- The Big Three Chains
- 7-Eleven (セブンイレブン) — 21,000+ locations
- Lawson (ローソン) — 14,000+ locations
- FamilyMart (ファミリーマート) — 16,000+ locations
- Must-Try Items
- Onigiri / Rice Balls (おにぎり / 100-250 yen)
- Bento / Boxed Meals (弁当 / 400-800 yen)
- Sandwiches (サンドイッチ / 200-400 yen)
- Hot Foods Counter (ホットスナック / 100-300 yen)
- Desserts (デザート / 150-450 yen)
- Practical Tips
- Best Drinks
- Seasonal and Limited-Edition Items
- Which Chain is Best? Quick Comparison
- FAQ
- Related Guides
Japanese convenience stores (konbini / コンビニ) are a food experience in themselves. With over 56,000 locations nationwide, they offer surprisingly high-quality meals, snacks, and drinks at very low prices, 24 hours a day. Many tourists say konbini food was one of the best parts of their Japan trip.
The Big Three Chains
7-Eleven (セブンイレブン) — 21,000+ locations
Best for: onigiri (rice balls) and fresh sandwiches. Their premium Seven Premium product line rivals restaurant quality. The egg salad sandwich (tamago sando) is legendary among tourists and locals alike. Gold-label premium onigiri are worth the extra 50 yen.
Lawson (ローソン) — 14,000+ locations
Best for: fried chicken (Karaage-kun in multiple flavors) and premium desserts (Uchi Cafe line). Natural Lawson stores (brown sign instead of blue) have healthier, organic options. Their Machikado Kitchen counter serves fresh hot foods including bento and sandwiches made in-store.
FamilyMart (ファミリーマート) — 16,000+ locations
Best for: bento boxes and Famichiki (a crispy fried chicken cutlet that has a devoted following). Their premium Mochimochi onigiri series uses higher-quality rice. The Okaeri Gohan (home-style meal) line offers restaurant-quality dishes.
Must-Try Items
Onigiri / Rice Balls (おにぎり / 100-250 yen)
The iconic Japanese convenience food. Sold in a triangular shape with nori (seaweed) wrapping. Top picks: Sake (鮭 / salmon) — the #1 seller nationwide. Tsuna Mayo (ツナマヨ / tuna mayo) — Japan’s comfort food. Mentaiko (明太子 / spicy cod roe) — bold flavor. Kombu (昆布 / kelp) — vegetarian-friendly.
How to open: Pull the center tab (labeled 1), then peel left side (2) and right side (3). This ingenious wrapping keeps the nori crispy and separate from the moist rice until you eat it.
Bento / Boxed Meals (弁当 / 400-800 yen)
Complete meals ready to eat. Staff will microwave it free — say Atatamete kudasai (温めてください / please heat this up) or just nod when they ask. Best picks: Noriben (海苔弁 / seaweed rice with fried fish, budget classic). Makunouchi (幕の内 / variety box with multiple items). Omurice (オムライス / omelette rice).
Sandwiches (サンドイッチ / 200-400 yen)
Tamago Sando (卵サンド): Japanese egg sandwiches are famously fluffy, creamy, and rich — unlike any egg sandwich you have had before. A must-try. Fruits Sando (フルーツサンド): Fresh strawberries, kiwi, or mango with whipped cream between soft white bread. Beautiful and delicious. Katsu Sando (カツサンド): Crispy pork cutlet sandwich — the ultimate quick meal.
Hot Foods Counter (ホットスナック / 100-300 yen)
Near the register: Nikuman (肉まん / steamed pork buns, October-March). Oden (おでん / hot pot items — daikon radish, boiled egg, fish cakes, October-March). Karaage (唐揚げ / fried chicken pieces). Korokke (コロッケ / croquettes). American Dog (corn dog). Point at what you want and the cashier will bag it.
Desserts (デザート / 150-450 yen)
Japanese convenience store desserts are genuinely excellent — some rival dedicated patisseries. Premium pudding (プリン) at 7-Eleven is silky smooth. Matcha parfaits and cakes rotate seasonally. Cream puffs (シュークリーム) at Lawson. New limited-edition desserts appear monthly — locals actively track and review them on social media.
Practical Tips
Free microwave heating: Staff asks Atatamemasu ka? (温めますか?/ Shall I heat it?). Nod or say hai (yes). Takes 30 seconds.
Free hot water: Available near the cup noodle section for instant ramen. Just pour and wait 3 minutes.
ATMs: 7-Eleven ATMs accept virtually all international bank cards (Visa, Mastercard, Cirrus, Plus). This is often the most reliable ATM option for tourists.
Eat-in corners: Many stores have a small seating area. Look for イートイン (Eat-In) signs. Some charge an extra 2% tax for eat-in vs takeout.
Plastic bags: Cost 3-5 yen per bag. Bring your own or say Fukuro iranai desu (袋いらないです / No bag needed).
Toilets: Most convenience stores have free, clean toilets available to anyone. A lifesaver for tourists.
Best Drinks
Coffee: Convenience store coffee (100-180 yen) rivals cafe quality. 7-Eleven and Lawson have self-service machines at the counter. Press S/M/L, insert coins, place cup under the nozzle. Hot and iced available.
Green tea: Oi Ocha (おーいお茶) and Ito En are the top brands. Sold cold in bottles. Unsweetened — this is real Japanese green tea, not the sweet version.
Unique drinks to try: Calpis (カルピス, sweet yogurt drink), Pocari Sweat (sports drink, better than it sounds), Royal Milk Tea (ロイヤルミルクティー, creamy tea), Amazake (甘酒, sweet fermented rice drink, winter). Strong Zero (ストロングゼロ, 9% alcohol chu-hai — approach with caution).
Seasonal and Limited-Edition Items
Japanese convenience stores rotate products monthly. Seasonal highlights:
Spring (Mar-May): Sakura-flavored everything — mochi, Kit Kat, drinks. Strawberry sandwiches peak season.
Summer (Jun-Aug): Cold noodle cups (hiyashi chuka), frozen desserts, watermelon-flavored items, refreshing citrus drinks.
Autumn (Sep-Nov): Sweet potato everything — yaki-imo (roasted sweet potato, sold hot near register), mont blanc desserts, chestnut items. Oden returns to the hot counter.
Winter (Dec-Feb): Nikuman (steamed pork buns) return to the counter. Oden is at its best. Hot canned coffee from the warmer. Christmas cakes (order in advance!).
Which Chain is Best? Quick Comparison
Best onigiri: 7-Eleven (widest variety, Gold label premium). Best fried chicken: Lawson (Karaage-kun) and FamilyMart (Famichiki) — both excellent, try both and decide. Best bento: FamilyMart (Okaeri Gohan line). Best desserts: Lawson (Uchi Cafe line). Best coffee: 7-Eleven (machine coffee). Best for ATMs: 7-Eleven (accepts all international cards).
FAQ
Related Guides
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