Japan Cyclist Fine Lookup 2026
自転車 違反・罰金 検索ツール
🚲 Search any violation. See the exact fine.
Blue Ticket system started April 2026. 113 violations. Foreigners too.
🚨 Phone Use = ¥12,000 — Biggest Fine
Even checking Google Maps while moving counts. STOP first. Foreign residents and tourists are NOT exempt. Read full guide →
Try searching in English (phone), Japanese (スマホ), or romaji (sumaho).
Showing 19 of 19 violations
Using phone while ridingNEW 2026
FINE
¥12,000
Talking, texting, looking at maps, or holding phone in hand while moving. STOP first.
Running a red light
FINE
¥6,000
Crossing intersection on red. Even at quiet hours, even small streets.
Riding against traffic
FINE
¥6,000
Cyclists must ride on the LEFT side of the road. Same as cars.
Dangerous overtaking
FINE
¥6,000
Passing without leaving safe gap, or overtaking on the wrong side.
Not yielding at crosswalk
FINE
¥6,000
When pedestrians are waiting at a crosswalk, you MUST stop.
Ignoring stop sign
FINE
¥5,000
止まれ signs apply to bicycles too. Foot must touch the ground.
Riding at night without lights
FINE
¥5,000
Required from sunset to sunrise. ¥800 USB light at Don Quixote solves this forever.
Bike with broken/missing brakes
FINE
¥5,000
Both front and rear brakes required. Fixies (no brakes) = illegal.
Riding while holding umbrellaNEW 2026
FINE
¥5,000
Use a clip-on umbrella holder (¥1,200 at Don Quixote) or wear a raincoat.
Wearing earphones (both ears)NEW 2026
FINE
¥5,000
Both-ear noise-cancelling = banned. Bone conduction or single earpiece OK.
Unnecessary hard braking
FINE
¥5,000
Sudden braking that causes danger to others.
Sudden swerving
FINE
¥5,000
Lane changes without signaling or checking.
Splashing pedestrians (puddles)
FINE
¥5,000
Going through puddles fast and splashing people.
Not staying left when overtaken
FINE
¥5,000
When a vehicle overtakes you, stay to the left edge.
Riding side-by-side (2+ bikes)
FINE
¥3,000
Only allowed on roads marked 並進可 (parallel riding allowed).
Carrying 2nd person (illegal)
FINE
¥3,000
Adult-on-back of mama-chari = ¥3,000. Kids in proper child seats OK.
Riding fast on sidewalk
FINE
¥3,000
Sidewalk allowed for under-13, over-70, signed routes — but SLOW (<10 km/h).
Drinking and cyclingCRIMINAL
UP TO
¥1,000,000
+ prison
NOT a Blue Ticket. CRIMINAL: up to 5 years prison or ¥1,000,000 fine. Even 1 beer = risk.
Drunk cycling causing injuryCRIMINAL
UP TO
¥1,000,000
+ prison
CRIMINAL. Much worse than just drunk. Taxi is ¥3,000. Easy choice.
💡 Yamada Hack: 5 Rules to Never Get Fined
- • Phone in pocket while moving. Stop completely, then check. ¥12,000 is the biggest fine.
- • USB-rechargeable light, ¥800 at Don Quixote. Charge it every Sunday. Done forever.
- • Ride on the LEFT, like cars. Wrong way = ¥6,000.
- • Drink → walk or taxi. Even 1 beer + bike = criminal record, not just ¥3,000 fine.
- • Bone conduction headphones, ¥6,000. Music while riding, but you can hear traffic. Legal.
What to Do If You Get a Ticket
- 1. Stop the bike, get off, be polite. Bow slightly, say "すみません (sumimasen)".
- 2. Show your residence card if asked. Foreigners and tourists are subject to the same fines.
- 3. Listen to the violation. If you don't understand, say "英語でお願いします (English please)".
- 4. Accept the ticket. You'll get a payment slip.
- 5. Pay within 8 days at any bank, post office, or 7-Eleven/FamilyMart/Lawson.
- 6. Keep the receipt for 1 year.
⚠️ If you do NOT pay within 8 days, the Blue Ticket becomes a Red Ticket (criminal proceedings).
❓ FAQ - Japan Cyclist Fines 2026
❓ When did the Blue Ticket system start?
✅ April 1, 2026. Before that, police only gave warnings. Now they give actual fines on the spot.
❓ Do I need a Japanese driver's license to be fined?
✅ No. The Blue Ticket applies to all cyclists 16+. You can be fined even without any Japanese license.
❓ Are tourists fined the same?
✅ Yes. Tourists on rental bikes (LUUP, HelloCycling) get the same fines as residents.
❓ How do I pay the fine?
✅ Take the ticket to any bank, post office, 7-Eleven, FamilyMart, or Lawson. Show the barcode, pay cash, get receipt. Must be done within 8 days.
❓ Can I appeal a Blue Ticket?
✅ Yes, but you must go to court. Most cases lose. Paying is faster and cheaper unless you're 100% sure it was wrong.
❓ What's the difference between Blue Ticket and Red Ticket?
✅ Blue = administrative fine (pay & forget). Red = criminal proceedings (court, possible prison). Drunk cycling, repeat phone use, and unpaid Blue Tickets become Red Tickets.
❓ Is helmet required?
✅ Recommended, not required. No fine for no helmet. But a ¥2,000 helmet has saved many lives.
❓ Are bone conduction headphones legal?
✅ Yes. Bone conduction headphones do NOT cover your ears, so you can hear traffic. Single in-ear is also legal. Only both-ear sealed types are banned.
❓ What if I just check my phone briefly?
✅ Police judgment. Stopped completely with foot on ground = OK. Holding phone while moving even briefly = ¥12,000. Don't risk it.
❓ Can I carry my child?
✅ Yes IF your bike is a registered child-carrying bike (子供乗せ自転車) with proper front/rear seats. Regular bike = ¥3,000 fine.
Japan Cyclist Fines 2026: Full Blue Ticket Guide (青切符制度)
Starting April 1, 2026, Japan introduced the Blue Ticket System (青切符制度, ao-kippu seido) for cyclists. Police now issue on-the-spot fines for 113 different violations. The system applies to everyone aged 16 and over, including Japanese citizens, foreign residents, and tourists on rental bikes (LUUP, HelloCycling).
Most common fines: Using a phone while riding (¥12,000), running a red light (¥6,000), riding against traffic (¥6,000), riding at night without lights (¥5,000), riding with an umbrella (¥5,000), and wearing both-ear earphones (¥5,000). The system covers 113 distinct violations in total. Use the search above to find any specific violation and its exact fine.
Blue Ticket vs Red Ticket: A Blue Ticket is an administrative fine — pay within 8 days at any bank, post office, or convenience store and there's no criminal record. A Red Ticket is for serious violations (drunk cycling, causing accidents, repeat offenses) and goes straight to court with up to 5 years prison or ¥1,000,000 fine. Unpaid Blue Tickets become Red Tickets.
Drunk cycling (飲酒運転): This is NOT a Blue Ticket — it is always criminal (Red Ticket). Even one drink at an izakaya followed by cycling home risks up to 5 years prison or ¥1,000,000 fine. A taxi home is ¥3,000 — much cheaper than a criminal record.
Sidewalk rules: Default rule — roads are for cyclists, sidewalks are for pedestrians. You may ride on the sidewalk when (a) a sign explicitly says 自転車通行可 (cyclists allowed), (b) you are under 13 or over 70, (c) you have a disability, or (d) the road is too dangerous (heavy traffic, no shoulder). When on the sidewalk, ride slowly (under 10 km/h) and give way to pedestrians. Riding fast or scaring pedestrians = ¥3,000 fine.
What to do if police stop you: Stop, get off the bike, be polite. Show your residence card if asked. Accept the ticket. Pay within 8 days at any bank, post office, or convenience store (FamilyMart, 7-Eleven, Lawson all accept). Keep the receipt for 1 year.
For the full breakdown of all 113 violations, the political background, and real stories from foreign residents who got fined,read our full Japan Cyclist Fines 2026 guide. You can also check our complete Bicycle Laws Guide for ownership rules, theft procedures, e-bike rules, and how to dispose of a bike legally.