If you've been sourcing matcha from Japan — or trying to — you've likely noticed something alarming: prices are going up, lead times are getting longer, and some grades are simply unavailable.
This isn't temporary. It's the result of structural changes in Japan's tea industry that have been building for decades. As someone who sources matcha directly from farms in Uji, Nishio, and Kagoshima, I want to give you an honest, boots-on-the-ground analysis of what's happening and what it means for international buyers.
The Numbers: Japan's Tea Industry in Decline
The data paints a stark picture:
| Metric | 2010 | 2020 | 2026 (est.) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tea cultivation area (ha) | 46,800 | 40,200 | 35,500 | -24% |
| Number of tea farming households | 62,000 | 38,000 | ~28,000 | -55% |
| Average farmer age | 63 | 67 | 70+ | — |
| Tencha (matcha raw material) production | 1,900t | 3,700t | ~4,200t | +121% |
| Global matcha demand (est.) | Low | Medium | Very High | +200%+ |
Notice the paradox: tencha production has doubled, but it still can't keep pace with demand that has tripled. And the production gains are being achieved by converting regular green tea fields to tencha — meaning the total tea-growing base is still shrinking.
Five Factors Driving the Matcha Shortage
1. Aging Farmers and No Successors
The average Japanese tea farmer is now over 70 years old. The younger generation is moving to cities for corporate jobs. When a farmer retires without a successor, that land is typically abandoned — not transferred to another farmer. This is an irreversible loss of production capacity.
2. Shrinking Farmland
Japan has lost nearly a quarter of its tea cultivation area in 15 years. Urbanization, solar panel installations, and land conversion are permanent. New tea fields take 5-7 years to reach matcha-grade production, so even if land were replanted today, supply wouldn't increase until the early 2030s.
3. Climate Volatility
Japanese tea is exquisitely sensitive to weather. Recent disruptions include:
- Late spring frost damaging first-harvest buds (the most valuable)
- Extreme summer heat stressing plants and reducing second-harvest quality
- Typhoon season causing physical damage and soil erosion
- Unpredictable rainfall affecting shading schedules and leaf development
4. Exploding Global Demand
The global matcha market has grown at 10-15% annually, driven by:
- Café culture — matcha lattes are now standard menu items worldwide
- Health and wellness trends — matcha positioned as a superfood
- Food manufacturing — matcha flavoring in ice cream, chocolate, snacks, beverages
- Cosmetics industry — matcha in skincare, supplements, beauty products
5. Domestic Japanese Brands Absorbing Supply
Major Japanese food companies (Itoen, Marukome, Nestle Japan) are expanding their own matcha product lines. They have long-standing relationships with farmers and often secure supply through annual contracts before the harvest. Export buyers are competing with well-funded domestic brands for the same limited supply.
Price Trends: What to Expect Going Forward
| Grade | 2023 Avg. | 2025 Avg. | 2026 Forecast | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ceremonial (Uji) | ¥50,000/kg | ¥60,000/kg | ¥65,000-80,000/kg | ↑ Strong |
| Premium (Nishio) | ¥22,000/kg | ¥28,000/kg | ¥30,000-38,000/kg | ↑ Moderate |
| Culinary (Kagoshima) | ¥10,000/kg | ¥14,000/kg | ¥15,000-20,000/kg | ↑ Moderate |
Key insight: Ceremonial-grade matcha from Uji is seeing the steepest increases because supply is the most constrained and demand from luxury markets is surging. Culinary grade is more stable because Kagoshima's longer growing season provides more production flexibility.
What This Means for International Buyers
Short-Term (2026-2027)
- Expect 5-15% annual price increases across all grades
- Lead times may increase from 1-2 weeks to 3-4 weeks for popular grades
- Some specific cultivars (Samidori ceremonial) may have allocation limits
Medium-Term (2027-2030)
- Supply constraints will intensify as more farmers retire
- Buyers with established direct relationships will have supply priority
- Chinese and Korean matcha may fill lower-grade gaps, but Japanese origin will command increasing premiums
How to Protect Your Supply
- Lock in a Japanese supplier NOW — Establishing a relationship today secures your position as supply tightens
- Consider annual contracts — Commit to volume and lock in pricing before each harvest season
- Diversify across regions — Source from multiple regions (Uji, Nishio, Kagoshima) to hedge against regional crop failures
- Secure sample orders first — Test quality now so you can scale quickly when ready
- Work with a partner who has direct farm relationships — Middlemen get cut first when supply is tight
Secure Your Matcha Supply Before Prices Rise Further
We source directly from farms across Japan's three main matcha regions. Start with a sample order and lock in your supply chain while competitive pricing is still available.
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