The two things that decide whether you’ll be accepted (and what you’ll actually pay) are: (1) ID/eligibility rules at the door, and (2) whether the posted price is “base only” or truly total. This page focuses on reading official wording and avoiding surprise fees or refusals—not on arranging services.
Start here: the 3 tourist “gate checks”
Most tourist problems happen before anything starts: ID/age, communication policy, and payment method are the three “gates” that trigger refusals or surprise costs.
ID gate: assume you may be asked to show a passport (tourists) or residence card (residents), not a phone photo.
Age gate: entry is adult-only and businesses must restrict minors (under 18) from entering as customers.
Communication gate: some venues restrict entry if they can’t confirm rules/fees in a shared language.
Payment gate: some accept cash only; others accept cards but not for every line item.
Policy gate: tattoos, intoxication, and “group behavior” can be refusal triggers depending on house rules.
Gate
Typical requirement
What gets tourists “stuck”
What to confirm (in writing)
ID / status
Passport (tourists) or residence card (residents)
No original ID; only a photocopy/photo; mismatch name vs card; expired passport
Accepted ID types and whether copies are allowed
Age
Adult entry only; minors must not enter
Looking young + no passport; confusion between “18+” and “20+” house wording
Minimum age line on the official page (or posted notice)
Language / communication
Ability to confirm rules, time, and fees clearly
“No English support” becomes a blanket “no foreigners” at the counter
ATM needed; card accepted only for base; surcharge for card; “tax separate” surprise
Cash/card coverage, taxes, and fees (“税込/税別”)
Tip: In Japan, foreign nationals have a legal obligation to carry and present passport/residence ID when requested—so bring the original, not a photo. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
System types (anonymous): what the menu structure means
The “system” is not universal: some places bundle most costs into one course, while others split the bill into base + nomination + options + extensions. Your total changes based on which system you’re walking into.
Look for whether the official page lists one price per time or a base fee plus multiple add-ons.
Watch for nomination wording (e.g., “指名,” “本指名”) that adds a separate line item.
Check extension rules: some allow only “one extension,” others allow multiple, and cutoffs can apply.
Confirm whether “tax included” is written (税込) or not (税別).
If “options” exist, treat them as separate costs unless the page explicitly says “included.”
Table A: System quick-compare (anonymous System A–E)
System type
Time unit
Price signal
Common add-ons
Friction points
Best for (confirmation focus)
System A: “Course-only”
60 / 90 / 120 min
One headline course price, few line items
Nomination, extensions, seasonal surcharges
“What’s included?” ambiguity; tax line
People who want a single written total (tax-in)
System B: Base + course
Base fee + time course
Two prices that must be added
Nomination, options, extensions
Tourists miss the base fee; card rules split
Anyone double-checking “base included?” wording
System C: Nomination-driven
Course time + nomination tiers
Large price jumps between “no nomination / photo / specific”
Photo nomination, specific nomination, “premium” tiers
Tourists confuse nomination fee with course fee
Anyone who needs the exact nomination fee upfront
System D: Option-heavy
Course time + menu of options
Low headline price, many add-on lines
Options, “special” menus, extensions
Hidden-feeling total if you don’t itemize
People who will only proceed with a written itemized total
System E: Time-block / cutoffs
Time blocks with last reception / cutoff rules
Same course priced differently by time-of-day or day-of-week
Tourists miss the “last reception” + surcharge window
Anyone verifying time windows and surcharge rules
Tip: In law, “store-based sex-related business” can include bathhouse private-room services with physical contact—so pricing and notices may follow a formal “posted charges / posted rules” style. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
Total cost: how the math really works
Don’t treat the headline course price as the total until you’ve checked tax, nomination, options, and extensions. Tourists get surprised because different parts of the bill can have different payment rules.
Write your total as a formula: Total = Base + Course + Nomination + Options + Extensions + Fees/Tax.
If the site uses “税別,” assume tax is added unless clearly stated otherwise.
If you see multiple nomination terms, treat each as a separate possible fee (choose one, don’t assume “included”).
If you see “延長,” confirm extension units (e.g., 10/20/30 min) and whether extensions are allowed at all.
If card is accepted, confirm whether it covers everything or only the base/course portion.
Table B: Total price breakdown (where surprises happen)
Base
Time
Extensions
Options
Fees
Where stated
What to confirm
入浴料 / 基本料 / 入店料
コース料金 (60/90/120…)
延長 (per X minutes)
オプション (menu)
指名料 / 本指名料 / 税 / カード手数料
Price page + small-print “system” section
Whether the headline price includes base, nomination, tax, and any time-of-day surcharge
How the price is presented
What tourists assume
What it often actually means
Your fix
“60分 〇〇円” (headline only)
That’s the total
Could exclude base fee, nomination, tax, or options
Find the “system / 料金システム” block and scan for 税込/税別 + 指名/オプション
“基本料+コース” shown separately
Only pay the course
You must add both (and usually nomination/tax)
Add the numbers on paper and confirm “合計” if shown
Tip: If you cannot point to a written “tax included” (税込) line, assume the posted price may be pre-tax (税別) until proven otherwise.
What to confirm on official pages (before you spend)
For tourists, the “official page scan” is about avoiding refusals and surprise totals: you’re looking for ID rules, foreign customer policy, payment coverage, and what the listed price does (and doesn’t) include.
Scan time rules: “最終受付,” “受付終了,” “延長不可,” “延長は○分単位.”
Check tax wording: “税込,” “税別,” and any “サービス料/手数料.”
Table C: What to check on official pages (and why it matters)
Item
Where to find
Typical wording
Why it matters
Minimum age
Rules / 이용안내
18歳未満入店不可 / 20歳以上
Minors must not enter; you may be asked for proof if you look young :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
ID requirement
Rules / FAQ
身分証必須 / パスポート
Tourists should carry passport; officials may request presentation :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Foreigner policy
FAQ / Notes / 利用条件
外国人不可 / 日本語のみ / 通訳同伴
If enforced at the door, you lose time and may face cancellation/entry restrictions
Payment coverage
System / Payment
現金のみ / カード可(一部) / 手数料
Avoid ATM runs; avoid “card OK for base only” surprises
Tax & fees
Small print near prices
税込 / 税別 / 別途
Changes the total immediately; “別途” means “added on top”
Time rules
System / Reception
最終受付 / 受付終了 / 延長不可
Determines whether your intended course is even possible that day
Tip: If the official page doesn’t explicitly say foreigners are accepted (or what language support exists), treat it as uncertain and plan for a refusal at the counter.
What to expect at the counter: questions you must be ready for
Even when a place accepts tourists, the counter interaction is designed to lock in rules, time, and charges quickly. If you can’t confirm these clearly, entry is often refused to avoid disputes.
Be ready to show original ID immediately (passport or residence card).
Be ready to confirm you understand time (course length) and pricing components (nominations/options/extensions).
Be ready to confirm payment method and whether you can pay the total that way.
Expect clear refusal if you appear heavily intoxicated or cannot follow basic rules.
If anything about the total is unclear, it’s normal to stop and not proceed.
Table D: What staff may ask (and what it’s really checking)
Staff may ask about…
What they are confirming
Why it matters for tourists
ID / age
Eligibility and legal compliance (no minors)
If you can’t show proper ID, the interaction ends quickly :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Language ability
Whether rules/fees can be understood without disputes
“No English” sometimes functions as a gate for foreigners
Course and time
What you are buying (time window + cutoff constraints)
Avoid accidental upgrades or impossible courses near closing
Nomination / options
Which add-ons (if any) are being charged
This is where tourists lose track of the total
Payment
Whether you can pay the whole bill under the house rules
Cash/card mismatches cause last-minute cancellation
Tip: If you can’t repeat back the total (base + course + nomination + options + tax) in one sentence, you’re not ready to commit money.
Wording patterns that change price or entry
Tourists don’t usually get trapped by “hidden” fees—they get trapped by unread fees. The same 2–3 Japanese words (“別途,” “税別,” “指名”) can change your total immediately.
別途 means “separately / added on top” (assume extra cost).
税込 (tax included) vs 税別 (tax excluded) changes your real total.
指名 terminology signals nomination fees; confirm whether it’s optional and how much.
最終受付 (last reception) can block longer courses even if the shop is “open.”
現金のみ (cash only) is a hard stop if you’re relying on cards.
Japanese wording
What it usually means
Why tourists misread it
Your “price impact” check
別途
Added fee on top of listed price
Looks like a minor note; actually changes total
List every “別途” item and add it before deciding
税込 / 税別
Tax included / excluded
Tourists assume tax is always included like in some countries
Proceed only when one of these is explicitly stated
指名 / 本指名
Nomination fee (general / specific)
Some tourists think it’s a free preference selection
Confirm nomination fee amount and whether it’s optional :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
最終受付 / 受付終了
Last reception / reception closes
Confused with “closing time”
Check whether your course fits before the cutoff
現金のみ / カード可(一部)
Cash only / card partially accepted
“Card OK” can mean base only
Confirm whether card covers nominations/options/tax too
Common misunderstanding
What it leads to
Simple fix
Assuming the headline course price is the total
Surprise nomination/option/tax at checkout
Force an itemized total (written) before paying anything
Treating “日本語のみ” as “we’ll try”
Door refusal after you’ve already traveled there
Treat it literally: “Japanese only” means no exceptions
Tip: Treat “別途” as a bright red highlight: it’s the fastest way for a listed price to become not-your-total.
Red flags that usually mean “walk away”
If you want to avoid the worst outcomes as a tourist, the rule is simple: don’t follow street touts, and don’t enter anywhere that can’t show clear pricing and rules. Tokyo police explicitly warn about rip-offs and tout-related scams in nightlife districts.
Aggressive street solicitation (“touting”) is a major risk signal—walk away.
No written prices visible (or staff won’t show them) = leave.
Any pressure to hand over a card, or “we’ll explain inside” = leave.
“Special deal for foreigners” without written breakdown = treat as a trap until proven otherwise.
If you feel rushed, you’re being managed into an expensive misunderstanding.
Red flag
Why it’s risky
What you should do
Street tout says “cheap, safe, follow me”
Nightlife rip-offs often start with solicitation; police warnings focus on tout-led overcharging
Decline and choose venues yourself (never follow)
No visible price list / no clear “system” explanation
You can’t verify total cost (base + add-ons + tax)
Leave before money changes hands
“Card OK” but won’t say for what
Card acceptance may be partial; disputes happen at checkout
Proceed only if they state exactly what card covers
You’re offered alcohol or pushed into another place first
Police warn about nightlife scams involving intoxication and exorbitant charges
Stop immediately and leave the situation
Tokyo Metropolitan Police provide English warnings about rip-offs and solicitation in nightlife districts; use those as your baseline risk model. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Tip: If you wouldn’t pay the total right now in cash, you don’t yet know the total—so don’t go further.
Summary & next checks
As a tourist, your safest approach is “proof-first”: only proceed when eligibility, communication policy, and total price are all clear in writing.
Eligibility: you can show original ID and meet the stated age rule.
Policy clarity: foreign customer policy and language support are explicit (not implied).
Total clarity: you can itemize base + course + nomination + options + extension + tax/fees.
Payment clarity: you know whether cash/card covers every line item.
No touts: you are not being guided by street solicitation (a major scam pattern).
10-second scan item
If you can’t verify it…
Risk
Minimum age + ID accepted
Assume refusal at the door
Wasted trip + awkward dispute
Foreign customer/language policy
Assume policy can be enforced against you
Refusal after travel
税込 vs 税別 + “別途” notes
Assume the listed price is not your total
Surprise bill
Nomination/options/extension fees
Assume extra line items exist
Total blows past your expectation
Payment coverage (cash/card)
Assume you’ll need cash
ATM scramble or cancellation
Tip: The “right” choice is the one where nothing depends on guessing—especially tax, nomination, and payment coverage.
FAQ
These are the most common tourist failure points: ID, total price structure, and tout-driven scams.
Do tourists need to carry a passport?
Yes. Japan’s immigration law requires foreign nationals to carry and present their passport (or residence card for mid/long-term residents) when requested by authorities, and police guidance repeats this in plain English. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
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Is the listed course price usually the total?
Not always. Some systems bundle most costs; others add base fees, nomination fees, options, extensions, and tax. Treat “別途,” “税別,” and “指名” as signs the headline price is not the full total.
What’s the minimum age?
You must be an adult. Under the Act on Control and Improvement of Amusement Business, operators must not have persons under 18 enter as customers, and venues commonly enforce adult-only entry policies. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
Can tourists pay by credit card?
It depends on the venue, and sometimes card acceptance is partial (for example, base/course only). Your safest assumption is “cash needed” unless the official page clearly states card coverage and any fees.
Should I trust street touts who offer to “guide” me?
No. Tokyo police explicitly warn about rip-offs tied to nightlife solicitation, including being lured into establishments and charged exorbitant fees. Avoid any tout-led “guidance.” :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
Enchou wa dekimasu ka? Enchou ryoukin wa ikura desu ka?
Can I extend? How much is the extension fee?
SEO + AIO meta
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SEO Title: Soaplands for Tourists in Japan: Costs, ID & Entry Rules
Alternate Titles:
Soaplands in Japan for Foreigners: What to Confirm (ID, Price, Payment)
Japan Soapland Costs Explained: Base Fees, Nominations, Options, Tax
Tourist Checklist for Soaplands in Japan: Entry Rules & Total Price
Meta description (140–160 chars): Tourist-focused guide to Japan soaplands: ID and age rules, foreigner policies, and how to calculate the real total cost without surprises.