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by adisbladis 2625 days ago
In Japan tattoos are generally banned from spa areas (which there are a lot of, pretty much all capsule hotels have one).

It was explained to me that this was a roundabout way of banning the Yakuza.

2 comments

Piercings are very restricted there too. You won't find any piercing shops. Doctors have to do them, even if you just want your ears pierced.
I wonder if they would bother enforcing the ban on foreigners, since it's a roundabout way of banning the Yakuza.
Places will enforce it - I'd say most do not - but my sample size is only large enough to say confidentially that the places my friends went to do not, with one exception that enforced it.

Source: Friends with tattoos who have visited Japan as I don't have any myself.

E: This is one of very, very few shows I'd ever recommend and it covers this topic: https://www.viceland.com/en_us/show/needles-and-pins , specifically the ones in Japan and South Korea which have very similar culture surrounding tattoos.

I went to a public onsen in Hakone. More like a western spa than a bathhouse. They made me purchase a covering for my leg tattoo, even though I am not Japanese and therefore could never have been Yakuza.
I was also in Hakone, last month. There was a foreigner with pretty obvious tattoos on his body in the onsen I went to. It probably depends on the bathhouse.
I went to Hakone Kowakien Yunessun. I've heard other non-Japanese people mention having to cover up their tattoos.
The Japanese culture is also extremely conformist and rule following. In my (limited) experience the letter of a rule is very important while the intent of the rule is not considered much.

I'd expect the rule to be enforced but I don't _really_ know.

I wonder if they keep it as a way of banning foreigners..
They probably keep it as a way to restrict both.