Souvenir Guide · Regional Sweets
Japan’s Big Omiyage Brands, Ranked Honestly —
Tokyo Banana, Shiroi Koibito & the Boxes Everyone Recognizes
The National Icons · What’s Actually Good · What’s Just Famous
The Honest Ranking Nobody Publishes
Every station sweets hall stacks the same celebrity boxes, and every traveler wonders the same thing: are these actually good, or just famous? Having eaten them all repeatedly (research is hard), here’s the truthful tier list.
🥇 The Genuinely Excellent
Royce Nama Chocolate (Hokkaido) — silky ganache squares that need refrigeration and reward the logistics. The best famous thing in the category.
Marusei Butter Sand (Rokkatei, Hokkaido) — rum-raisin buttercream between shortbread; adults’ favorite for a reason.
Press Butter Sand (Tokyo) — the modern challenger: caramel-butter engineering in a sleek box, and it travels perfectly.
Kamome no Tamago (Iwate) — white-bean yolk in castella and white chocolate; Tohoku’s quiet champion. Grab it along the Tohoku line.
🥈 The Deservedly Famous
Shiroi Koibito (Hokkaido) — elegant, reliable, slightly over-familiar; the tin matters as much as the cookie, and that’s fine.
Tokyo Banana — soft sponge, banana cream, gently absurd; kids adore it, adults pretend not to. Short shelf life — buy on departure day.
Hakata Torimon (Fukuoka) — butter-touched white bean manju that converts bean-paste skeptics.
Momiji Manju (Hiroshima) — best eaten warm on Miyajima itself; boxed versions are good, fried ones on the island are better.
🥉 Famous, With Caveats
Unagi Pie (Shizuoka) — crisp, buttery, beloved — and crumbles to golden dust if your suitcase looks at it wrong.
Nama Yatsuhashi (Kyoto) — lovely, but the 7–10 day expiry ambushes multi-city itineraries; details in the Kyoto guide.
Jaga Pokkuru (Hokkaido) — technically a snack, perpetually sold out, genuinely great; see the regional snack royalty guide.
Strategy
Mix one celebrity box (recognition value) with one local-only find (conversation value) — the combination the omiyage etiquette guide recommends for offices. All of the above cluster in station halls and airports; prices are identical everywhere, so buy at whichever door you exit last.
