Live SOL-JPY rate from Phemex spot, with USD-JPY foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. Japan was the first country to legally recognise Bitcoin as a means of payment (2017) and remains one of the most tightly-regulated crypto markets in the world.
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 SOL = ¥13,438 JPY.
SOL-JPY is offered by some FSA-licensed Japanese exchanges (bitFlyer, Coincheck, GMO Coin) but with notably lower liquidity than BTC-JPY or ETH-JPY. Foreign exchanges cannot legally offer JPY rails to Japanese residents, so domestic exchange selection is the constraint. Japan's heavy crypto-tax regime applies identically to SOL — gains are miscellaneous income at progressive rates up to 55%.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain that's become the dominant network for fast, cheap on-chain trading and a meaningful share of stablecoin transfers. SOL-fiat pairs are liquid on the larger exchanges but spreads can be a few basis points wider than BTC's on the same venue. The chain processes thousands of transactions per second at sub-cent fees — a structural difference from ETH that's reflected in the kind of activity SOL holders typically use it for (memecoins, perpetuals, NFT mints).
The yen was introduced in 1871 as part of Japan's Meiji-era modernisation, replacing the complex feudal-era currency system. After WWII the yen was fixed to the dollar at 360:1 under the Bretton Woods agreement; it began floating in 1973 and has since traded between roughly 75 and 160 to the dollar depending on global rate cycles. The Bank of Japan has run the world's most sustained ultra-loose monetary policy since the 1990s, with negative or near-zero short rates for most of the past 25 years. The yen remains the world's third-most-held reserve currency at around 5% of central-bank holdings, prized for its liquidity and the depth of Japanese government-bond markets.
Used in: Japan exclusively. The yen is unusual among major reserve currencies in being used by a single nation, with no formal pegs or dollarisation arrangements with neighbours.
Japan was the first country to legally recognise Bitcoin as a means of payment (2017) and remains one of the most tightly-regulated crypto markets in the world. JPY-pair liquidity is concentrated on domestic exchanges — bitFlyer, Coincheck, GMO Coin — which are FSA-licensed and operate under some of the strictest capital and segregation requirements globally. The weak-yen narrative of recent years has driven steady retail demand for BTC and ETH as a hedge against domestic monetary policy.
All exchanges accessible to Japanese residents must hold a Crypto Asset Exchange Service Provider licence from the Financial Services Agency. Foreign exchanges (Binance, Bybit) cannot legally onboard Japanese residents and have actively geo-blocked. Tax treatment is harsh by global standards: gains are classified as miscellaneous income (zatsushotoku) and taxed at progressive rates up to 55% combined national + local — meaning Japan's tax regime is one of the heaviest in the developed world for active crypto traders. Long-term holding offers no preferential rate. Domestic exchanges integrate with all major Japanese banks via furikomi transfers (typical settlement: minutes during banking hours).
Japan's crypto culture is deeply institutional and rule-bound. The 2017 legal recognition of Bitcoin as a means of payment, combined with the 2014 Mt. Gox collapse and the 2018 Coincheck hack, drove Japan toward what is arguably the strictest exchange-supervision regime in the developed world. The result is a small set of well-capitalised, conservative domestic exchanges and a retail base that treats crypto as a regulated savings vehicle rather than a frontier opportunity. Bitcoin maximalism is muted; XRP enthusiasm is unusually strong owing to SBI Holdings' early investment in Ripple. The 2022-25 yen weakness against the dollar drove a notable structural retail flow into BTC and ETH as monetary hedges — Japanese savers facing negative real interest rates have measurably increased crypto allocations as a portfolio diversifier. The 55% top tax rate keeps active trading subdued; long-only holding is the dominant pattern.
1 SOL is worth ¥13,438 JPY at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-JPY foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading Solana are legal in Japan. Japan's crypto culture is deeply institutional and rule-bound. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using SOL as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for SOL-JPY in Japan is summarised in detail in the section above. All exchanges accessible to Japanese residents must hold a Crypto Asset Exchange Service Provider licence from the Financial Services Agency. Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.