Souvenir Guide · Where to Buy
Japanese Drugstore Souvenirs —
The Matsukiyo List: Skincare, Medicine & the Aisle of Small Miracles
Sheet Masks · Eye Drops · Patches & Balms · What’s Actually Restricted
Why Drugstores Beat Gift Shops
Matsumoto Kiyoshi, Sundrug, Kokumin, Welcia — Japan’s drugstore chains are where the country’s obsessive product engineering meets pocket-money prices, and half of Asia flies here specifically to shop them (see what Chinese travelers buy and what Koreans buy). For everyone else: this is the souvenir aisle you didn’t know you needed.
The Skincare Shelf
Hada Labo Gokujyun lotion — the hyaluronic staple with a global cult. Anessa and Bioré UV sunscreens — textures Western brands still haven’t matched. LuLuLun and Megrhythm steam eye masks — the flat, giftable crowd-pleasers. DHC lip balm, Canmake and Cezanne budget cosmetics — quality that embarrasses their prices.
The Medicine Cabinet (Legendary Division)
Salonpas patches — the world’s favorite muscle-ache export. Ryukakusan throat powder/drops, Muhi bite balm, Ohta’s Isan stomach powder, Santé FX eye drops (the icy blast people either love or fear), cooling gel sheets for fevers. Practical, cheap, and beloved as gifts across Asia for good reason.
The Aisle of Small Miracles
Foot-peel masks, beauty-grade cotton pads, individually wrapped toothbrushes of unreasonable quality, hand creams by the dozen — the ¥300–800 tier that fills gift bags perfectly.
Know Before You Fly
Your country’s import rules matter more than Japan’s export rules. Some Japanese medicines contain ingredients restricted abroad (pseudoephedrine-type cold medicines, some codeine formulas) — stick to the topical and herbal classics above and you’re universally safe. Tax-free applies over ¥5,000 (consumables — sealed bag rules per the tax-free guide). Prices vary meaningfully between chains and even branches; the discount signs are real, and Donki often undercuts them all late at night (the Donki method).
