Japan Considers Cutting Food Consumption Tax from April 2027, 1% Rate Likely

The Japanese government and ruling coalition are coordinating to implement a consumption tax cut on food and beverages starting April 2027. A 1% rate is currently the most likely option, though 0% remains possible if system updates allow.
financeNQ 50/100出典:PR Times

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  • 📰 Published: June 2, 2026 at 08:40
  • 🔍 Collected: June 2, 2026 at 08:55 (15 min after Published)
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The Japanese government and the ruling coalition began coordination on the 1st to implement a consumption tax reduction for food and beverages starting in April 2027. Considering the time required to update cash register systems, a reduction to 1% is currently the most likely scenario. If systems can be updated ahead of schedule, a 0% rate is not ruled out. According to senior government officials, the ruling coalition hopes to implement the tax cut before the unified local elections in April 2027 to showcase it as a political achievement. If the 1% plan is adopted, the government intends to pass the relevant legislation in an extraordinary Diet session this autumn. Industry feedback suggests that while a 0% rate would require about a year for system upgrades, a 1% rate could potentially be completed in about six months. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi had previously pledged to reduce the food consumption tax to 0%, but there is a possibility of settling for 1% to prioritize a faster implementation. Recent polls show that 42.5% of respondents believe a 1% cut is acceptable if it can be implemented quickly.

FAQ

Why is Japan considering a food consumption tax cut?

To provide relief to households amid rising costs and to fulfill political campaign promises.