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CJ Olive Young Takes Flagship Beauty Festival to Japan

The move marks the retailer’s first large-scale international showcase and positions Japan as the first stop in a broader effort to export Olive Young’s retail model alongside K-beauty brands.

Cezary Kowalski
April 27, 2026 2 min read
CJ Olive Young Japan showcase featuring 55 K-beauty brands

CJ Olive Young has taken its flagship beauty festival abroad for the first time, launching Olive Young Festa Japan 2026 at Makuhari Messe. The company said the event will run alongside KCON Japan 2026 and will feature 55 brands in a format designed to extend its domestic beauty platform into overseas markets.

Japan Showcase Format

Olive Young said the event space recreates elements of its flagship store environment, including retail pathways inspired by Seoul shopping districts such as Myeong-dong and Hongdae. The aim is to give visitors a physical introduction to the products and trends currently performing in the Korean beauty market.

A Ranking Zone will display 36 products across 12 categories selected from the previous year’s Olive Young Awards based on sales data. The company said a separate Select Zone will present curated beauty routines tailored to Japanese consumer needs, with on-site consultants guiding shoppers through skincare and inner beauty recommendations.

Omnichannel Expansion Strategy

The company said the showcase will be linked to its global digital platforms through limited-edition bundles and coupons. That approach suggests the event is designed not only for trial and awareness but also for conversion into longer-term cross-border sales.

For buyers and brands, the significance lies in the format itself. Olive Young is promoting K-beauty in Japan and testing whether its curation, merchandising, and platform model can travel beyond Korea in a more structured way.

Wider International Push

CJ Olive Young said its Festa World Tour will continue in Los Angeles in August. Japan’s position as the first stop indicates that the company sees the market as a priority international showcase for Korean beauty.

Cezary Kowalski

I'm a journalist and editor with a background in trade publishing. I started Dewsia because the Asian beauty market - and Vietnamese skincare in particular - had no dedicated English-language editorial coverage. Not blogs, not influencer content: reporting. Brand histories, market data, regulatory shifts, and ingredient sourcing. Dewsia covers the full scope - news and analysis across Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese beauty - with a focus on the markets and brands that Western media overlooks.

2 min read