Japanese Convenience Stores And You

You can pick almost any area to compare Japan with the U.S.: history, culture, sports — or if you like, convenience stores. The modern combini came to Japan in 1974 with the opening of the first Seven-Eleven here, a project which got its start when Japanese businessman Hideo Shimizu took a bus trip across the U.S. looking for the “next big thing” and fell in love with the idea of stores that offered items customers might need to buy on short notice, sold in a uniform way. Now there are dozens of convenience store chains here, including Lawson (“your town’s hot station”), Sunkus (the name is a bizarre merging of “sun” and “thanks”), FamilyMart, MiniStop, Heart-In, and Yamazaki Daily Store.

While most of the foods sold at U.S. convenience stores are pre-packaged and highly processed, many of the offerings in their Japanese counterparts are downright wholesome, with traditional Japanese-style food (bento and onigiri), Western favorites like cucumber and strawberry sandwiches, bread products including sliced bread as well as specialty items like Curry Pan, a good selection of salads, dozens of types of bottled Asian and Western teas, aloe-flavored yogurt, and so on.

Convenience stores are the salvation of the single male since there are enough healthy choices that you can usually eat pretty well there without resorting to that most famous of bachelor foods, instant ramen, although they sell that, too.

You won’t find the iconic Slurpee or Big Gulp at Seven-Elevens in Japan, but I’d give them up any day in exchange for niku-man, a steamed Chinese bun filled with meat that’s great in the winter.

Combini
offer other forms of convenience, too, like a full color copier and digital photograph printer, the ability to pay your electric and phone bills at the cash register, shipping services for sending packages, and increasingly, real banking services, including making cash withdrawals and deposits using the smart ATM.

That first pilot store back in 1974 has really paid off: Seven-Eleven’s parent company Seven&i Holdings purchased its parent company in 2005 and now owns the brand worldwide.

6 Responses to “Japanese Convenience Stores And You”

tornadoes28 Said:

Don’t forget Hotspar.

Amazing that there are so many convenience stores AS WELL as so many vending machines.

Ryo Hoshi Said:

Yeah, but I also found myself wandering part of Tokyo trying to find an early-opening drug store one Sunday due to the one thing I never could find at a conbini…

sputnik Said:

man, seeing my first Lawson store was a total “wtf moment” for me. Seeing of all things a Japanese conbini named Lawson really got me laughing (don’t forget the wild-west style font).

Mr. T Said:

Lawson’s is nice since they feature public restrooms which the 7-11’s don’t. I love the mini-marts. The food is fresh and the quality is good.

MikeDane Said:

Do the Lawson’s stores in Japan sell the
Lawson’s french onion chip dip? that was
always the best. I live right next to
Lawson’s home town (in Akron OH) and I sure
do miss the stores and the dip.

riki Said:

I always go to Fam-de-Mart and it annoys the hell out of me that they advertise eco friendly, but always give me a pile of unwanted plastic junk when-ever I buy something.

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