The FAW TOKYO, Japan’s only dedicated textile‑fabric exhibition, draws designers, distributors, brand owners, importers, and product developers from across the country each year to source fabrics and trims for the upcoming season. As part of the Fashion World Tokyo series, the most recent edition spanned 80,000 square meters, with 1,250 exhibitors hailing from China, South Korea, Hong Kong, Dubai, the United States, Italy, Germany, France, and other markets, attracting a total of 45,000 visitors
The Exhibition Value of FAW TOKYO
- FAW TOKYO, organized by Reed Exhibitions, is held twice annually—spring and autumn—at the Tokyo Big Sight. It has evolved into a leading indicator for Asia’s fashion industry and a strategic gateway for global textile companies seeking to enter the Japanese market. The show encompasses eight specialized sub‑exhibitions covering apparel, fabrics, trims, contract manufacturing, sustainable fashion, digital fashion technologies, and more, serving as a central platform for connecting global textile‑industry resources, showcasing cutting-edge technological advancements, and shaping industry trends.
- The core value of participating lies in its unique ability to connect exhibitors with Japan’s high‑end consumer market and its highly concentrated pool of professional buyers. Japan is a globally recognized premium consumer market that places great emphasis on quality and design, embraces personalization and diversity, and prioritizes sustainable fashion. The country’s ready‑to‑wear retail sector continues to recover, with retail sales rising for 29 consecutive months, making it one of the world’s top markets for mid‑to‑high‑end consumption. At the Spring 2025 edition, over 600 exhibitors from 38 countries and regions participated, with Chinese exhibitors accounting for 40% of the total. A total of 14,599 professional buyers attended, fostering vibrant on‑site business interactions and sealing numerous commercial partnerships.
- The exhibition establishes a one‑stop trade platform spanning the entire textile and apparel value chain. Exhibits range from finished garments—including men’s, women’s, and children’s wear, footwear, luggage, scarves, hats, and socks—to raw materials such as silk, cotton, linen, wool, knitted fabrics, synthetic fibers, and functional textiles, as well as trims like zippers, lace, edging, embroidery, belts, and interlinings. Specialized zones include Sustainable Fashion, Fashion Technology, and the Japan International Sports Fashion Show, comprehensively covering the full industrial ecosystem from raw materials to finished products.
- The event aligns with three major industry trends—sustainable fashion, technological innovation, and supply‑chain collaboration—creating a hub for deep integration among industry, academia, research, and application. The 2025 edition, themed “Innovation, Integration, and Sustainable Development,” featured numerous companies introducing products crafted from eco‑friendly materials such as organic cotton, recycled polyester, and natural dyes. The Vietnamese delegation showcased innovative fabrics made from pineapple fiber, lotus fiber, and coffee fiber, demonstrating diverse pathways toward sustainable fashion alongside traditional Japanese washi paper fibers. Additionally, the newly introduced Japan International Sports Fashion Show highlighted the cross‑disciplinary fusion of sport and fashion, presenting groundbreaking products that seamlessly blend functionality with style.
- For Chinese enterprises, this exhibition serves as a strategic gateway to penetrate the Japanese market, connect with Asian resources, and showcase their innovative capabilities. Due to high domestic production costs in Japan, light‑industrial products such as apparel and footwear largely rely on imports. Leveraging its geographical advantages and superior product quality, China enjoys a competitive edge over lower‑tier manufacturers in Southeast Asia. At the Spring 2025 show, Chinese exhibitors accounted for 40% of the total, with Quanzhou-based enterprises such as Quanzhou Lianxingfa Knitting and Quanzhou Jindalai Technology partnering with Koshi Group to form a “triangular alliance,” offering end‑to‑end services—from garment design to finished‑product manufacturing. Through this platform, Chinese companies establish direct links with Japanese and broader Asia‑Pacific buyers, deeply integrating into the global fashion supply chain.