You moved to Japan. Your hair changed. This is the complete guide for expats in Tokyo — why the climate affects your hair, what products work, what treatments help, and how to find a salon that can actually handle your hair type.
Why Your Hair Changed After Moving to Japan
Tokyo’s humidity — particularly during the rainy season (June–July) and summer (July–September) — regularly sits at 80–90% relative humidity. Hair that managed fine elsewhere reacts strongly to sustained high atmospheric moisture: frizz, puffiness, loss of shape, and unpredictable behavior that products from home can’t control. Full explanation →
The Most Important Change: Switch to Silicone-Free Shampoo
Most international shampoos contain silicone that builds up on the hair shaft over weeks, gradually making it more porous and reactive to humidity. Switching to a Japanese silicone-free shampoo is the single most impactful product change. Results improve over 4–6 weeks as existing buildup is removed.
SBCP Raw Mineral Shampoo
Most recommended switch for expats · Silicone-free
The Hair Dryer Situation
Japan operates on 100V — most international dryers are designed for 110–240V. Using a home country dryer with a converter works but underperforms. For long-term residents, a Japanese dryer makes a practical difference. For expats who travel internationally, Dyson’s dual-voltage Supersonic works globally. Best hair dryers in Japan 2026 →
Finding a Salon That Works for Your Hair
Most Tokyo salons are technically skilled but trained for Japanese hair. Non-Japanese hair types need a stylist with specific international experience. The indicators: international work history, portfolio showing diverse hair types, and a thorough consultation before booking. How to find the right salon →
Is Japanese Hair Straightening Worth It for Expats?
For expats planning to stay 1+ years who struggle with humidity — yes. Modern acid-based straightening produces soft, natural results and significantly reduces daily management. Most clients go from 40–50 minutes to under 15 minutes in the morning. Complete guide →
By Nationality: Specific Guides
- American expats in Tokyo →
- British expats in Japan →
- Australian expats in Japan →
- South Asian expats in Tokyo →
- Southeast Asian clients →
If you are struggling with frizzy hair in Tokyo,
feel free to send me a photo on Instagram before booking.
📍 Ginza / Yokohama · English · One-on-one · 23 years
🕙 Yokohama: Every Monday + 1st & 3rd Thursday · Tokyo (Ginza): Tue–Sun + 2nd & 4th Thursday · 9:00–18:30

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