What Japan Thinks

What Japan Thinks: Korean-Japanese Marriage ‘Surge’ Met With Skepticism and Fury

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Source: @YahooNewsTopics on X (2026-05-01)

Overall verdictSkepticism, hostility, and a viral fact-check. A Yahoo News Topics headline announcing a surge in Korean-Japanese marriages ignited a firestorm on X, but the most-liked comment (3,228 likes) was a measured correction: the article describes Korean domestic marriage statistics, not Japanese women abandoning Japanese men. Below that top reply, the thread fractured into hostile camps. DV warnings dominated one flank, with users citing countries that have restricted marriages to Korean nationals and sharing anecdotes of abuse. Nationalists demanded the women renounce their citizenship and move to Korea. A gender war erupted in the middle, with some users mocking Japanese men as undesirable and others calling the women foolish. The smallest but most substantive thread analyzed the economic pressures driving the trend, particularly Korea’s crushing marriage costs.

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
371
Total likes
13,274
Total retweets
1,192
Peak hour
16:00
JST, 2026-05-01

What the tweet was about

A Nishinippon Shimbun article reported via Yahoo News that marriages between Korean men and Japanese women registered in South Korea rose 26.1% in 2025 to 1,483, following a 40.2% increase the year before. The article attributed the trend to cultural proximity through K-pop and dramas, improved Japan-Korea relations under the Yoon administration, and the appeal of sharing marriage costs. Korean tradition expects the groom’s family to provide housing, which in Seoul can run over 34 million yen.

The Yahoo News Topics account shared the story with the headline “Korean Men and Japanese Women: Marriages Surging.” But as the most-liked reply (3,228 likes) quickly noted, the framing was misleading. The data reflected Korean government statistics about marriages registered in Korea. The story was really about Korean men increasingly choosing Japanese women as partners within Korea’s own marriage market, not about Japanese women leaving Japan in droves.

The distinction mattered enormously to the commenters, many of whom read the headline as an attack on Japanese masculinity or a piece of pro-Korean propaganda. The thread became a proxy battlefield for Japan’s ongoing anxieties about gender relations, demographic decline, and cultural influence from South Korea.

Sentiment distribution (engagement-weighted)

Misleading Headline & Media Skepticism
43.3%
DV & Safety Warnings
21.6%
Nationalist Rejection
17.9%
Economics Behind the Trend
7.1%
Gender War Dynamics
6.5%
K-Culture & Cross-Cultural Takes
3.5%
3,228
likes on
top correction
vs.
24%
of all thread
engagement
The single most-liked reply was a calm fact-check explaining that the headline was misleading. It earned nearly a quarter of all likes in the entire thread, far outpacing the hostility below it.

Highest-engagement comments

Misleading Headline & Media Skepticism
@YahooNewsTopics この記事、早合点しないようにご注意を。 見出しだけだと、「日本人女性が日本人男性よりも韓国人男性を選んでいる」というイメージを強く与えますが、 これは韓国国内の結婚事情の記事ですね。 つまり、「韓国国内において、韓国人男性が日本人女性を選ぶ傾向が強まった」という話です。
“A word of caution before you jump to conclusions about this article. The headline gives a strong impression that Japanese women are choosing Korean men over Japanese men, but this is actually an article about marriage trends within South Korea. In other words, the story is that Korean men in Korea are increasingly choosing Japanese women as partners.”
♥ 3,228 RT 395 Views 437,629
Misleading Headline & Media Skepticism
@YahooNewsTopics また、そういうデマで印象操作しよる
“Here they go again, using disinformation to manipulate public impressions.”
♥ 1,965 RT 46 Views 158,838
Nationalist Rejection
@YahooNewsTopics 結婚してはいいけど韓国に嫁いでくれ。 永住権発行された瞬間に離婚とかされると日本が困るからマジで韓国で過ごして欲しい。 本当に頼む。日本人男性をいくら罵倒してもいいからマジで結婚生活は韓国でしてくれ。
“Fine, get married if you want, but please go live in Korea. If they get permanent residency and divorce you the second they have it, Japan is the one that suffers. I’m begging you, please conduct your married life in Korea. You can trash-talk Japanese men all you want, just please live over there.”
♥ 1,315 RT 43 Views 117,940
DV & Safety Warnings
@YahooNewsTopics 韓国人女性からのアドバイス 韓国の男は、日本人に対して差別的なので、絶対にやめたほうがいいと警告しています⚠️ https://t.co/FNUHOfapdY
“Advice from a Korean woman: Korean men are discriminatory toward Japanese people. She is warning everyone to absolutely stay away.”
♥ 778 RT 151 Views 72,897
DV & Safety Warnings
@YahooNewsTopics 禁止されてる国があるレベルなのに… https://t.co/2WLjWbgJf9
“There are countries that have outright banned this…”
♥ 764 RT 152 Views 189,673
DV & Safety Warnings
@YahooNewsTopics 悪いことは言わん。 DV被害にあいたくない女性はやめたほうがいい。
“Take it from me. If you’re a woman who doesn’t want to experience domestic violence, stay away.”
♥ 505 RT 27 Views 39,721
Economics Behind the Trend
@YahooNewsTopics 2014年以降急速に減ってただけで長期で見てそんな大きい数字ではない https://t.co/lnqyWtMV77
“The numbers just dropped sharply after 2014. If you look at the long-term trend, these aren’t particularly large figures.”
♥ 401 RT 52 Views 128,168
Nationalist Rejection
@YahooNewsTopics やめとけ、 どうしても結婚したいなら日本国籍捨ててくださいね、 他民族と結婚なんて不幸にしかならないよ
“Stop. If you absolutely must get married, then give up your Japanese citizenship. Interethnic marriage will only bring unhappiness.”
♥ 401 RT 15 Views 31,334
Economics Behind the Trend
@YahooNewsTopics 韓国での結婚のハードルが高すぎて、日本人女性に逃げてくる韓国人男性。 日本の女性に「尽くしてくれそう」「高望みしなさそう」っていう勝手な幻想を抱いて来日するの、正直気持ち悪い…
“Korean men who can’t clear the impossibly high marriage hurdles in Korea are fleeing to Japanese women. They come to Japan carrying fantasies that Japanese women will be ‘devoted’ and ‘undemanding.’ Honestly, it’s creepy…”
♥ 381 RT 1 Views 24,928
Nationalist Rejection
@YahooNewsTopics 辞めろ 遺伝子レベルで教養無い人間を作るな まだ人口減ってる方がマシまである
“Stop. Don’t create humans with zero education at the genetic level. Population decline is still better than that.”
♥ 378 RT 12 Views 24,535
DV & Safety Warnings
@YahooNewsTopics D V 被害を訴えている女性の声も報道してあげてください😓
“Please also report the voices of women who are speaking out about domestic violence.”
♥ 304 RT 4 Views 24,683
Gender War Dynamics
@YahooNewsTopics 誰がどう見ても負け犬にしか見えないネトウヨが発狂中wwwww https://t.co/RLzrXk50hg
“The online right-wingers, who by any measure look like sore losers, are having a complete meltdown lol”
♥ 217 RT 5 Views 13,241

Activity timeline (JST, 2026-05-01)

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Japan Standard Time (JST = UTC+9). Activity peaked around 16:00 JST.

Key themes in detail

📰 Misleading Headline & Media Skepticism · 43.3% of engagement

The dominant reaction was not about intermarriage itself but about the headline. Dozens of commenters pointed out that the article described Korean domestic marriage statistics, meaning Korean men in Korea were choosing Japanese women as partners, not that Japanese women were flocking to Korean husbands. The most-liked reply (3,228 likes) laid this out clearly, and several others echoed it with varying degrees of frustration.

Beneath the factual corrections sat a deeper layer of media distrust. Users accused Yahoo News and the Nishinippon Shimbun of deliberate “impression manipulation” and pro-Korean bias. Some dismissed the story as outright fake news. Others invoked the Unification Church’s mass wedding history, suggesting the numbers might be inflated by organized religious matchmaking rather than organic romance. The thread’s Community Note being triggered on the original tweet only reinforced the sense that the framing had been deceptive from the start.

⚠️ DV & Safety Warnings · 21.6% of engagement

The second-loudest chorus was a wall of domestic violence warnings. Multiple highly-liked replies cited claims that several countries have restricted or banned marriages to Korean nationals due to DV rates. One commenter (505 likes) simply wrote: “I’m telling you, if you don’t want DV, stay away.” Another shared a story of a friend who was threatened with a knife when she tried to break up with a Korean boyfriend.

A Korean woman’s warning (778 likes) that Korean men are discriminatory toward Japanese people was widely shared. Several commenters pointed to Korean patriarchal culture rooted in Confucianism, warning that the gentleman behavior seen during courtship would vanish after marriage. Others asked why the media wasn’t reporting the voices of Japanese women who had experienced abuse in these marriages. The DV theme cut across political lines: both nationalists and feminists invoked it, though for very different reasons.

🇯🇵 Nationalist Rejection · 17.9% of engagement

A significant faction rejected the marriages on ethnonationalist grounds. These replies ranged from demands that the women give up their Japanese citizenship and live permanently in Korea, to outright racial slurs and dehumanizing language. One highly-liked reply (378 likes) told women not to “create humans with no education at the genetic level.” Others called the women traitors, spies, or sell-outs.

Some commenters questioned whether the “Japanese women” in the statistics were actually ethnic Koreans with Japanese citizenship, a common conspiratorial framing in Japan’s online right. Others demanded that Japan pass laws prohibiting Korean marriages entirely. The most extreme comments called for women who married Korean men to never return to Japan. This faction treated the headline as an existential threat rather than a demographic footnote.

⚔️ Gender War Dynamics · 6.5% of engagement

The thread became a proxy for Japan’s simmering gender war. One camp mocked Japanese men as unattractive, lazy, and unromantic, arguing that Korean men’s willingness to do housework and express affection made them better partners. “Japanese men don’t do housework. Their share of domestic labor is among the lowest in the world,” one commenter wrote. Others taunted: “The obvious losers are losing their minds.”

The opposing camp fired back with misogynistic insults toward the women, calling them stupid, brainwashed, or sexually loose. Some demanded that Japanese men “step up” rather than blame women. The gender war dynamic was notable for how quickly the discussion moved away from the actual Korean-Japanese marriage data and became a referendum on Japanese masculinity, with both sides using the headline as ammunition for pre-existing grievances.

💴 Economics Behind the Trend · 7.1% of engagement

The most measured thread focused on the economic mechanics. Korea’s marriage tradition requires the groom to provide housing, and with Seoul apartment prices soaring past 34 million yen, the financial barrier to marriage has become crushing. Several commenters noted that Japanese women’s willingness to “start small together” made them attractive partners precisely because they did not expect a fully furnished home on day one.

Others drew broader conclusions about Japan’s relative economic decline, pointing out that the weak yen and stagnant wages were making Japanese men less competitive in the international marriage market while Korean economic growth made Korean men more attractive. One commenter observed that the reverse pattern (Japanese men marrying Korean women) had been declining in lockstep with the yen’s fall. A few users ran the actual numbers, noting that 1,483 marriages in a year was statistically tiny and hardly warranted the “surge” framing.

🎶 K-Culture & Cross-Cultural Takes · 3.5% of engagement

A large volume of comments, particularly from lower-engagement accounts and international users, attributed the trend to Korean cultural soft power. K-pop, Korean dramas, and social media were cited repeatedly as the bridge that made cross-cultural romance feel normal for younger generations. Some commenters offered balanced takes, noting that cultural proximity could be both an advantage and a trap if people confused drama characters with real partners.

Personal anecdotes dotted this thread: a friend whose Korean husband cooks on weekends, a commenter who dated a Korean woman in Busan, someone who saw more Japanese-Korean couples in their neighborhood. These were drowned out by the hostile majority but represented the most human responses in the thread. A handful of users simply wished the couples well, noting that marriage is a personal choice regardless of nationality.