Japan is one of the best places in the world to shop for stationery. But the experience can vary a lot depending on where you go. Some stores are perfect for first-time visitors who want an easy overview. Others are better for refined gifts, premium pens, minimalist notebooks, art supplies, or wrapping materials.
That is why this guide is organized by store type, not just by popularity. If you understand the role of each shop, it becomes much easier to decide where to spend your time and budget. LOFT and HANDS work well as broad entry points, while stores such as Itoya, Kakimori, Kyukyodo, and Shimojima are more useful when you already know what kind of stationery experience you want.
- Why Japanese stationery shopping feels different
- Four types of stationery shops in Japan
- Large general stores: the best starting point for most travelers
- Design and lifestyle stationery stores: best for style, gifts, and atmosphere
- Paper Tree
- Premium and specialty stores: for serious stationery lovers
- Packaging and supplies: underrated but useful
- Shimojima
- Package Plaza
- Best shops by purpose
- Nationwide chains vs destination shops
- How to choose the right shop in Japan
- Final thoughts
- Need help sourcing Japanese stationery from Japan?
Why Japanese stationery shopping feels different
Japanese stationery is loved not only because it is cute or collectible, but because it is often designed with real daily use in mind. Pens write smoothly, notebooks open well, paper quality feels intentional, and even small accessories are often thoughtfully made.
The key difference is that Japanese stationery is sold through several distinct retail cultures. A large general store, a design-focused shop, a specialist pen store, and a packaging supplier may all sell paper goods, but they serve very different needs. Choosing the right kind of store is often more important than choosing the right neighborhood.
Four types of stationery shops in Japan
1. Large general stores
These are the easiest places to start. They offer wide selections, easy browsing, and a good mix of practical items, gifts, and trend-based stationery.
Best for:
- first-time shoppers
- travelers with limited time
- people who want a little bit of everything
Typical examples:
- LOFT
- HANDS
- TSUTAYA
- MUJI
- 100 yen shops
2. Design and lifestyle stationery stores
These shops are more curated and style-driven. They are ideal when you care about aesthetics, gifting, paper texture, or a strong brand point of view.
Best for:
- stylish gifts
- journaling and paper lovers
- design-conscious shoppers
Typical examples:
- HIGHTIDE STORE
- Smith / DELFONICS
- TRAVELER’S FACTORY
- Kakimori
- Paper Tree
3. Premium and specialty stores
These are the places to go when you want depth, expertise, premium writing tools, specialist paper goods, or creative materials.
Best for:
- fountain pens
- premium paper
- artists and creators
- traditional stationery
Typical examples:
- Itoya
- Maruzen
- Sekaido
- TOOLS
- Kyukyodo
4. Packaging and supplies stores
These are especially useful if you care about wrapping, presentation, storage, or buying practical materials in quantity.
Best for:
- gift wrapping
- packaging supplies
- shipping and presentation
- bulk practical purchases
Typical examples:
- Shimojima
- Package Plaza
Large general stores: the best starting point for most travelers
LOFT

LOFT is one of the easiest recommendations for travelers because it combines accessibility, variety, and gift appeal. Official Tokyo tourism information describes Shibuya Loft as a lifestyle-oriented household goods store with tens of thousands of items, including stationery, and LOFT’s own site treats stationery as one of its core categories.
Why go:
- easy first stop
- wide mix of popular Japanese stationery
- strong for planners, stickers, pens, and gift-friendly paper goods
- good balance of practical and trendy products
LOFT is especially useful when you do not have a strict shopping list yet. It is a good place to see what feels current, seasonal, and widely loved.
HANDS

HANDS is another strong all-round option, but it often leans a little more practical than LOFT. Its English-language store information highlights nationwide coverage, and many branches offer tax-free shopping and multiple payment options depending on the location.
Why go:
- great for functional stationery
- useful office and organization tools
- good for clever problem-solving items
- convenient for travelers visiting major cities
If you like practical Japanese products that feel smart and efficient, HANDS is often a better fit than a trend-led variety store alone.
TSUTAYA

TSUTAYA works well for shoppers who like browsing stationery in a bookstore or design-oriented environment. Ginza TSUTAYA BOOKS presents itself as an art-focused bookstore, and its English information highlights a stationery selection connected to Japanese aesthetics.
Why go:
- calm, curated shopping atmosphere
- strong for stylish gifts and paper goods
- appealing if you enjoy books, design, and presentation
- better for browsing than for buying everything in one trip
TSUTAYA is not usually the deepest stationery stop, but it can be one of the most pleasant.
MUJI

MUJI is not a stationery specialist, but it is a very useful stop if you like simple and reliable everyday tools. MUJI’s global site presents the brand as a lifestyle company built around practical daily products, and its stationery fits that identity well.
Why go:
- minimalist design
- practical notebooks and desk tools
- easy to pair with other shopping
- good for calm, understated everyday use
MUJI is best for people who want stationery that feels clean, functional, and visually quiet rather than decorative.
100 yen shops: DAISO, Seria, and Can★Do
Budget shops deserve a place in a serious stationery guide because they are genuinely useful. Can★Do’s English site clearly positions it as a 100-yen shop, and these chains are good for low-risk purchases such as stickers, storage items, pouches, wrapping supplies, and basic notebooks.
Why go:
- affordable add-ons
- useful for storage and packaging
- easy to buy in quantity
- good for small souvenirs and desk extras
These are best treated as support stops, not as replacements for specialist stores.
Design and lifestyle stationery stores: best for style, gifts, and atmosphere
HIGHTIDE STORE

HIGHTIDE is a stationery and lifestyle brand with direct retail presence, and its official store information reflects that mix of stationery, desk tools, and design-oriented daily goods.
Why go:
- clean, design-forward selection
- good for stylish everyday tools
- strong lifestyle branding
- useful for gifts that feel modern but not flashy
Smith / DELFONICS

DELFONICS’ English site describes Smith as a more casual branch of the brand’s stationery world, with daily-use items and design appeal.
Why go:
- strong for diaries and notebooks
- good design without feeling too formal
- giftable but still practical
- a nice middle ground between cute and serious
TRAVELER’S FACTORY

TRAVELER’S FACTORY is centered on TRAVELER’S notebooks, customization parts, and related stationery, according to its English site.
Why go:
- ideal for notebook lovers
- highly memorable shopping experience
- good for journaling and customization
- especially appealing to travelers
This is one of the best concept-driven stationery shops in Japan.

Kakimori
Kakimori is well known for its made-to-order notebooks and ink-related experiences, making it very different from a general store. Its English site emphasizes custom notebooks and writing tools.
Why go:
- unique, experience-based shopping
- excellent for gifts with a personal feel
- ideal for people who love paper and writing culture
- memorable for stationery enthusiasts
Paper Tree
Paper Tree is a good example of a paper-focused shop that appeals to people interested in cards, wrapping, and tactile paper goods rather than general stationery browsing.
Why go:
- beautiful paper products
- good for cards and gift presentation
- useful if you care about texture and paper quality
Premium and specialty stores: for serious stationery lovers
Itoya
Itoya is one of Japan’s best-known stationery specialists. Its English site describes the company as a long-established specialty store offering high-quality writing instruments, notebooks, letters, diaries, greeting cards, and wrapping-related goods.
Why go:
- premium pens and paper
- refined gift selection
- specialist atmosphere
- ideal for people who want a polished stationery experience
If you care about quality, presentation, or classic stationery culture, Itoya is one of the strongest stops in Japan.
Maruzen
Maruzen is useful because it sits between bookstore culture and serious stationery retail. It often works well for shoppers who enjoy browsing books and paper goods together.
Why go:
- dependable stationery floors
- good for notebooks, pens, and reading-related desk items
- comfortable for shoppers who like bookstore environments
Sekaido

Sekaido is especially valuable for artists, designers, and creative shoppers. Travel coverage of the Shinjuku flagship highlights its large range of Japanese stationery and art supplies.
Why go:
- strong art and design supply selection
- good for markers, brushes, paint, and technical materials
- better for creators than for casual souvenir shopping

TOOLS

TOOLS is worth mentioning for shoppers who like specialist design and art materials rather than broad mainstream selections.
Why go:
- more focused selection
- useful for creators and visual thinkers
- better for technical browsing than casual gifting
Kyukyodo
Kyukyodo is one of the most distinctive names in this list because it brings in traditional Japanese stationery culture. Its official site presents the company as a long-established shop dealing in items such as incense, Japanese paper, calligraphy and painting supplies, and seasonal paper goods.
Why go:
- traditional atmosphere
- elegant paper goods
- strong for Japanese-style gifts
- appealing if you want something culturally rooted
Packaging and supplies: underrated but useful
Shimojima
Shimojima is especially useful for wrapping materials, bags, boxes, storage supplies, and practical packaging needs. It is not a classic tourist stationery stop, but it can be very useful if presentation matters.
Why go:
- wide range of wrapping and packaging materials
- practical supplies for gifts or shipping
- useful for bulk or project-based buying
Package Plaza
Package Plaza serves a similar role. It is helpful when you need practical presentation materials rather than curated stationery.
Why go:
- gift wrapping tools
- bags, boxes, and packing materials
- useful for quantity buying or resale preparation
Best shops by purpose
Best for first-time shoppers: LOFT and HANDS
These are the easiest starting points if you want a broad overview of Japanese stationery without planning a very specific route.
Best for minimalist everyday stationery: MUJI, HIGHTIDE STORE, and Smith / DELFONICS
These shops work well for shoppers who prefer clean design, practical tools, and stationery that feels calm and understated.
Best for stylish gifts and curated paper goods: TSUTAYA, TRAVELER’S FACTORY, Kakimori, and Paper Tree
These are better choices if you care about presentation, paper texture, brand identity, or a more memorable shopping experience.
Best for premium pens and serious stationery browsing: Itoya, Maruzen, and Kyukyodo
These stores are stronger for premium writing tools, higher-end paper goods, and a more classic stationery atmosphere.
Best for artists and creators: Sekaido and TOOLS
These are more useful if your interests lean toward art materials, design supplies, or technical tools rather than general souvenir shopping.
Best for wrapping, packaging, and practical presentation: Shimojima, Package Plaza, DAISO, Seria, and Can★Do
These are useful for bags, boxes, wrapping
Nationwide chains vs destination shops
One helpful thing to know before shopping in Japan is that not all stationery stores are equally easy to find. Some are convenient multi-location chains or large retailers that appear in several major cities, while others are more destination-oriented and worth visiting only if you are in a specific area.
If you want convenience, start with stores such as LOFT, HANDS, MUJI, Maruzen, Shimojima, or nearby 100 yen shops. These are generally easier to work into a travel itinerary.
If you are visiting Tokyo and want a more memorable stationery experience, destination shops such as Kakimori in Kuramae, Paper Tree in Kudanshita, and TRAVELER’S FACTORY in Nakameguro or Tokyo Station are especially worth considering. For traditional Japanese paper goods, Kyukyodo is also a strong stop in Ginza, with Kyoto ties that may matter if your trip includes Kansai.
How to choose the right shop in Japan
A simple shortcut works well:
- Want one easy stop with broad variety? Go to LOFT
- Want practical and clever daily-use items? Go to HANDS
- Want minimalist tools? Go to MUJI
- Want premium pens and paper? Go to Itoya
- Want design-led gifts? Go to TSUTAYA or TRAVELER’S FACTORY
- Want art materials? Go to Sekaido
- Want traditional Japanese paper goods? Go to Kyukyodo
- Want wrapping materials? Go to Shimojima
- Want low-cost add-ons? Go to DAISO, Seria, or Can★Do
Final thoughts
The best Japanese stationery shop depends on what kind of experience you want.
For a first overview, LOFT and HANDS are the easiest starting points. For minimalist daily-use items, MUJI is reliable. For premium stationery, Itoya is hard to beat. For artists, Sekaido stands out. And for gifts, paper goods, or more concept-driven browsing, stores such as TSUTAYA, TRAVELER’S FACTORY, Kakimori, and Kyukyodo add a very different kind of value.
If you only visit one kind of store, you will see only one side of Japanese stationery culture. The best approach is to combine one broad general store with one more specialized stop. That gives you a much clearer picture of why stationery shopping in Japan feels so rewarding.
Need help sourcing Japanese stationery from Japan?
If this guide helped you narrow down where to shop, but you still need help comparing products, buying from multiple stores, or arranging international shipping, I also offer a Japan sourcing service on Fiverr.
This is useful if you want to:
- buy stationery from several Japanese shops without visiting each one yourself
- source giftable or resell-friendly items from Japan
- compare products across stores such as LOFT, Itoya, MUJI, and specialty stationery shops
- get help with communication, purchasing, and shipping from Japan
Whether you are a traveler planning ahead, a stationery collector, or a small overseas buyer, I can help you source Japanese stationery more efficiently.
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