
Starting in April 2026, Japan introduced a new “Blue Ticket” (on-the-spot fine) system for bicycle traffic violations.
This means foreign tourists are also subject to fines if they break bicycle traffic rules.
This guide explains:
- The difference between Red Ticket vs Blue Ticket
- Common violations (including newly enforced ones)
- What to do if you receive a ticket
- How to pay the fine
🚦 Red Ticket vs Blue Ticket (Important Difference)
🔴 Red Ticket (Serious Violations)
- Used for dangerous or criminal-level violations
- You may be referred to prosecutors
- Court appearance may be required
- No immediate fine — handled as a legal case
Examples:
- Drunk cycling
- Causing an accident
- Ignoring police instructions
- Extremely dangerous riding
🔵 Blue Ticket (New in April 2026)
- For minor traffic violations
- Similar to car or motorcycle tickets
- You pay a fine and the case ends
- No court if paid on time
This is the new system introduced in 2026.
🚴♂️ Common Bicycle Violations (Tourists Often Do This)
These violations now commonly result in Blue Tickets:
❌ Using a smartphone while riding
- Looking at Google Maps while moving
- Filming videos while riding
❌ Riding through red lights
❌ Riding on the right side of the road
Japan drives on the left. Bicycles must also ride on the left side.
❌ Riding on sidewalks too fast
You must slow down and prioritize pedestrians
❌ Riding without lights at night
❌ Two people on one bicycle
Except for approved child seats
❌ Holding umbrella while riding
❌ Riding side-by-side (parallel riding)
❌ Wearing headphones / earphones
If it prevents hearing surrounding sounds

🆕 Newly Enforced / More Strictly Penalized (Important)
These are being strictly enforced starting 2026:
- Smartphone use while riding
- One-hand riding (umbrella / phone)
- Ignoring stop signs
- Dangerous sidewalk riding
- Earphones reducing awareness
Tourists often do these unknowingly.
💴 Example Fine Amounts (Typical Range)
Blue ticket fines for bicycles typically range:
- Minor violations: around 3,000 – 5,000 yen
- Moderate violations: around 5,000 – 8,000 yen
- Dangerous riding: around 10,000 yen
(Amount depends on violation)
🧾 What To Do If You Receive a Blue Ticket
- Police stops you
- Officer explains the violation
- You receive a Blue Ticket paper
- You can continue riding afterward
- Pay the fine by deadline
No arrest. No court. Just payment.
💳 How to Pay the Fine (Tourists)
You can usually pay:
Option 1: Convenience Store (Recommended)
Take the ticket to:
- 7-Eleven
- Lawson
- FamilyMart
Pay at the cashier.
Option 2: Bank / Post Office
Use the payment slip attached to the ticket.
Option 3: Online (sometimes available)
Depends on region.
⚠️ Important for Tourists
- Passport may be requested
- Hotel address may be written on ticket
- You must pay before leaving Japan
- Unpaid fines may cause issues if stopped again
🚴 Bicycle Rules Tourists Should Remember
✔ Ride on the left side of the road
✔ Stop at red lights & stop signs
✔ No phone while riding
✔ No umbrella riding
✔ Use lights at night
✔ Slow down on sidewalks
✔ No side-by-side riding
Why This Matters
Japan previously had very loose bicycle enforcement, but accidents increased.
The new Blue Ticket system aims to improve safety — and tourists are not exempt.
If you plan to:
- Rent a bicycle
- Cycle around Kyoto
- Ride in Tokyo
- Use bike-sharing
You should know these rules.
Quick Summary
- April 2026: Bicycle Blue Tickets introduced
- Foreign tourists included
- Minor violations → fine only
- Pay at convenience store
- Avoid phone use while riding






