top of page

Vending Machine Selling Insect Snacks Creates Buzz In Japan

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • May 3, 2022
  • 2 min read

A vending machine that lets people try "nutritious" insect snacks was unveiled along a national road in this Matsuyama City in western Japan on April 27, Yasutoshi Tsurumi reported for Mainichi Japan.


Photo Insert: The odd meal was described as "crunchy like a snack, with a taste like the head of a shrimp" which was not bitter, were salty, and had a pleasant smell.



The vending machine, which promotes the snacks as "highly nutritious meals of the future," is the first of its kind in western Japan's Shikoku region, according to the firm that introduced it.


A representative commented, "I'd like people to pick them up as a snack for their journey or sightseeing trips." Tomoko Kira, 43, an employee who tried the fried crickets, described them as "crunchy like a snack, with a taste like the head of a shrimp." She said they were not bitter, were salty, and had a pleasant smell.



Nine types of insect snacks, including fried crickets, mole crickets, bamboo worms, diving beetles, locusts, and silkworm pupae, are sold for 1,000 yen (about $8) each.


The project was started by Sanpuku Holdings, based in the city of Matsuyama, which handles real estate and other businesses, with a subsidiary that operates vending machines, as an initiative to contribute to the realization of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

The vending machine uses insects processed by Hamaru Foods, a manufacturer of insect meals in the city of Sasebo, Nagasaki Prefecture.


The vending machine is set up along National Route 11 in the parking lot of a fitness club near a public middle school. A sign reading "insect meals" in large letters attracts the attention of passersby. Transparent jars containing silver bags can be viewed through the window, but the actual contents cannot be seen unless they are bought.


Entrepreneurship: Business woman smiling, working and reading from mobile phone In front of laptop in the financial district.

The new project has the added benefit of allowing old drink vending machines owned by the firm's subsidies to be reused. The annual electricity used to store insect snacks in vending machines is half the amount required to refrigerate or warm drinks. The company has set a target of selling 300 products in one month and will consider setting up more vending machines if sales go well.





Optimize asset flow management and real-time inventory visibility with RFID tracking devices and custom cloud solutions.
Sweetmat disinfection mat

TFD (Facebook Profile) (1).png
TFD (Facebook Profile) (3).png

Register for News Alerts

  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • X
  • YouTube

Thank you for Subscribing

The Financial District®  2023

bottom of page