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How Nori Prices Are Set in Japan: The Auction System Explained

By Karen Hashimoto · May 1, 2026 · 3 min read
How Nori Prices Are Set in Japan: The Auction System Explained
Quick Answer: Japanese nori prices are set through cooperative auctions held 8-10 times per season in Saga and other Ariake Bay prefectures. Buyers (wholesalers, food manufacturers) bid on lots graded by color, thickness, and flavor. 2025-26 season average: Grade 1 nori fetched ¥28-35 per full-size sheet at auction.

How the Nori Auction Works

Unlike most commodity markets, Japanese nori is sold through a cooperative auction system controlled by fishery cooperatives (漁協). The system dates back decades and ensures stable pricing for farmers while providing quality transparency for buyers.

The Process

  1. Harvest & Processing — farmers harvest, wash, dry, and bundle nori
  2. Grading — cooperative inspectors grade each lot on 12+ quality criteria
  3. Sample Distribution — registered buyers receive sample sheets 3-5 days before auction
  4. Bidding — sealed-bid auction; highest bidder wins each lot
  5. Settlement — payment within 30-60 days; cooperative distributes to farmers

Key Auction Markets

LocationPrefectureShare of Japan ProductionSpecialty
Ariake BaySaga / Fukuoka / Kumamoto~45%Premium sushi nori
Ise BayMie / Aichi~15%Crisp, delicate texture
Tokyo BayChiba~8%Traditional Edomae nori
Seto Inland SeaHyogo / Kagawa~10%Thick, robust sheets

Price Trends 2024-2026

Nori prices have been rising steadily due to climate-driven harvest declines. Ariake Bay production dropped 15% from 2023 to 2025 due to warming water temperatures and nutrient depletion. Grade 1 prices rose from ¥25/sheet to ¥32/sheet over the same period.

Auction-Direct Nori Sourcing

WAGYU NINJA has direct relationships with Saga cooperative members. We buy at auction and export with full traceability.

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FAQ

Can foreign buyers participate in nori auctions?

Not directly. Auctions are restricted to registered domestic wholesalers. International buyers need a licensed Japanese intermediary like WAGYU NINJA.

How often are auctions held?

8-10 times per season (November through April). Major auctions in January-February when harvest peaks.

Are auction prices public?

Results are published by cooperatives after each auction, but not widely accessible outside Japan. We share relevant pricing data with our clients.

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Karen Hashimoto

Karen Hashimoto

Curator & Export Compliance Director · WAGYU NINJA

Karen sources directly from Japanese producers and handles export compliance for B2B buyers in 50+ countries. Based in Fukuoka, Japan. @konnichiwa.karen

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