Japan Personal Spending Falls the Least in 5 Months
2026-06-04 23:37
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
Household spending in Japan dropped 0.5% yoy in April 2026, easing from a 2.9% decline in the prior month and beating market expectations for a 1.5% fall.
While this marked the fifth straight month of contraction, it was also the mildest decline in the sequence, suggesting that easing inflationary pressures may be helping to support consumer spending.
Expenditure on food fell at a slower pace, (-0.5% vs -2.9% in March) while spending increasing for transport and communication (7.5% vs -16.8%), housing (7.6% vs 15.3%), furniture and household goods (19.0% vs 5.5%), healthcare (6.7% vs 20.1%), and culture and recreation (6.3% vs 4.6%).
In contrast, outlays weakened further on clothing and footwear (-10.9% vs -2.6%) and utilities (-8.6% vs -3.2%).
Education spending also shrank, down 19.4% after a 2.1% increase in March.
On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, household expenditure rose 1.6%, rebounding from a 1.3% fall in March and exceeding forecasts of a 0.8% increase.