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A digital menu at an Osaka ramen shop showing different prices for the same meal
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Osaka Ramen Restaurant English Menu Prices Double for Tourists: Fair Charge or Bias?

3 min readSource

Osaka's Gadoya ramen shop is under fire for charging English speakers double the price of locals. The owner claims it's for 'premium' dishes, but discrimination allegations persist.

The price of your ramen just doubled—but only if you're reading it in English. Gadoya, a ramen shop in Osaka, has sparked a firestorm of controversy after it was revealed they charge foreign tourists nearly twice the price of local diners. While the restaurant claims it's a difference in quality, a recent police intervention involving a disgruntled customer has turned this pricing strategy into a heated debate over discrimination and tourism ethics in Japan.

Osaka Ramen Restaurant English Menu Prices: A Steep Tourist Tax?

The price gap is staggering. According to photos from the restaurant's ordering kiosk, a basic bowl costs 864 yen on the Japanese menu but jumps to 1,500 yen when the screen is switched to English. For more elaborate options, like the extra-large Green Onion Braised Pork Ramen, locals pay 1,455 yen while English speakers are charged 2,700 yen. That's a nearly 100% markup for essentially the same dish.

Owner Yusuke Arai defended the move on his YouTube channel, arguing that the English menu isn't just a translation—it's a "special premium" version. He claimed explaining complex customizations to non-Japanese speakers is "impossible," so the English menu offers fixed, high-end versions to ensure satisfaction. However, critics point out that the topping lists on the Japanese menu often match the photos shown on the expensive English menu, suggesting the "premium" claim might be a facade for higher margins.

Conflict and the 'Japanese First' Policy

The friction reached a breaking point on January 4, when the restaurant called the police following a dispute with a Chinese customer. The customer reportedly complained that the food served didn't match the order, leading to a refusal to pay the tourist rate. In the aftermath, Arai posted on X (formerly Twitter) that the shop is considering barring Chinese customers altogether, stating that "90 percent of problems" involve them and emphasizing a "Japanese people first" philosophy.

While Arai insists this is a "distinction based on experience" rather than discrimination, the legal and social implications are messy. In practice, only foreign tourists end up paying the higher price, creating a two-tiered system that many feel exploits the current weak yen and the influx of global travelers.

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