If you are planning a trip to Japan, you might want to double-check your accommodation bookings. Japan is currently facing a massive turning point regarding Minpaku—the Japanese term for private home rentals like Airbnb.
For years, the Japanese government encouraged these rentals to help welcome the world. But in a sudden and dramatic shift, the Japan Tourism Agency is about to allow local governments to effectively ban Minpaku entirely in their areas.
“The Airbnb ban is finally HERE!!!
[Local Governments Will Be Allowed to Effectively Ban Short-Term Rentals] Japan Tourism Agency to Issue Notice, Shifting Policy Due to Rising Troubles”
Why This is Groundbreaking News in Japan
To understand why this is trending all over Japanese news today, you have to look at how much Japan is booming right now. Tourism has reached an unprecedented, historic peak. In 2025, Japan welcomed a record-breaking 35.6 million international visitors, and that massive wave has only continued to swell into 2026.

While this is great for the economy, it has triggered a severe case of “overtourism.” Unlike the US, where tourist areas and quiet residential suburbs are usually miles apart, Japanese cities are incredibly dense. Traditional Minpaku homes are often located in ultra-quiet, narrow residential alleyways where neighbors live literally inches apart.
For Japanese residents, who deeply value Wa (social harmony) and strict public etiquette, the sudden influx of tourists rolling loud suitcases at 3:00 AM, partying on balconies, and completely ignoring Japan’s infamously complex trash-sorting rules has pushed local patience to its absolute limit.
From “Welcome” to “Zero Days”
Under the current 2018 law, registered Minpaku hosts are allowed to rent out their properties for up to 180 days a year. Local cities could limit this slightly, but they weren’t allowed to ban it completely.
However, with this new official directive dropping this month, the government is handing the ultimate power back to the locals. Cities can now legally set that 180-day limit all the way down to “Zero Days.” This means popular historical neighborhoods in Tokyo, Kyoto, or Osaka could effectively wipe Airbnbs off their maps overnight to protect the peace of their residents.
Cool Trivia: The “Cardboard Box” Garbage Detective Work
Speaking of trash rules—which is the number one complaint driving this new law—did you know how seriously Japan takes its garbage disposal?

In many Japanese neighborhoods, garbage collection is not anonymous. Trash bags must be translucent so neighbors can see if you mixed plastic with burnable waste. In fact, if a Minpaku guest throws away a cardboard Amazon box into the wrong bin, local “Trash Watchdogs” (often retired neighborhood volunteers) have been known to carefully dismantle the box to find the shipping label, track down the exact Airbnb address, and report the host to the local authorities!
So, if you do manage to snag a home rental on your next trip to Japan, remember: sorting your trash isn’t just a polite suggestion—the neighborhood eyes are watching!
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