid products (cleansing oil, liquid liner, lip tint) must go in your 1-liter clear bag if carried on. The Kiss Me cleansing oil is 230ml — too large for carry-on. Pack it in checked luggage or buy the 70ml travel size (around ¥550). All powder products, pencils, and curlers are carry-on safe.

For more on optimizing your luggage for Japanese shopping, our Japan tax-free shopping guide covers exemption thresholds and receipt procedures in detail.

When to Shop & How to Avoid Stockouts

Japanese drugstores restock shelves between 7:00 and 10:00 AM. If you’re hunting for a specific shade that tends to sell out — like Cezanne Pearl Glow Highlight 01 or Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder in Matte Beige Ochre — arrive before 11:00 AM.

Tourist-heavy stores in Shinjuku and Dotonbori sell out of viral products by early afternoon on weekends. Weekday mornings are your best window. Alternatively, stores 2–3 train stops away from major hubs (think Koenji instead of Shinjuku, Tennoji instead of Namba) stock identical products with less competition.

Seasonal limited-edition shades launch in March (spring collection) and September (autumn collection). Cezanne’s 2026 autumn lineup was previewed in April, with new eyeshadow and liner shades hitting shelves by early September. If your trip coincides, these limited editions make unique gifts because they can’t be found online after the run sells out.

The ¥5,000 Tourist Starter Kit (If You Can Only Buy 5 Things)

Pressed for time or luggage space? Here’s the five-product core kit that delivers the most impact per yen:

Canmake Marshmallow Finish Powder — ¥1,034 (universal, shade-agnostic)
Cezanne Superfine Liner EX Plus — ¥748 (weighs almost nothing)
Canmake Silky Souffle Eyes — ¥825 (replaces eyeshadow palette + brush)
Canmake Juicy Lip Tint — ¥660 (skip the lip balm and lipstick)
Cezanne UV Ultra Fit Base N — ¥748 (replaces primer + sunscreen)

Total: ¥4,015. That leaves room for a Cezanne Pearl Glow Highlight (¥660) and still stays under ¥5,000 — the tax-free threshold. If you’re also stocking up on skincare and snacks, check our drugstore beauty top-10 picks for complementary skincare items to push you past the exemption amount.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Japanese drugstore makeup cruelty-free?

Canmake, Cezanne, and most Japanese drugstore brands do not conduct animal testing on finished products. However, Japan does not ban animal testing by law, and some ingredient suppliers may test on animals. If you follow strict Leaping Bunny standards, verify individual brands on their certification lists before purchasing.

Can I find these products at Japanese airports?

Narita and Haneda airports stock limited selections of Canmake and Kate at duty-free shops, but prices are 10–20% higher than drugstores and shade options are minimal. Buy in-city for the best selection and price. Kansai International Airport has a slightly better range in its domestic terminal shops.

How long does Japanese drugstore makeup last before expiring?

Japanese cosmetics law requires products to be usable for 3 years from manufacture if stored properly, though most brands recommend using opened products within 6–12 months. Powders last longest (up to 2 years opened), while liquid products like lip tints and cleansing oil should be used within 6–8 months. Check the lot number stamped on the bottom — it indicates production date, though you’ll need the brand’s website to decode it.

Are Canmake and Cezanne available outside Japan?

Both brands have expanded into Southeast Asia (Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong) and can be found on Amazon Global. However, prices outside Japan run 50–100% higher, and shade availability is inconsistent. Buying in-person at a Japanese drugstore remains significantly cheaper and gives you access to the full range including limited editions.

What’s the difference between Kate and Canmake?

Kate (owned by Kanebo/Kao Corporation) targets a slightly edgier, cooler aesthetic with deeper pigments and moodier packaging. Prices sit in the ¥1,000–¥1,800 range. Canmake (owned by Ida Laboratories) goes for a sweeter, more approachable look with lighter textures and lower price points (¥600–¥1,100). Quality is comparable — the choice comes down to personal style and color preference.

Should I buy makeup at Don Quijote or Matsumoto Kiyoshi?

Matsumoto Kiyoshi if you want the widest shade range, organized shelves, and testers. Don Quijote if you’re shopping late at night (many locations open until 3–5 AM) or want to combine makeup shopping with snacks, electronics, and souvenirs in one chaotic but entertaining trip. Don Quijote’s makeup prices are slightly higher on average, but their bulk-deal bins occasionally turn up discontinued shades at steep discounts.

Disclosure

This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission when you buy through them, at no extra cost to you. Every pick is an honest recommendation.

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