How to Pay at a Japanese Convenience Store
At the counter, watch the tray, screen, and staff gesture. Put items down, choose a payment method if prompted, pay, and clear the line.
In Practice ยท Convenience Stores
A konbini flow for paying, ordering, heating, eating, disposing, and using simple services.
In a Japanese convenience store, follow the visible counter cue: tray, screen, staff gesture, microwave, eat-in sign, bin, or service machine.
Reader promise
If you are here now
At the counter, watch the tray, screen, and staff gesture. Put items down, choose a payment method if prompted, pay, and clear the line.
Choose from the case, point if needed, ask for one item, and let staff handle the case.
Look for a microwave/eat-in cue. If the cue is unclear, ask before heating or opening food, and use the store bins only when provided.
Buy or pick the correct cup, match the size/type to the machine button, place the cup, press once, and move aside.
At self-checkout, identify whether staff scans items or you scan them, then choose the payment method only when prompted.
If the store or eat-in area has bins, use the posted sorting cue. If not, keep the trash with you instead of leaving it on a ledge or street.
Treat convenience-store services as sign-led. If the ATM, printer, ticket, shipping, or service machine does not clearly match your need, ask or use a staffed alternative.