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Customer Behavior

How Do You Line Up at Japanese Convenience Stores?

Hello everyone.

Today, I’d like to explain something that can sometimes confuse visitors in Japan:

👉 how lines work at convenience store registers.

Why is it confusing?

Because there is no single universal system.
The way customers line up depends on the store.

Two Common Styles

In most Japanese convenience stores, there are two main systems.

1. Separate Lines for Each Register

In this system, customers line up directly in front of each cashier.

For example:

  • Register 1 → one line
  • Register 2 → another line

This style is still common in smaller stores.

2. One Shared Line

In this system, everyone waits in a single line, and the next customer moves to whichever register becomes available first.

This style is often used in:

  • busy city stores
  • train station stores
  • larger convenience stores

So How Can You Tell?

The easiest way is to look at the floor.

Many Japanese convenience stores place:

👉 footprint stickers

near the registers to show customers where to wait.

Some stores also place signs saying:

👉 “Please line up here.”

What About During Busy Times?

During rush hours, things can become a little confusing.

When stores are crowded, floor markings and signs are sometimes hard to notice.

In that situation:

👉 calmly observe how other customers are moving.

Here is a useful tip:

If one side looks unusually empty while another side has many waiting customers, the crowded side is probably the correct line.

For example:

  • one area has several waiting customers
  • another area near the registers is completely empty

Usually, the crowded side is the actual waiting line.

It may feel confusing at first, but after visiting a few Japanese convenience stores, you will quickly get used to it.

That’s all for today.

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