The Cafe Table Trust Test
If you are sitting in a busy coffee shop in Los Angeles and need to use the restroom, what do you do? You frantically pack up your laptop, grab your smartphone, and carry your heavy bag with you into the tiny bathroom stall. Leaving your valuables completely unattended on an American cafe table is basically an invitation for theft. But if you visit a Starbucks in Tokyo, you will witness a scene that defies global logic. Japanese people regularly leave their expensive iPhones, designer bags, and laptops sitting alone on a table just to “reserve” their seat while they stand in line to order. And miraculously, nobody ever touches them!

The Return of the Lost Wallet
This extreme level of trust extends to the streets. It is a well-known fact among tourists that if you drop your wallet in Japan, there is a remarkably high chance you will get it back with every single dollar bill still inside. Japan operates an incredibly efficient “Koban” (Police Box) system. These tiny neighborhood police stations are everywhere. If a Japanese person finds a dropped wallet, an umbrella, or even a single 500-yen coin, their immediate reflex is to walk to the nearest Koban and turn it in. In Tokyo alone, millions of lost items and millions of dollars in cash are handed in to the police every single year.
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Read Next:Did You Know Japanese People Eat Sharks? (The Hidden Regional Delicacy)

A Culture of Collective Empathy
Why is Japan so honest? It is not just out of a fear of getting caught by the police; it is deeply rooted in the education system and cultural empathy. From a very young age in elementary school, Japanese children are strictly taught that taking something that does not belong to them causes deep distress to the owner. The societal pressure to do the “right thing” for the collective group outweighs the selfish desire for a quick payout. It is a beautiful, stress-free aspect of Japanese society that makes traveling there feel like visiting a futuristic, crime-free utopia.
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