How to Book a Collab Cafe in Japan

Sayu · 8 Apr 2026 · 7 min read

cafe · reservation · how-to · guide

The Basics

Most anime collab cafes in Japan require advance reservations. Unlike regular restaurants, you can't just walk in — you need to book a time slot, usually 70-90 minutes long. This system exists because demand far exceeds supply, especially for popular series.

Reservation Methods

There are three main reservation systems used by collab cafes:

1. First-Come, First-Served (Online)

The most common system. Reservations open on the cafe's official website (or a partner site) at a specific date and time. You select your date, time slot, and number of guests, then complete the booking.

Key details:
- Reservations typically open 2-3 weeks before the cafe starts
- Popular time slots sell out in minutes
- Most sites are in Japanese only — use Google Translate or a browser auto-translate feature
- You usually need a Japanese phone number for confirmation (some accept email only)

2. Lottery (Chuusen)

For the most popular franchises, cafes use a lottery system instead of first-come-first-served. You submit an application during a window (usually 3-5 days), and winners are randomly selected.

How it works:
1. Application period opens (e.g., March 1-5)
2. You apply for your preferred dates and times
3. Results announced a few days later
4. Winners get a confirmation and payment link
5. Losers can try for remaining seats in a second-round first-come sale

Lottery cafes are common for mega-franchises like Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, and Spy x Family.

3. Lawson Loppi

Some cafes sell reservations through Lawson convenience stores' Loppi terminal system. This is an in-person machine inside Lawson stores across Japan.

To use Loppi:
1. Find a Lawson store with a Loppi terminal
2. Navigate to the event tickets section
3. Search for the cafe name
4. Select your date and time
5. Print the receipt and pay at the register

This method is Japan-only and requires being physically at a Lawson store.

When Do Reservations Open?

Timing varies by cafe, but the pattern is:

4 weeks before: cafe is announced on social media and the official site
2-3 weeks before: reservation details published (dates, times, system)
2 weeks before: reservations open
1 day before: any remaining/cancelled slots released

Follow the cafe's official Twitter/X account for real-time updates. Reservation openings are almost always announced there first.

What If It's Sold Out?

Don't give up. Options:

Cancellation releases — cafes release cancelled slots periodically. Check the booking page daily.

Walk-in (touji-jitsu) — some cafes accept walk-ins for unpopular time slots, usually weekday afternoons. Ask at the door — the worst they can say is no.

Second-period releases — many cafes divide their run into periods (e.g., first half / second half) and open reservations for each period separately.

Buy For Me goods-only — even if you can't eat at the cafe, we can buy the exclusive merchandise for you.

Tips

Book the first day of the cafe. The menu is freshest (literally — ingredients are better stocked), and all goods are available.

Avoid weekends if possible. Weekday afternoon slots are easiest to get.

Screenshot your confirmation. Some cafes only check a confirmation number, not your ID.

Arrive exactly on time. Not early (they won't seat you), not late (your slot time is your slot time).

Be aware of minimum order requirements. Most cafes require you to order at least one food item and one drink per person.

For Overseas Fans

If you don't have a Japanese phone number or can't navigate the Japanese booking sites, your options are:

Ask a friend in Japan to book for you.

Use a concierge service that handles cafe bookings.

Focus on walk-in-friendly cafes — smaller, less popular collaborations often have availability.

And remember: even if you can't visit the cafe, the exclusive goods are available through our Buy For Me service.