Shizuoka

Definition:

Shizuoka Prefecture (静岡県), located on Japan’s Pacific coast between Tokyo and Nagoya with the Southern Alps and Mt. Fuji to the north, is the largest tea-producing prefecture in Japan — accounting for approximately 38–42% of total national production volume — and the dominant supplier of sencha and fukamushi sencha to the Japanese domestic market, with a diverse range of growing elevations, microclimates, and sub-regional terroirs producing tea ranging from mass-market commercial blends to internationally awarded single-estate lots. Collectively the region’s teas are marketed as Shizuokacha (静岡茶).


In-Depth Explanation

Scale and geography: Shizuoka encompasses multiple distinct sub-regions, from coastal lowlands (Makinohara plateau, Kakegawa) to high mountain valleys (Kawane, Honyama, Aoyama):

Sub-regionAltitudeCharacterKey product
Makinohara Plateau150–300mFlat plateau; high mechanisation; volume productionSencha, fukamushi
Kakegawa100–250mLow altitude; warm; deep-steamed specialist zoneFukamushi sencha
Kawane (本山)500–1000mRiver valley with steep terraced gardens; manual harvestSpecialty sencha
Honyama400–800mMountain fog; mineral-rich; artisan qualitySpecialty sencha
Shizuoka City area200–500mMid-range; diverse quality; large cooperativesMid-grade blending

Fukamushi specialist zone: Kakegawa, in western Shizuoka, is specifically known for perfecting the fukamushi (deep-steam) processing style — longer steaming times (90–180 seconds vs. standard 30–60s) that break down the leaf more thoroughly, producing a rich, opaque, intensely green brew with less bitterness. The climate and cultivars in Kakegawa are specifically suited to fukamushi.

Cultivar diversity: Shizuoka grows a very wide range of cultivars — yabukita (far and away the most common, ~75% of plantings nationwide), as well as okumidori, yamakai, sayamakaori, and a growing range of experimental varietals from prefectural breeding programs.

Commercial vs. artisan: Shizuoka produces both the commodity sencha found in most Japanese supermarket brand blends (Itoen, Yamamotoyama) and an increasingly recognised artisan sector — single-estate hand-harvested mountain teas winning in competitions and exporting to specialty markets in the USA and Europe.


History

Tea cultivation spread to Shizuoka from Kyoto in the Kamakura period. The Makinohara plateau was developed into large-scale tea gardens in the Meiji era (1868–1912) by former samurai of the Tokugawa shogunate who were displaced by the Meiji Restoration and given land for agricultural settlement. This Meiji-era expansion established Shizuoka as the dominant volume producer. The region now processes roughly 40% of Japan’s tea in its centralised factory cooperatives.


Common Misconceptions

“Shizuoka tea is all commercial quality”: The Kawane and Honyama mountain sub-regions produce artisan-grade teas that compete with Uji and Yame in quality.

“Fukamushi sencha is inferior”: Deep-steam sencha has a different character (rich, opaque, lower bitterness) that many prefer — it is not a lower quality process but a stylistic choice optimised for specific cultivars and consumer preferences.


Related Terms

See Also

Research

Regional production statistics:

Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. (2023). Tea Production Statistics by Prefecture. Tokyo: MAFF. Annual figures showing Shizuoka’s share of national production volume.

Sub-regional terroir comparison:

Takeda, Y., et al. (2018). “Multi-element analysis to characterise the geographical origin of Japanese green tea: Shizuoka sub-regions.” Food Analytical Methods, 11(3), 721–730.