Which wine styles stand the biggest chance of being sold in Japan? Exporters expect the highest demand in Japan for white wines, which also pair with Japanese cuisine especially well. Ranking second are red wines, followed by sparkling wines. Exporters also see good business opportunities for high-end sweet wines such as ice wine, port and madeira. There is currently only limited demand for organic wines, rosé wines and no and low-alcohol wines in Japan, according to experts.
In this respect, Japan slightly deviates from the global trend where white wines (63%) and sparkling wines (61%) clearly top the trend list while red wines (28%) rank clearly behind rosé (52%) and no/low wines (42%). (Details to follow in the Special ProWein Business Report “No-Low Wines”). In the experts’ view, Japan therefore continues to be a very good market for red wines, especially also for premium red wines.
The list of top wine types in Chart 3 represents a very robust survey result, which is valid regardless of the origin of the polled exporters. Experts hailed from very different wine-growing nations such as Italy, Spain, France and the New World, followed by the smaller wine-growing countries Germany, Portugal and Austria. Although these countries of origin differ in terms of their focal ranges, the experts completely agreed on the relative ranking of wine types that stand the biggest chance of success in Japan.
There are only minor differences as to the absolute values. Nearly 80% of exporters from Austria and Germany see white wines ranking top in Japan, while this figure stands at 60% in the other wine-growing countries. According to exporters from France and Italy with their strong Champagne, Prosecco and Crémant brands, demand for the sparkling wine category is also slightly higher than average in Japan at 45%.