Japan logged 3.49 million inbound visitors in February, a 6.4% year-over-year increase that marks the highest February total on record, according to data released Wednesday by the Japan National Tourism Organization. The figure arrives despite a measurable decline in arrivals from mainland China, historically the archipelago's largest source market.
The February number extends a streak of monthly records dating to December and reflects structural shifts in Japan's visitor mix rather than simple recovery math. Mainland Chinese arrivals fell 11% from February 2025, yet were more than offset by double-digit growth from South Korea, Taiwan, and Southeast Asian markets where visa liberalisation took effect in Q4 2025. The United States contributed 487,000 arrivals, up 22% year-over-year, driven in part by direct yen exposure for dollar-based leisure budgets. Average daily spend per visitor climbed to ¥21,300 in February, a 9% premium over the same month in 2025, indicating that composition changes are tilting upmarket.
The data carries weight for luxury hospitality developers and DMO strategists because it confirms that Japan's tourism infrastructure is absorbing volume without the price collapse that typically follows oversupply. Occupancy rates in Tokyo's five-star segment held at 83% in February, consistent with January, while ADR rose 4% sequentially to ¥74,000. Kyoto's ryokan segment saw February bookings 19% above 2025 levels, with lead times stretching to 90 days for heritage properties during sakura season. This suggests that Japan is successfully stratifying its inbound base: mass-market growth from visa-eased Southeast Asia, premium leisure from North America and Europe, and sustained high-net-worth interest from the Middle East, which posted 41% growth in February despite representing a modest absolute count.
Allocators should track March data due in mid-April, which will capture the first full sakura season under the new visa regime and offer a cleaner read on demand elasticity. The government's revised 2026 target of 38 million total arrivals requires an average monthly run rate of 3.17 million, a threshold February exceeded by 10%. Operators should also monitor the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism's hotel development pipeline, which shows 127 new properties slated to open before year-end, 64% of them in regional cities outside the Tokyo-Osaka corridor. Whether secondary markets can capture their share of incremental flow will determine pricing power through 2027.
The yen traded at ¥143.2 to the dollar on Wednesday, softer than the ¥138 average that prevailed during February, suggesting that currency tailwinds remain in place for at least the next two quarters.