What Japan Thinks: 40% Have No Golden Week Plans as Inflation Bites

A new survey finds 41.2% of Japanese people have no plans for Golden Week 2026, the highest figure since tracking began. With budgets shrinking and nearly half blaming inflation and the weak yen, the thread became a pressure valve for frustration at rising prices, packed tourist spots, and a government many feel has abandoned its citizens.

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Overall verdict: A Nation Too Broke and Too Tired to Go Anywhere. The response to this survey was less a debate than a collective exhale. Commenters fell into two broad camps: those who genuinely cannot afford to travel anymore, and those who could but refuse to fight the crowds, pay peak-season prices, or compete with foreign tourists for space at their own destinations. The most-liked comment, with 266 likes, turned the lens squarely on the government, arguing that large-scale tax cuts were needed to stimulate demand but that politicians did nothing after the election. Anti-inbound sentiment ran hot, with many commenters saying they avoid travel not because of cost but because Japanese destinations feel overrun by foreign tourists. A quieter but sizable contingent embraced the staycation, describing home time with genuine contentment rather than resignation.
Note: Comments on X (formerly Twitter) in Japan tend to skew toward the political right, though individual threads may lean left depending on the original poster and topic. These comments are not necessarily representative of the Japanese population as a whole.
Comments analyzed
353
Total likes
1,201
Total retweets
67
Peak hour
12:00
JST, 2026-04-16
What the tweet was about

On April 16, 2026, Livedoor News reported the results of a survey showing that 41.2% of Japanese respondents had no plans for Golden Week, Japan’s cluster of national holidays in late April and early May. That figure was up 4.7 percentage points from 2025 and the highest since the survey began in 2023. Average leisure budgets also fell by 1,500 yen. Among those who cut their budgets, 49.2% cited inflation and the weak yen as the main reason.

The survey landed at a sensitive moment. Japan’s consumer price index has been rising steadily, driven by energy costs, food prices, and a yen that has remained weak against the dollar. Meanwhile, inbound tourism continues to boom, with foreign visitor numbers setting records and pushing up hotel and restaurant prices in popular destinations. Many Japanese feel squeezed between stagnant wages and an economy that seems to cater increasingly to wealthier foreign tourists.

Golden Week is traditionally Japan’s biggest domestic travel season, but the thread suggests a growing number of people are opting out, whether by choice or by necessity.

Sentiment distribution (engagement-weighted)
Government Blame
31.1%
Inflation Squeeze
26.3%
Crowd Avoidance
22.6%
Inbound Tourism Resentment
11.2%
Happy Homebody
7.9%
Working Through GW
0.9%
41.2%
have no
GW plans
vs.
¥1,500
budget
decrease
The share of Japanese with no Golden Week plans hit a record 41.2%, while average budgets dropped by 1,500 yen. Nearly half of those who cut spending blamed inflation and the weak yen directly.
Highest-engagement comments
Government Blame
@livedoornews 政府が手を打たないからでしょう 本当なら大規模減税して需要を刺激しないといけなかったけど、選挙後何も動かないで他国支援している
“It’s because the government won’t act. They should have implemented large-scale tax cuts to stimulate demand, but after the election they’ve done nothing except send aid to other countries.”
♥ 266 RT 25 Views 20,361
Inflation Squeeze
@livedoornews 調べなくても当たり前やろw どんだけ物価上がって生活してると思ってるの😅
“You didn’t need a survey to figure this out lol. How much do they think prices have gone up while we’re trying to get by?”
♥ 120 RT 2 Views 3,622
Inbound Tourism Resentment
@livedoornews 高いというより、日本中どこ行っても外人ばっかりでうんざりなんだよ。 家でお茶飲んでるだけで幸せだし😃
“It’s not even about the cost. Everywhere in Japan is packed with foreigners and I’m sick of it. I’m perfectly happy just drinking tea at home.”
♥ 99 RT 3 Views 6,454
Crowd Avoidance
@livedoornews どこも激混み、高速は渋滞、ホテル代も高騰、どこ行けっちゅうねん
“Everywhere’s packed, the highways are gridlocked, hotel prices have skyrocketed. Where are we supposed to go?”
♥ 93 RT 0 Views 7,259
Crowd Avoidance
@livedoornews そりゃそうさ 人が多いし ガソリン代が高騰してるし 出掛けた先事故に遭いました この世からおさらばしましたじゃ 洒落にならない。
“Of course. Too many people, gas prices are through the roof, and if you get in an accident on a trip and die, that’s no joke.”
♥ 65 RT 0 Views 5,960
Government Blame
@livedoornews 物価上げて、給料据え置いて、GWの予算は減る。計算通りの結果を「調査で判明」って言われてもね。驚くの政府だけでしょ。
“Prices go up, wages stay flat, GW budgets shrink. A predictable result being presented as ‘revealed by survey.’ The only ones surprised are the politicians.”
♥ 54 RT 1 Views 4,056
Crowd Avoidance
@livedoornews GWにしか休めない人は旅行に行くかもしれないけど、普通に高いし混んでるし。日をずらす方がいろいろお得な気がする。
“If GW is the only time you can take off, maybe you go on a trip, but honestly it’s expensive and crowded. Shifting to a different week feels like a much better deal.”
♥ 43 RT 2 Views 5,231
Happy Homebody
@livedoornews ゴールデンウィークだからって特別な予定をたてなくてもいいですよ。出かけた先で人混みに疲れたり、食事を頼んでも時間がかかる。家でノンビリしてもいいし、近所で過ごすとかでも全然いいんじゃないでしょうか。一方で海外旅行など普段できないことに時間を使ってもいいし。それぞれ好きなようにする
“There’s no rule that says you need special plans for Golden Week. Tourist spots are packed, restaurants take forever. Relaxing at home or hanging around the neighborhood is totally fine. On the other hand, if you want to do something you normally can’t, like travel abroad, go for it. Everyone should just do what they want.”
♥ 31 RT 1 Views 6,687
Inflation Squeeze
@livedoornews そりゃそうだ。 早めに物価対策してほしいな。
“Well, obviously. I wish they’d hurry up with inflation countermeasures.”
♥ 26 RT 0 Views 5,385
Happy Homebody
@livedoornews 高速道路がクソほど混むのでGWは家でゆっくり。来たる夏に備えて庭の整備にゴキブリ退治に掃除にとやることはたくさんあるけど。そんで近場の銭湯行って子供と楽しむんだ
“The highways are an absolute nightmare during GW so I’m staying home. Plenty to do: prepping the garden for summer, cockroach prevention, cleaning. Then hit the local bathhouse with the kids and have a great time.”
♥ 22 RT 1 Views 5,517
Inflation Squeeze
@livedoornews 1,500円を気にするような人たちが旅行に行っていいわけない
“People who worry about 1,500 yen have no business going on vacation in the first place.”
♥ 20 RT 0 Views 11,886
Inflation Squeeze
@livedoornews 4月から、電気料金も上がり 食品も2千品種値上がりし 独身税まで取られ 旅行費用など1円も在りません。
“Starting April, electricity bills went up, 2,000 food products got price hikes, we’re even getting taxed for being single. There is not a single yen left for travel expenses.”
♥ 17 RT 1
Activity timeline (JST, 2026-04-16)
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Japan Standard Time (JST = UTC+9). Activity peaked around 12:00 JST.
Key themes in detail
💸 Inflation Squeeze (26.3% of engagement)

The single most common thread was straightforward economic pain. Commenters cited rising electricity bills, food prices, gasoline costs, and new tax burdens as reasons they simply cannot afford leisure travel. Several pointed out that real wages remain negative and that the survey results should surprise no one. One commenter listed April’s price increases by category and concluded there was “not a single yen left” for travel.

The tone ranged from resigned to bitter. Many framed Golden Week not as a holiday but as a financial stress test, noting that property taxes and car taxes also come due in May, draining whatever surplus might have existed.

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🏛️ Government Blame (31.1% of engagement)

A significant share of commenters directed their frustration at the national government, particularly the ruling LDP and the Takaichi administration. The most-liked comment argued that the government should have implemented large-scale tax cuts to stimulate demand but instead focused on foreign aid. Others accused politicians of living in a bubble, enjoying overseas trips during GW while citizens cannot afford a day trip.

Calls for tax cuts, gasoline subsidies, and inflation relief appeared throughout the thread, alongside cynicism that nothing would change regardless of which party held power.

🚗 Crowd Avoidance (22.6% of engagement)

For many commenters, the problem was not just money but logistics. GW means gridlocked highways, packed trains, fully booked hotels at double their normal rates, and hour-long waits at restaurants. A recurring refrain was that savvy travelers take paid leave at off-peak times and avoid the GW rush entirely.

Several noted a paradox: despite the survey showing 40% with no plans, trains and tourist spots remain packed during GW every year, suggesting that the 60% who do go out create enough congestion to deter the rest.

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✈️ Inbound Tourism Resentment (11.2% of engagement)

A vocal contingent framed their reluctance to travel in terms of inbound tourism. Comments described Japanese destinations as “overrun by foreigners” and expressed frustration that government policies prioritize foreign visitors, citing examples like free shinkansen tickets for tourists and subsidized travel programs. One commenter wrote: the foreigners eat well, stay at luxury hotels, and get subsidies, while Japanese citizens cannot even afford a day trip.

This theme blends economic frustration with cultural anxiety, reflecting a growing sense among some Japanese that their country’s tourism infrastructure now serves foreign visitors at the expense of domestic ones.

🏠 Happy Homebody (7.9% of engagement)

Not all “no plans” responses were laments. A substantial number of commenters described their at-home Golden Week with genuine enthusiasm: binge-watching Netflix, gaming on PS5, tending the garden, visiting the local bathhouse, or simply sleeping in. For these commenters, staying home during GW is not a concession but a rational, even preferable, choice.

This theme suggests a cultural shift. Post-pandemic habits of staying home have persisted, and for some, the appeal of a quiet staycation now outweighs any FOMO about missing GW travel.

👷 Working Through GW (0.9% of engagement)

A consistent thread came from service workers, healthcare staff, and others for whom Golden Week is just another work week. Their comments carried a mix of resignation and dark humor: “GW? I’ve been working every one for 30 years.” Some noted they prefer working through GW to earn extra money, then taking cheaper, quieter vacations at off-peak times.

These voices served as a reminder that the GW debate itself is a privilege, one that large swaths of the workforce do not share.


What Japan Thinks: 40% Have No Golden Week Plans as Inflation Bites

A new survey finds 41.2% of Japanese people have no plans for Golden Week 2026, the highest figure since tracking began. With budgets shrinking and nearly half blaming inflation and the weak yen, the thread became a pressure valve for frustration at rising prices, packed tourist spots, and a government many feel has abandoned its citizens.

Read More »

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