Japanese Beauty Supplements: An Evidence-Based Guide

japanese beauty supplement

In This Article

Key Takeaways

  • Multiple meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials confirm that oral collagen peptides can improve skin hydration and elasticity, with results typically appearing after 8-12 weeks of daily use
  • Japanese collagen formulations use low-molecular-weight processing (under 3,000 Da) for enhanced absorption — a key differentiator from many international supplements
  • Japan's FOSHU and Functional Foods regulatory systems require companies to submit clinical evidence for health claims, exceeding US FDA requirements for dietary supplements
  • Oral ceramide supplements show growing evidence for skin barrier function improvement, with Japanese rice-derived ceramides now registered as functional foods
  • These supplements are generally well-tolerated in clinical trials, but tranexamic acid products should be avoided by those taking blood thinners, and pregnancy safety data is limited across all categories
  • The biggest gap in competing guides: zero scientific citations — this guide includes research from both international journals and Japanese sources published on J-STAGE

If you have been researching beauty supplements, you have probably noticed something interesting: Japan keeps coming up. Japanese collagen drinks, ceramide capsules, placenta jelly sticks, and brightening pills appear in conversations about beauty supplementation more than almost any other country's products. But with so many options from brands like FANCL, Shiseido, DHC, and Meiji, and with claims ranging from "smoother skin in weeks" to "reverse aging from within," it is natural to wonder — what actually works, and what is just marketing?

Here is the challenge: most guides to Japanese beauty supplements read like product catalogs. They list brands and ingredients without explaining the science, citing any research, or addressing safety concerns. That is a problem, because beauty supplements are something you put in your body every day, and you deserve to know what the evidence actually says before you start.

Our team reviewed multiple meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, Japanese government databases, and research published in both English and Japanese to create this guide. We compared how Japan approaches beauty supplementation differently from international markets, examined the clinical evidence behind each major ingredient category, and identified which products have the strongest research backing. Whether you are new to Japanese beauty supplements or looking for deeper evidence before committing, this guide covers what you need to know.

What Makes Japanese Beauty Supplements Different

Japan's approach to beauty supplementation is rooted in a cultural concept called "beauty from within" (内側からの美) — the idea that oral supplements are a core part of the beauty routine, not an optional addition. This philosophy has shaped a market estimated at approximately $79.6 million USD, projected to nearly double by the early 2030s [24].

What sets Japanese formulations apart comes down to three factors:

Low-molecular-weight processing. Japanese manufacturers typically hydrolyze collagen peptides to under 3,000 Daltons (Da), and some formulations go as low as 2,000 Da. This matters because smaller peptides are absorbed more efficiently in the digestive tract. International collagen supplements often use higher molecular weight forms [2].

Combination formulas. Rather than single-ingredient supplements, Japanese beauty products frequently combine collagen with ceramides, hyaluronic acid, CoQ10, or vitamin C. The logic is synergistic — these ingredients support different aspects of skin health simultaneously. Meiji's Amino Collagen Premium, for example, includes collagen peptides alongside hyaluronic acid, ceramide, CoQ10, and glucosamine in a single powder formula.

Diverse delivery formats. While tablets and capsules dominate international markets, Japan offers beauty supplements as ready-to-drink bottles, powder sachets you mix into coffee or yogurt, and even jelly sticks you eat like a snack. These formats are not just about convenience — liquid and powder forms can offer faster absorption than compressed tablets.

The result is a supplement category that feels more integrated into daily life than the "pill-taking" experience common in other markets. But do these formulation differences translate to better results? That depends on the evidence — which varies significantly by ingredient.

How Japan Regulates Beauty Supplements

Understanding Japan's regulatory system helps explain why these products often come with more substantiation than their international counterparts.

Japan operates a two-tier system managed by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW / 厚生労働省) and the Consumer Affairs Agency (CAA / 消費者庁) [21]:

FOSHU (Foods for Specified Health Uses / 特定保健用食品): This is the stricter category. Products must submit human clinical trial data — typically involving 40 or more participants — and undergo pre-market review before making specific health claims like "maintains skin health." The MHLW approves each FOSHU product individually.

Foods with Function Claims (機能性表示食品): Introduced in 2015, this system allows companies to submit scientific evidence (systematic reviews or clinical trials) to a public database managed by the CAA. There is no pre-approval, but the database is transparent — anyone can look up the evidence a company submitted for their claims. Over 1,000 products with submitted evidence are currently listed [22].

Feature Japan (FOSHU / Functional Foods) US (FDA / DSHEA)
Pre-market evidence required Yes (FOSHU) / Submitted (Functional) No
Health claim oversight Government-reviewed or evidence database Structure-function claims without pre-approval
Clinical trial requirement Yes (FOSHU requires human trials, n>40) Not required
Public evidence database Yes (CAA database) No
Post-market surveillance Yes Limited

This does not mean every product is superior. But the regulatory framework creates a higher baseline evidence standard — and for consumers, it means you can actually verify the research behind many of these products.

Collagen Supplements: The Strongest Evidence

Collagen is the most thoroughly researched beauty supplement ingredient in both international and Japanese literature. The evidence here is genuinely strong.

What Oral Collagen Does

When you take hydrolyzed collagen peptides orally, they are broken down in the gut and absorbed into the bloodstream. Research suggests these peptides stimulate fibroblasts — the cells responsible for producing collagen, elastin, and hyaluronic acid in the skin. The key insight is that you are not directly adding collagen to your skin; you are signaling your skin cells to produce more of their own [4].

Skin Hydration and Elasticity: Strong Evidence

Multiple meta-analyses — the highest level of scientific evidence — have examined oral collagen supplementation for skin health:

  • A systematic review of randomized controlled trials using 2.5-10g/day of hydrolyzed collagen found statistically significant improvements in skin hydration, elasticity, and wrinkle reduction [1].
  • A meta-analysis of 26 RCTs confirmed that oral collagen supplements improved skin hydration and elasticity, with marine collagen peptides showing particularly strong effects on elasticity [2].
  • A separate meta-analysis of 40 RCTs involving 2,119 participants found significant skin moisturizing improvements in both Asian participants (SMD=0.49, p<0.0001) and European participants [4].
  • A systematic review published in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology confirmed that oral collagen supplements increase skin elasticity, hydration, and dermal collagen density [3].

It is worth noting one contrasting voice: a meta-analysis published in The American Journal of Medicine analyzed 23 RCTs (1,474 participants) and concluded "no evidence" of benefit, citing issues with multi-ingredient blends, commercial funding biases, and inconsistency across studies [6]. This analysis generated significant debate, with industry and academic critics questioning its methodology — particularly how it handled subgroup analyses. The weight of evidence from five other meta-analyses supports efficacy, but acknowledging this debate is part of honest reporting.

Japanese Collagen Research

Japanese researchers have contributed distinctive findings. Doctoral research from Josai University confirmed that 12 weeks of continuous fish-scale collagen peptide intake comprehensively improved skin hydration, elasticity, and wrinkle suppression [12]. Earlier Japanese studies demonstrated that collagen oral intake increased skin hydration in healthy women [14].

Collagen Dosage Guide Purpose Typical Duration
2.5-5g/day Skin hydration and elasticity 8-12 weeks
5-10g/day Wrinkle reduction 8-12 weeks
Marine (fish) collagen Preferred in Japanese formulations for higher bioavailability Ongoing

Bottom line: Oral collagen supplementation has strong evidence supporting benefits for skin hydration and elasticity, with most studies showing results after 8-12 weeks. Japanese marine collagen formulations using low-molecular-weight processing may offer enhanced absorption.

Ceramide Supplements: Growing Evidence for Skin Barrier Support

Ceramides are lipids that make up about 50% of the skin barrier — the outermost layer that keeps moisture in and irritants out. When ceramide levels decline (as they do with age), skin becomes dry, sensitive, and more prone to damage.

How Oral Ceramides Work

The concept of restoring skin ceramides by eating them might sound unlikely, but research suggests it works. Oral ceramides are absorbed in the gut, transported through the bloodstream, and appear to upregulate ceramide synthesis in the skin's stratum corneum [7].

A comprehensive review published in Experimental Dermatology found that topical and oral administration of ceramides may be equally effective and safe, with clinical trials on rice bran oil-derived ceramides showing skin barrier improvements [7].

A meta-analysis of dietary supplements for skin moisturizing confirmed that oral ceramide supplementation produced statistically significant improvements in randomized controlled trials [4].

Japan's Ceramide Innovation

Japan has pioneered the use of plant-derived ceramides — particularly glucosylceramide from rice and konjac — as oral supplements. This research stream is almost invisible in English-language databases but well-documented on J-STAGE, Japan's academic publishing platform.

Research published on J-STAGE documented how various food-derived glucosylceramides have been developed into functional foods (機能性表示食品) with official health claims for skin hydration, confirming that oral intake of food-derived sphingolipids contributes to improved skin barrier function [15].

This research area has been recognized with the Japan Nutrition and Food Science Society Technology Award for work on food materials that enhance skin function, including ceramide-based functional food development [16].

Japanese plant-derived ceramides are gluten-free and reportedly more stable in supplement form than animal-derived sources. FANCL and other Japanese brands offer ceramide capsules as standalone products or blended with collagen.

Bottom line: Evidence for oral ceramide supplementation is moderate and growing. Japanese research is ahead of international literature in this area, particularly for plant-derived sources. If your primary concern is dry skin or compromised skin barrier, ceramide supplements are worth considering alongside collagen.

Placenta Extract Supplements

Placenta extract supplements are common in Japan but relatively unknown internationally. This ingredient deserves an honest, evidence-based look.

What Placenta Extract Contains

Japanese beauty supplements use purified extracts from porcine (pig) or equine (horse) placenta. These extracts contain amino acids, peptides, growth factors, and minerals. Japanese manufacturers emphasize purification processes that remove hormones while preserving bioactive compounds.

The Clinical Evidence: Moderate

Three published randomized controlled trials support placenta extract for skin health:

A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study on porcine placenta extract in healthy adult women found significant improvements in skin condition, with certified safety and no adverse events [8].

A second RCT tested equine (horse) placental extract and confirmed it was safe and effective for improving facial skin parameters [9].

More recently, a 12-week RCT found porcine placenta peptide to be a safe and effective complementary functional food for skin rejuvenation, noting roots in traditional East Asian medicine [10].

Japanese products typically distinguish horse placenta (馬プラセンタ) as containing higher concentrations of growth factors like EGF (epidermal growth factor) compared to porcine sources.

Bottom line: Placenta extract has moderate evidence from three RCTs — all positive, all reporting no adverse events. However, no meta-analysis or systematic review exists for this specific ingredient. If you are open to trying placenta extract, the clinical data is encouraging but still limited. The concept may feel unusual if you are not familiar with East Asian beauty traditions, but the ingredient itself is well-established in Japan.

Brightening Supplements: Tranexamic Acid, L-Cysteine, and Glutathione

Japan has a well-established market for oral supplements that target hyperpigmentation, melasma, and uneven skin tone. The key ingredients work by inhibiting different steps in melanin production.

Tranexamic Acid

In Japan, tranexamic acid is available as an OTC pharmaceutical product — not a dietary supplement. The Transino line by Daiichi Sankyo is the most well-known, specifically formulated for melasma treatment. This regulatory distinction matters: pharmaceutical products undergo stricter testing than supplements.

Most clinical research on tranexamic acid for skin has focused on topical or injectable forms. Oral formulations are available in Japan, but the evidence base is primarily from dermatological studies rather than supplement-specific trials [18].

Glutathione

Glutathione is the body's primary antioxidant, and oral glutathione supplements have been studied for skin-lightening effects. A comprehensive review published in the Indian Journal of Dermatology examined the evidence and concluded that clinical trials support glutathione's skin-lightening effect with a good safety profile, though questions remain about treatment duration and how long effects last [17].

Oral glutathione has been designated as GRAS (Generally Recognized As Safe) status, and glutathione-based dietary supplements are widely available in Japan as health foods.

L-Cysteine

L-cysteine is an amino acid precursor to glutathione that also directly inhibits melanin synthesis. It is a key ingredient in Japanese brightening products like Hythiol-C. Evidence from in vivo studies supports its mechanism, though dedicated clinical trials specifically for skin brightening remain limited [18].

Brightening Ingredient Mechanism Evidence Level Key Consideration
Tranexamic acid Inhibits plasmin, reducing melanin production Moderate (mostly topical/injectable studies) OTC drug in Japan, not a supplement
Glutathione Antioxidant that shifts melanin production toward lighter pheomelanin Moderate (clinical trial support) GRAS status; duration of effect unclear
L-Cysteine Glutathione precursor + direct melanin inhibition Emerging (in vivo support, limited clinical trials) Often combined with vitamin C
Vitamin C Inhibits tyrosinase enzyme in melanin pathway Moderate (well-established mechanism) Enhances effects of other brightening agents

Bottom line: Japanese brightening supplements have moderate evidence. Glutathione has the most clinical trial support among the supplement-category ingredients. If you are considering brightening products, be aware that Japan's Transino line is classified as a pharmaceutical, which means it has undergone more rigorous testing than typical supplements.

Other Notable Japanese Beauty Ingredients

Several additional ingredients appear frequently in Japanese beauty supplement formulations:

Hyaluronic acid (oral): Japanese research from Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology investigated how oral hyaluronic acid is digested, absorbed, and affects skin tissue [13]. Shiseido includes hyaluronic acid in their collagen products, with formulations targeting 120mg/day for skin hydration benefits. Evidence is moderate but less extensive than collagen.

Multi-ingredient combinations: A recent 12-week RCT tested an oral skincare supplement combining ceramides and hyaluronic acid, finding positive results for skin aging parameters [11]. This supports the Japanese philosophy of combination formulas rather than single-ingredient approaches.

Astaxanthin is a carotenoid antioxidant with growing evidence for skin protection. A systematic review found that astaxanthin supplementation may help protect skin from UV-induced damage and support moisture retention. FUJIFILM — leveraging its expertise in antioxidant chemistry from photographic film technology — produces Japan's leading astaxanthin supplement, which carries a Functional Food designation for UV skin protection at 6mg daily.

CoQ10, equol (soy isoflavone), and royal jelly are also popular in Japanese beauty supplements, though clinical evidence specifically for beauty benefits is more limited. They are best considered as complementary components within multi-ingredient formulations.

How to Choose the Right Japanese Beauty Supplement

With so many options, choosing the right Japanese beauty supplement starts with identifying your primary concern:

Primary Concern Best-Supported Ingredient Evidence Strength Format Options
Skin hydration and elasticity Collagen peptides Strong (multiple meta-analyses) Drink, powder, tablet
Dry skin / barrier function Ceramide Moderate (growing evidence) Capsule, powder blend
Hyperpigmentation / uneven tone Glutathione, L-cysteine, tranexamic acid Moderate Tablet, capsule
Anti-aging (comprehensive) Collagen + ceramide + CoQ10 combination Moderate (combination approach) Powder, drink
Skin rejuvenation Placenta extract Moderate (3 RCTs) Jelly stick, capsule

Reading Japanese Supplement Labels

If you are purchasing directly from Japan, here are the key label elements to look for:

  • 原材料 (Genryō): Ingredients list — check for allergens (fish, soy, shellfish)
  • 服用方法 (Fukuyō Hōhō): Dosage and usage instructions
  • 注意事項 (Chūi Jikō): Warnings and precautions
  • 機能性表示食品: Functional food with submitted evidence to the CAA database
  • 特定保健用食品: FOSHU certification with government-reviewed clinical evidence

A FOSHU or functional food designation means the company has submitted evidence for their health claims to the Japanese government.

Safety Considerations

The supplements covered in this guide have a generally favorable safety profile based on available clinical data, but there are important considerations for each category.

Overall Safety Profile

In a review of 40 randomized controlled trials on dietary supplements for skin health, 28 out of 40 reported zero adverse events [4]. All three placenta extract RCTs reported no adverse events [8]. Oral glutathione holds GRAS status [17].

However, quality varies across the industry. Research has shown that over 40% of tested Japanese health supplement products failed pharmaceutical solubility standards, underscoring the importance of choosing reputable brands [20].

Drug Interactions

  • Tranexamic acid (found in some Japanese OTC pharmaceutical products, not dietary supplements) should be avoided by anyone taking anticoagulants (blood thinners) or hormonal contraceptives, due to its antifibrinolytic mechanism
  • Collagen, ceramide, and placenta extract have no clinically significant drug interactions reported in reviewed literature
  • Anyone on regular medications should consult a healthcare provider before adding supplements

Allergens and Contraindications

  • Fish-derived collagen is contraindicated for people with fish or shellfish allergies
  • Soy-derived ingredients (equol, some ceramide sources) are contraindicated for soy allergies
  • Tranexamic acid should be avoided by individuals with a history of blood clots or thromboembolic conditions

Pregnancy and Nursing

No specific clinical trial data exists for these supplements during pregnancy or nursing. Some product labels recommend avoiding use during pregnancy as a precaution. Tranexamic acid should be avoided during pregnancy based on pharmacological concerns. The clear recommendation: consult your healthcare provider before using any beauty supplement during pregnancy or nursing.

Realistic Expectations

These are not miracle products. Based on clinical data:

  • Collagen: Expect 8-12 weeks of daily use before measurable improvements in skin hydration and elasticity
  • Ceramide: Limited data suggests barrier function improvements may appear within 4-8 weeks
  • Placenta extract: RCTs showed skin improvements at 8-12 weeks
  • Brightening supplements: Timeline data is limited; ongoing consistent use is likely required

These supplements support skin health — they do not replace medical treatment for skin conditions, and they will not reverse significant aging. Set realistic expectations and give any supplement a consistent 8-12 week trial before evaluating results.

Beyond the Labels: What Sets Japanese Beauty Science Apart

Japan's Ceramide Research Is Ahead — But Almost Invisible Internationally

Japanese scientists have developed an entire category of functional foods based on plant-derived ceramides — recognized with national scientific awards and registered in the CAA functional foods database. This work is published on J-STAGE (Japan's academic publishing platform) and barely appears in English-language search results. That means Japanese ceramide supplements are backed by a research tradition that most international consumers never see.

Why this matters: If you are considering ceramide supplements for dry skin or barrier function, Japanese formulations using rice or konjac-derived glucosylceramide have a research lineage that international alternatives typically lack.

The Regulatory Difference Is Worth Understanding

Japan's FOSHU and Functional Foods system requires companies to submit clinical evidence — either pre-market human trials (FOSHU) or publicly available research (Functional Foods) — before making health claims. By contrast, US supplements can make structure-function claims without submitting any evidence. This does not mean every Japanese supplement is better, but it does mean the regulatory floor is higher.

Why this matters: When a product carries a FOSHU seal or functional food designation, there is verifiable evidence behind its claims. This gives you a transparency tool that does not exist in most international supplement markets.

Placenta Is Mainstream in Japan — and the Research Supports Curiosity

Placenta extract as a beauty supplement can seem unusual to international consumers, but in Japan it is a mainstream category with dedicated shelf space at drugstores. What may surprise you is that three published RCTs — all double-blind and placebo-controlled — support its safety and efficacy for skin health. This does not make it a proven powerhouse, but the evidence base is more legitimate than many better-known supplement ingredients internationally.

Why this matters: If you have been dismissing placenta supplements, the clinical data suggests they may deserve a second look — especially horse placenta formulations that Japanese research indicates contain higher concentrations of beneficial growth factors.

Our Recommendations

Shiseido The Collagen Drink

Why We Selected This: From Shiseido, a company with over 150 years in beauty science and one of the few brands that operates its own research laboratories. We chose it for customers seeking a premium Japanese collagen experience because the drink format offers convenience and potentially faster absorption than tablets, and Shiseido's collagen technology uses their patented low-molecular-weight processing.

Shiseido's collagen drink combines marine collagen peptides with supporting beauty ingredients in a ready-to-drink format. As a liquid, it requires no mixing or preparation — you simply drink one bottle daily. Shiseido has invested significantly in collagen peptide research, and the drink format reflects Japan's preference for bioavailable delivery systems.

View Shiseido The Collagen Drink →

View Shiseido The Collagen Drink →

Meiji Amino Collagen Premium

Why We Selected This: Meiji is Japan's largest dairy and nutrition company, with deep expertise in protein science and amino acid research. We chose it for customers who want a comprehensive beauty formula because the Premium version combines collagen peptides with hyaluronic acid, ceramide, CoQ10, and glucosamine — reflecting the Japanese multi-ingredient approach supported by clinical research.

This powder format lets you mix it into coffee, tea, yogurt, or any beverage. The inclusion of ceramide alongside collagen is notable — it addresses both skin hydration (collagen) and skin barrier function (ceramide) in a single product. The powder format also means you get a 28-day supply in a single package, making it more economical for long-term use.

View Meiji Amino Collagen Premium →

View Meiji Amino Collagen Premium →

Placenta Jelly

Why We Selected This: From Earth Corporation, this product represents one of Japan's most unique beauty supplement formats — a jelly stick that combines placenta extract with collagen and vitamin C. We chose it for customers who want to try placenta supplementation in an accessible, everyday format.

The jelly stick format is distinctly Japanese — portable, no water needed, and with a mango flavor that makes daily supplementation genuinely enjoyable. Clinical research on placenta extract, while still building, supports skin rejuvenation benefits in three published RCTs.

View Placenta Jelly →

View Placenta Jelly →

Astaxanthin UV Skin Shield

Why We Selected This: From FUJIFILM Healthcare Laboratory, a company that applied its decades of antioxidant research from photographic film chemistry to health supplements. We chose it for customers who want proactive skin protection because this product carries a Functional Food designation — meaning FUJIFILM submitted clinical evidence to Japan's Consumer Affairs Agency supporting its claim for UV skin protection and moisture maintenance.

At 6mg of astaxanthin per daily dose, this supplement reflects the dosage range used in clinical studies. FUJIFILM's astaxanthin supplement is the top seller in Japan in its category, and the Functional Food certification gives consumers verifiable evidence behind the product's claims.

View Astaxanthin UV Skin Shield →

View Astaxanthin UV Skin Shield →

Product Comparison

Product Format Best For Key Ingredients Regulatory Category
Shiseido The Collagen Drink Liquid (drink) Premium collagen supplementation, convenience Marine collagen peptides Supplement
Meiji Amino Collagen Premium Powder Comprehensive beauty support, value Collagen + ceramide + HA + CoQ10 Supplement
Placenta Jelly Jelly stick Skin rejuvenation, on-the-go use Placenta + collagen + vitamin C Supplement
Astaxanthin UV Skin Shield Capsule UV protection, skin moisture Astaxanthin 6mg Functional Food

Conclusion

Japanese beauty supplements occupy a unique position in the global wellness market — backed by a regulatory system that demands evidence, informed by decades of research into bioavailability, and shaped by a culture that treats oral supplementation for beauty as routine.

The key insights from our review: collagen peptides have the strongest clinical evidence, supported by multiple meta-analyses. Ceramide supplements represent an area where Japanese research leads internationally. Placenta extract — while culturally unfamiliar to many — has legitimate RCT evidence supporting its use. And Japan's FOSHU and Functional Foods systems provide a transparency advantage most international markets lack.

Set realistic expectations: allow 8-12 weeks of consistent use before evaluating results, choose reputable brands with regulatory certifications, and consult a healthcare provider if you have existing conditions or take medications. The evidence suggests these supplements can genuinely support skin health — the key is choosing wisely and staying informed.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a healthcare professional before starting any new health regimen, especially if you have existing health conditions or take medications. Statements about dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Frequently Asked Questions

Based on clinical trial data, these supplements are generally well-tolerated. In a review of 40 RCTs on skin dietary supplements, 28 out of 40 reported zero adverse events. Choose established brands with FOSHU or functional food designations for quality assurance, and consult a healthcare provider if you are on medications.
Most clinical trials show measurable skin improvements after 8-12 weeks of consistent daily use. Some collagen studies showed changes as early as 4-8 weeks, but the majority of significant results appear at 8-12 weeks. Consistency is essential — these are not overnight solutions.
Many of these products are designed to be used alongside others — combination formulas are a hallmark of the Japanese approach. Products like Meiji Amino Collagen Premium already combine collagen with ceramide, hyaluronic acid, and CoQ10. If stacking separate products, check total ingredient doses to avoid unnecessary overlap and consult a healthcare provider if you take medications.
The evidence supports yes, with qualification. Multiple meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials have found that oral collagen peptides significantly improve skin hydration and elasticity. However, one contrasting meta-analysis questions these findings due to methodological concerns. The weight of evidence from the majority of meta-analyses supports meaningful skin benefits.
FOSHU (Foods for Specified Health Uses / 特定保健用食品) is a Japanese government certification system managed by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Products must submit human clinical trial data (typically n>40) and pass pre-market review before making specific health claims. It is more rigorous than the US FDA's requirements for dietary supplements and provides consumers with government-verified health claims.
No. These products are regulated by Japan's MHLW and CAA, not by the US FDA. When sold internationally, they are classified under the importing country's dietary supplement framework — in the US, that means FDA's DSHEA regulations. However, many have more evidence behind their claims than US regulations require, due to Japan's FOSHU and Functional Foods systems.
For clinically supported skin brightening, glutathione has the most evidence among supplement-category ingredients, with clinical trials supporting its safety and skin-lightening effects. Japan's Transino line (Daiichi Sankyo) uses tranexamic acid and L-cysteine but is classified as an OTC pharmaceutical, not a supplement — meaning it has undergone stricter testing.
Look for these key elements: 原材料 (Genryō) lists ingredients, 服用方法 (Fukuyō Hōhō) gives dosage instructions, and 注意事項 (Chūi Jikō) lists warnings. Products marked 機能性表示食品 have submitted evidence to the CAA database, while 特定保健用食品 (FOSHU) have government-reviewed clinical evidence. Check for allergen warnings if you have sensitivities to fish, soy, or shellfish.
No specific clinical trial data exists for these products during pregnancy or nursing. Most recommend consulting a healthcare professional before use during pregnancy. Tranexamic acid products (like Transino) should be avoided during pregnancy based on pharmacological concerns. Consult your healthcare provider before taking any beauty supplement while pregnant or nursing.
The primary differences are in processing and formulation. Japanese collagen supplements typically use low-molecular-weight hydrolysis (under 3,000 Da) for enhanced absorption, often use marine (fish) collagen rather than bovine, and commonly combine collagen with supporting ingredients like ceramide, hyaluronic acid, and CoQ10. Japanese formulations also benefit from stricter regulatory requirements through the FOSHU and Functional Foods systems.
Most Japanese beauty supplements are available over the counter without a prescription. However, some products — like Daiichi Sankyo's Transino EX — are classified as OTC pharmaceuticals in Japan, which places them in a higher regulatory category than dietary supplements. When purchasing from international retailers, these products are typically available without a prescription, but checking the regulatory classification helps you understand the level of evidence and testing behind each product.
Purchase from authorized retailers who source directly from Japanese manufacturers. When buying online, look for sellers who clearly list the manufacturer, provide original Japanese packaging, and offer products within their shelf life. Our curated selection at Naturacare includes products sourced directly from trusted brands like Shiseido, Meiji, Daiichi Sankyo, and Earth Corporation.
  1. Effects of hydrolyzed collagen supplementation on skin aging: a systematic review and meta-analysis
  2. Effects of oral collagen for skin anti-aging: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  3. Oral collagen supplementation: a systematic review of dermatological applications
  4. Effectiveness of dietary supplement for skin moisturizing: a systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs
  5. Exploring the impact of hydrolyzed collagen oral supplementation on skin rejuvenation
  6. Effects of collagen supplements on skin aging: A systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs
  7. Ceramides and skin health: new insights
  8. Effect of porcine placenta extract supplement on skin condition: a randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled study
  9. Effects of oral administration of equine placental extract supplement on facial skin
  10. Porcine Placenta Peptide as a Complementary Functional Food for Skin Rejuvenation: A 12-Week RCT
  11. Efficacy of an Oral Skincare Supplement on Skin Aging: A 12-Week RCT
  12. 魚由来コラーゲンペプチド摂取によるヒト皮膚状態改善作用およびその作用機構解明
  13. 経口摂取ヒアルロン酸の消化・吸収および皮膚・関節障害抑制効果に関する研究
  14. コラーゲン経口摂取が結合組織(骨, 皮膚)におよぼす作用
  15. 食品スフィンゴ脂質の健康機能性
  16. 皮膚機能を高める食品素材の研究とその実用化
  17. Glutathione as a skin whitening agent: Facts, myths, evidence and controversies
  18. The role of systemic treatments for skin lightening
  19. Systemic skin whitening/lightening agents: what is the evidence?

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