Why Do Japanese People Sit on the Toilet Facing Forward?

Younger Japanese people are not always comfortable with the traditional toilets. A Japan Times report in April 2025 said that roughly one in four students was unable to use the traditional style. That flips the stereotype on its head.

There is also something fitting about the way this story lingers. Japan is a country where tradition and modernization often sit side by side. The old squat toilet now exists beside sleek electronic models that have become famous around the world. Modern Japanese toilets are famous for warm-water bidets with adjustable pressure, heated seats, and air dryers. High-tech models offer automatic open/close lids, sensor-activated flushing, odor removal, and music/sound masking. The controls, usually on a side panel or wall, are often in intuitive pictograms.

A 2026 survey found that among people with warm-water bidet seats at home, 53% said they used the rear spray function almost every time, and more than 83% said the warm-water bidet toilet seat was something Japan could be proud of. That is a very different image from the old forward-facing myth.

So the next time someone asks, “Why do Japanese people sit on the toilet facing forward?” the honest answer is: most do not. What outsiders sometimes mistake for a strange national habit is really the legacy of a particular toilet design that is fast getting replaced by more modern designs. People were simply adapting to the bathroom technology available to them. Once that is clear, the mystery becomes much less exotic and much more human.