Most Popular Cat Breeds in Japan (2026): Top 20 Based on Official Data

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I got curious about which cats are really popular in Japan, so I asked AI to research the latest official data carefully and help me organize it in a simple way.

Many online rankings feel vague or outdated. For this article, I wanted something clearer: a ranking based on official Japanese data, presented in a way that is easy to read for cat lovers outside Japan too.

If you are curious about cat life in Japan, this list is a good place to start.

About this ranking
This top 20 is based on official Japanese insurance data and organized into clickable cards so readers can move from the ranking page to each breed’s detail page more easily.

Quick Navigation

Top 20 Cat Breeds in Japan

🥇

#1 Mixed-Breed Cats

Share: 28.8%

The most common cat type in Japan.

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🥈

#2 Scottish Fold

Share: 13.6%

One of Japan’s best-known companion cats.

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🥉

#3 Munchkin

Share: 7.8%

A very recognizable cat in Japan’s ranking.

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#4 American Shorthair

Share: 7.6%

A long-established favorite in Japan.

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#5 Norwegian Forest Cat

Share: 4.9%

A large long-haired breed with steady popularity.

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#6 Ragdoll

Share: 4.3%

A popular fluffy companion cat in Japan.

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#7 British Shorthair

Share: 4.3%

A calm-looking breed that continues to rank well.

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#8 Japanese Cat

Share: 3.0%

A category that reflects Japan’s own local cat context.

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#9 Minuet

Share: 2.9%

A newer breed that appears strongly in Japan’s list.

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#10 Siberian

Share: 2.7%

A large and fluffy breed with strong visibility in Japan.

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#11 Russian Blue

Share: 2.6%

Still one of the recognizable favorites in Japan.

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#12 Maine Coon

Share: 2.4%

A big-name breed that remains popular in Japan.

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#13 Bengal

Share: 2.3%

A striking breed that keeps a place in Japan’s top 20.

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#14 Ragamuffin

Share: 1.9%

A fluffy companion breed inside Japan’s top 20.

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#15 Persian (Chinchilla)

Share: 1.4%

A familiar long-haired type in Japanese rankings.

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#16 Exotic Shorthair

Share: 1.1%

A well-known short-haired companion breed.

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#17 Somali

Share: 1.1%

A smaller-share breed that still made the top 20.

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#18 Persian

Share: 1.0%

A classic long-haired breed still visible in Japan.

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#19 American Curl

Share: 1.0%

A distinctive breed that holds a top-20 spot.

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#20 Abyssinian

Share: 0.7%

The final breed in Japan’s top 20 ranking.

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How I Checked the Data

I did not want to use old, vague, or personal blog rankings. This page is based mainly on Anicom’s published ranking table, and I checked the broader trend against iPet’s newer 2026 release. I also used official pet-industry and breed-reference sources to keep the article grounded in real data.

  • Anicom White Paper on Household Animals 2025
  • iPet Insurance 2026 ranking release
  • Japan Pet Food Association 2025 survey index
  • CFA breed reference pages

Related Articles

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What’s the Difference Between Mixed-Breed Cats and “Japanese Cats”?

One interesting point in this ranking is that “Mixed-breed cats” (No.1) and “Japanese cats” (No.8) are listed separately.

At first glance, this can be confusing—because they can look very similar.

The difference is not about appearance.
It’s about how they are classified in official data.


🥇 #1 Mixed-Breed Cats (MIX)

Mixed-breed cats refer to cats with known mixed lineage.

  • Purebred × Purebred
  • Purebred × Unknown background
  • Clearly identified as a “mix”

In English-speaking countries, this is close to:

👉 Mixed breed cats/ Domestic mix


🐱 #8 Japanese Cat

“Japanese Cat” is not a specific breed.
It refers to cats that naturally exist in Japan.

  • No clearly defined lineage
  • Long-established in Japan
  • Often from rescue, stray, or local household origins cats

In English, this is closest to:

👉 Domestic cat (Japan context)


Simple Comparison

CategoryMixed-Breed CatsJapanese Cat
DefinitionMixed lineageCommon cats in Japan
BaseBreed-based catsNaturally occurring
ExampleScottish Fold × MunchkinJapanese tabby, calico
ClassificationMixed breed catsRegional category

Important Note

In real life, these cats can look almost identical.

The difference exists mainly because of
how organizations classify cats in Japan.

FAQ

What is the most popular cat in Japan?

Based on the ranking used here, mixed-breed cats are No. 1 in Japan.

Why are there so many mixed-breed cats in Japan?

One reason is that Japanese rankings often include many cats registered outside a purebred-only framework, so the mixed category stays very large.

Final Thought

Japan’s cat preferences are interesting because they mix local cat culture with modern indoor pet life. If cat trends in your country look different, that makes the comparison even more fun.

What cats are most popular where you live?

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