WiT (Web in Travel) will convene its 12th edition of WiT Japan at The Westin Tokyo under the theme: “The Next 20 – Precision, Reinvention & Quiet Power”. 

In 2025, Japan welcomed a record 42.7 million international visitors, a 15.8% increase year-on-year and the first time arrivals surpassed 40 million, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization. Visitor spending also hit a historic ¥9.5 trillion, underscoring tourism’s growing economic weight. 

While arrivals from China dipped late in the year amid geopolitical tensions, growth from South Korea, Taiwan, the United States and South-east Asia continued to surge. A weaker yen – hovering around ¥150 to the US dollar through 2025 – has further strengthened Japan’s value proposition. 

 

The rise of snow & adventure tourism

Among the strongest drivers of growth is the meteoric rise of snow and adventure tourism. 

Japan’s unique climate – cold Siberian winds sweeping across the Sea of Japan – produces some of the lightest, driest powder snow in the world. Resorts such as Niseko and Hakuba have become global winter playgrounds, their slopes amplified by social media and winter sports communities worldwide. 

This “JAPOW effect” has revived regional mountain economies, channeling international visitor spending into local communities and accelerating investment in infrastructure, hospitality and mobility. 

But rapid growth also raises critical questions: 

How can Japan balance global demand with regional sustainability? 

How will inter-regional forces shape the future of tourism in North Asia? 

Can technology solve labour shortages in ageing and shrinking societies? 

What’s the role of robotics – can Japan lead the world in modelling for the future? 

Will AI and automation reshape how destinations operate? 

How can tourism be redistributed beyond hot spots to rural communities? 

What’s the role of travel intermediaries in the age of AI? 

 

A North Asia lens on the future 

These themes will run throughout WiT Japan’s two-day programme. 

Sessions will include “North Asia 2045: Demand, Demographics, Destiny,” where experts will examine ageing populations, shifting outbound flows and geopolitical complexity across Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. 

In “Rewriting Japan’s Travel Playbook,” leaders will confront labour shortages, productivity gaps and digital transformation. As ski towns swell with foreign visitors, the question is no longer growth – but resilience. 

The programme will also move into deeper reflections on Japanese philosophy and design: 

“Product as Poetry” explores how craftsmanship, seasonality and ritual can differentiate experiences in a world of algorithmic scale. 

Founder sessions spotlight long-term resilience over overnight success, reinforcing the theme of “quiet power.” 

 

Intelligence awakens: AI meets Omotenashi 

A key focus will be technology’s accelerating role with global, regional and local OTA leaders gathering to discuss their future amid dynamic changes in traveller behaviour in the North Asian markets.  

 “Why Travel Still Matters in the Age of AI” will explore whether machines can replicate omotenashi – Japan’s deeply human spirit of hospitality – or whether the future lies in a new synthesis of empathy and intelligence. 

“Japan’s snow tourism boom is more than a seasonal story – it’s a signal of how global demand, social influence and currency dynamics can converge to shape a nation’s tourism trajectory,” said Yeoh Siew Hoon, Founder of WiT. 

“As Japan celebrates record arrivals, we must also ask deeper questions. How does Japan harness this moment not just for growth, but for reinvention? How do we blend AI with omotenashi, global scale with regional craft, and speed with quiet power? WiT Japan is where these conversations come together.” 

Book your seat here 

AloJapan.com