How to be a Baka Gaijin (on Trains)

Being a baka gaijin is not always easy. Being just a baka, or just a gaijin isn’t always that hard, but being both at the same time? Now that’s an achievement. Because I want all of you to achieve your goals and be the best baka gaijin you can be, I’ve put together this short and handy guide for you so you can show everyone in Japan how baka and how gaijin you really are.

Don’t let anyone get you down or tell you otherwise because armed with these tips you’ll be the most baka gaijin Japanese railways have ever seen. Feel free to print them out and take them with you next time you visit Japan. They’ll come in handy, I’m sure.

1. Miss the Last Train

How much more baka can you get than not even getting to board the train in the first place? Many of the most prestigious baka gaijin believe that trains in Japan run 24/7 when in fact, they do not. Many train lines stop running around midnight or 1am. Missing the last train is a great way to show your baka gaijin prowess and all of your friends will be very impressed.

However, if you do end up missing the train (you silly baka gaijin, you) there are a few options. The first and less desirable option is taking a taxi which will most likely end up costing you quite a bit depending on how far you have to travel. Another option is to hang out at an internet cafe and crash there for the night. They’re relatively cheap, have entertainment as well as food and drinks, and quite a few offer amenities such as showers and laundry machines. Not bad, eh?

2. Get Belligerent

If you do make it to the train in time, it’s important to be as violent as possible to show Japan how dominant you are. If you happen to be visiting Tokyo, or another busy area of Japan, chances are it’ll be pretty congested when you get to boarding your train. This is a prime opportunity to take the baka gaijin approach of shoving Japanese women and children to the ground as you make your way to the train (like a man), grumbling and shouting all the way.

Another approach to this is to realize that the congestion is nobody’s fault and it just comes with the territory. Pushing Japanese people into the concrete might not be the best option after all. Perhaps it would be wiser to just be as courteous as possible, try not to elbow anyone in the face, and just look forward to getting off the crowded train and into some fresh air again.

3. Bring Too Much Luggage

Another surefire way to piss people off (including yourself) is to bring too much luggage onto the train. If you just flew into Japan and are all ready to get to your hotel, the best way to make everyone’s day worse is to bring all that luggage onto the train with you. You’ll get in everyone’s way, take up too much room on the train, and if you’re lucky, you might even lose a piece of luggage in the chaos. Baka gaijinity at its finest.

However, if you just can’t handle being this big of a pain in people’s rears, there are other options. If you have lots of luggage, you can always grab a taxi or make use of Japan’s awesome takkyubin services. As I mentioned before, taxis can get kind of expensive, so takkyubin become a much more attractive option. It’s what I used when I was in Japan and it was just fabulous. Takkyubin services will take your luggage from you at the airport and then deliver them to your lodgings either later that same day or some time the next. They’re like, super convenient.

4. Talk on the Phone

Okay, so you’ve boarded the train without cracking any skulls, you decided to leave your luggage in the capable hands of the takkyubin kittens, so now what can you do to exert your baka gaijinity? You talk on your phone. Loudly. On the train, you’ll be likely to see most natives using their phones to communicate by means of text. What fools! Why text when you can blather on about how all your other baka gaijin friends are writing their names in kanji? I mean, the natives probably want to hear your side of the conversation anyway, right? You are very handsome and charming, after all.

Or you could just text if you’re not baka gaijin enough. I mean, not everyone has the conviction to be the best baka gaijin they can be. Don’t worry, I’m not mad. Just disappointed.

5. Board the “Women Only” Car

If none of these other options are doing it for you, the sneakiest way to be a baka gaijin on Japanese trains (if you’re a man) is to get onto the “women only” car. Most of the time these cars are only labeled as such between certain hours of the day so make sure you board it at the most awkward and inconvenient time as possible. No one will question your manliness (or your baka gaijin-ness) ever again. Trust me.

This one is actually pretty hard to pull off since most people will let you know that you’re in line for the women’s only car before you get to board it. The best way to avoid boarding the women’s only car is to pay attention to the signs since most of the time they’ll have a short explanation of the cars in English along with the Japanese. The reason these cars exist is so women can feel safe from gropers on the trains. And remember, kids, groping is a no-no.

Be Proud. Be Baka. Be Gaijin.

And there you have it. Pretty much all you’ll ever need to know about how to act in, on, or around Japanese trains. So next time you’re in Japan, whether it be your first time or your fifty-first time, be all that you can be. Be the best damn baka gaijin this side of The Great Wall of China.** Make me proud.


So tell me, have you ever seen anyone make these faux pas in Japan before? Ever made them yourself? Leave us a story down in the comments!


**Tofugu does not advocate purposefully being a baka gaijin in Japan on a train or otherwise. Please realize that this article was written in good humor. Thank you and have a kawaii day.

  • http://mypandahero.wordpress.com/ Cat

    This is the best thing I’ve ever read. 

  • Sebastian Shimomichi

    This is brilliant. About the Women Only carts…  When I was boarding on a train to go to Wakayama from Tennoji, Osaka, staff on the platform pushed me on the women only cart. I told them I was a guy and they said “Yes but this is the last line. Why would you miss going on it?” The person had a point as the other carts were way to full.

  • Nakura

    All I wanna do is speak their language horribly and say questionable things, but play it off like I have no idea what I’m saying. O:

  • Zac Citron

    GAIJEN SMASH.

  • 1daytokyo

    Best term: Baka gaijinity.

  • Ken Yasumoto-Nicolson

    The station in number 4 is Keihan Moriguchi, which I pass through twice every day. Rather an old photo, as UFJ has been MUFJ for a good number of years!

    http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/守口市駅

  • http://espo.in/ Jonas

    I always take my suitcase with me on the train, but I never arrive at rush hour so there’s plenty of room^^

  • http://twitter.com/tokumeiyamada Tokumei Yamada

    I actually did the luggage one, but… I mean, it was the train to the airport and we were poor. Taxi wasn’t really an option… We DID take a taxi on the way out from the airport, but on the way back we just couldn’t afford it. 

  • http://mkaito.github.com Michishige Kaito

    I generally make my way to the hotel by taxi when travelling. Tends to cost me some, but it hardly makes a big difference in the grand total the trip is going to cost me.

    That being said, I wish people around my neck of the woods valued being quiet on the bus/train/whatever as much as the Japanese do. I generally get to listen to 3-5 different songs played from crappy phone speakers. Sometimes, the bastards will even sing along!

  • http://www.twitter.com/christaran Chris Taran

    A “service” that takes possibly 24 hours to get you your luggage doesn’t exactly sound convenient or particularly smart to use.

  • Guest

    Makes me wonder how such an article written in reverse (for Japanese visiting America) would sound.

    Talk on the phone, preferably while playing music; fight to get on the subway; there’s no safety cars, so ladies, just get a bat and risk it; miss the last train, spend the rest of the night wandering around dangerous neighborhoods in the dark until you find a 24-hour gas station or something, then witness as it gets robbed – and that’s how to blend in.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003532085149 Emily Wilson

    Are there other baka gaijin articles like this? I like them. Very helpful.

  • Tom Payne

    If you take the buses from Narita into Tokyo, there’s substantially more room for luggage (since it’s stored underneath by luggage professionals) rather than trying to wrangle it onto the Narita Express or Keisei Skyliner.  Particularly useful when the bus actually stops right at your hotel.  3000 yen one-way from NRT to the Cerulean Tower in Shibuya, for example.

  • John

    Hopfully I will be writing more of these in the future – they’re pretty fun to put together :3

  • Flayer Marian

    5. Board the “Women Only” CarThat one is the biggest fail

  • John

    When I used it I gave it to them late at night when I got in and they delivered it to my lodgings before lunch the next day. If you want to take your bags with you, busses and taxis are always an option. Just depends on what’s most convenient and how much you’re looking to spend.

  • John

    Haha, cool!

  • John

    You’re welcome :)

  • CelestialSushi

    I’d certainly like to see more articles like this in the future; this was pretty amusing… and informative (especially the part about the luggage service… that’s pretty convenient).  Any chances you’ll be writing some about shopping or eating at a restaurant? (When I go to Japan in the future, I’m worried about making a mistake while shopping, especially if it’s different than shopping in the US)

  • トム ジェンセン

    Just about the most sarcasm on one page I’ve seen in quite a while. O.e

  • http://www.facebook.com/KariOkamoto Carly Rose Chonbubzkevnigpuff

    They have “Women  Only” trains (^o^) wow! Is it only for later hours? Kekeke~ what a privileged XD
    That’s actually really awesome!

  • Empathyart

    I was in Shibuya station waiting for my train to Yokohama. An Obaasan kept looking back at my while we waited in the standing by line for the train to arrive. After five minutes she pointed at the sign on the floor and said “Woman only”. I did not know that existed before then. 

  • GeForceFX

    The end just killed me xDD

  • ですこ

    They must have trusted your butler like nature, Sebastian.

  • ですこ

    This “Baka Gaijins on a Train” is clearly just a rip-off of “Baka Gaijins on a Plane.” This one doesn’t even have Samuel L. Jackson in it!

    Although I suppose it’s good for some people. I guess baka gaijins like them wouldn’t understand. You’re supposed to do it on a mountain.

  • http://twitter.com/WackoMcGoose Kimura

    Cracked.com: Tofugu Edition

  • http://twitter.com/shollum Shollum

    You make sure and have a kawaii day as well!

    The best part will be when you have to listen to that one person that has to talk loudly about things you really don’t want to know about.

  • linguarum

    How much I’m looking to spend? Actually, I’m not looking to spend anything extra for luggage transport. I’ve never done that in any country I’ve visited. Is it baka to try to save some cash for your trip? Some might call that bad manners, but I call it tourist survival. You gotta do what you gotta do. After all, people of all nationalities sometimes try to cut corners. Don’t be hatin’ on me just coz I’m poor. :-)

  • http://twitter.com/gloriapike G Pike

    Hm, when we travel we pack strictly in two mid-sized (bigger than a day pack but smaller than a frame pack) backpacks, and I’ve always felt sort of awkward lugging them on trains in various places but sometimes we just don’t have a choice. We try hard not to get in people’s way, though. We normally take them off and carry them between the knees/at our feet so we don’t bump into people with them…

  • John

    My work here is done.

  • John

    Also depends on how crowded it is, you’ll likely be fine as long as you’re not getting in anyone’s way.

  • John

    Yeah I’m going to try and think up some other good topics to write about in a similar fashion in the future.

  • Jateku

    What a funny post! xD
    Some of my Japanese friends have said that it annoys them when(アメリカ人)talk loudly on trains. 
    I wounder what would happen if you did sneeak on the womens only train…Everyone on the train would judge you.
    ヽ(°▽、°)ノエヘヘ

  • http://zoomingjapan.com/ zoomingjapan

    Funny enough .. most of the things described here I’ve only seen Japanese people doing!
    Like missing the last train, talking on the phone in trains etc.
    I’ve NEVER seen that there were women only in the “women only” trains. NEVER!!

    You forget one important point: fall asleep and miss your station! :D

  • simplyshiny

    I’ll be sure to practice my best baka gaijinity next time I’m in Japan!

  • ですこ

    All we need to do is spread the 5 items out over 3 pages and we’ll be good.

  • ですこ

     Of course there’s no women in the “women only” trains; that’s the plan! They label a train as “women only” to lure in all the perverts, then the women take the normal train. Problem solved!

  • http://zoomingjapan.com/ zoomingjapan

     Mwahahaha, what an evil plan!! Poor perverts! *g*

  • larisajane

    I’m looking forward to the next “How to be Baka Gaijin __________” you should make it a series. I can’t wait to lose my baka gaijinity.

  • Gokuo64

    I laugh at the women only sigh because no hablo ingles!  ;)

  • Momo

    Unfortunately I made the faux pas of bringing too much luggage on the train. I just moved to Japan with my husband who was already living there and he suggested we take the train to our place. It was early morning rush hour and we had 5 big bags between the two of us and I didn’t sleep at all on the flight. Little did I know that we would have to switch trains 4 times and it would take roughly 3 hours to get to the station we needed to. It was so crowded and we where it everyone’s way, I was so embarrassed, but even more exhausted. NEVER AGAIN!!! Black cat it!

  • Justinpskeen

    Lol, I’ve been living in Japan for over half a year now…and I’ve never seen the women only trains…well I’ve seen the stickers they have on the side of the train, but never seen the boarding time where only women get on. That would be a TOTAL fail.   Also, I think you forgot a VERY important one, and that is don’t ride the trains home when your half passed out drunk and about to puke all over the place. Best way to seal your title as the biggest baka gajin in the universe is to puke all over the floors, or worse yet the person next to you.

  • Jkljl

    God, your articles are so painful. I avoid most other foreigners, but I haven’t seen most of this go down. Anyone can miss the train, this is why taxis still exist at this point it seems. Japanese people do it too. And who the hell are you seeing that is destroying Japanese people when their train isn’t on time? Probably people who aren’t bothering to read this page. Some people are assholes, doesn’t matter if you’re foreign or not.
    And I’ll say, coming back from Golden Week, carrying too much luggage applies JUST as much to Japanese as anyone else. Don’t be a dick about it, but you gotta take what you gotta take. I’ve seen a ton of (Japanese) people geared up for hiking like the first pic up there. Thankfully they usually keep their shit under control. But you’re fooling yourself if that’s ad’s aimed primarily at foreign hikers.

  • ですこ

     I haven’t seen it, so it doesn’t exist!

  • awesomemvs

    loved it, laughed all the way and learned how not to be an ass on trains, not just in japan, not just on planet earth, but all over the entire spread of existence. Etiquette is more important in modern life than anyone realizes, seems to me.

  • awesomemvs

    Someone needs an attitude adjustment.

  • awesomemvs

     lock them up on the perverts only train!

  • John

     lol

  • ですこ

     Agree about it being more than just on Earth. I got kicked off of the Galaxy Express 999 for talking on my cell phone.

  • awesomemvs

     try watching this.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IpK0Ad8hD0I

    I assume you’re a Westerner. Sorry if this assumption is wrong, but I’m just assuming it by your dialect. Look, the point of this article was a funny way to describe being more aware of urban and train etiquette procedures in a foreign country. In no way was John being offensive or a “dick”. Also, what’s with “dick” being used derogatorily if it’s a necessary organ in your life that you use to make babies/have pleasurable experiences? I don’t get it. But! I won’t digress.
    You took offense when you assumed the author meant ONLY GAIJIN DO ALL OF THESE THINGS. The author did not mean this. This website is frequented by many demographics of people, among them gaijins, many of which want to travel to Japan and will probably ride a train. The urban culture in Japan is somewhat different from ours (thus this entire site) and thus, this unfamiliarity can result in faux pas like the above.
    This was not an attack on gaijins–just a funny article that meant to inform said people who are unfamiliar with this particular urban culture about how to act. If you’ve ever been to another culture’s territory you’re familiar with “culture shock” and not knowing what to do and wishing you figured it out before you got there.

    I also want to reiterate that this was told from a rather satirical viewpoint. Satire is
    “the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc.” in the dictionary. Satire is LIGHT. Satire uses humor and lighthearted jabs at something to point out what’s up with it. I love satire, write about it, listen to programs about it on the radio–try the News Quiz on BBC Radio 4–but if you took it just like it was a serious article, it would seem offensive. And yes, satire can go too far and be offensive, but in this case, it is not offensive nor derogatory, at least in the general tone of this “wonky” blog.

    I also want to end with an important point. Other cultures are different from yours for any number of reasons. It is important to not take offense when someone asks you to respect that culture’s norms, and also, if someone enters your culture from another culture, to respect their culture and the fact that they might not know everything about how your culture operates. This isn’t something you do as a nice person, as a saint, as a loving person, as someone special. It’s something you do, no matter what, because it’s the rule. It’s not being nice, it’s the rule, like driving under the speed limit and paying your taxes, all right? Respecting other cultures IS A RULE.