Hooray! 🎏 Golden Week is Here Again!
Japan is about to celebrate Golden Week, one of the country's biggest holiday periods, from April 29th to May 6th, 2026. Our Japanese team will be joining in the festivities, and we wanted to give you a heads up about what this means for your orders.
⚠️ Possible minor shipping delays
During Golden Week, our Japanese team takes a well-deserved break, so you may experience slight delays in order processing and shipping from our Japan warehouse. Normal operations resume May 8th, 2026. Orders placed before April 26th have the best chance of shipping out before the holiday kicks in, so if you need parts soon, now is the perfect time to grab them.
Parts available at our UAE, Belgium, and Korea warehouses are not affected and ship as usual 🚚
🎉 To make up for any inconvenience, we're offering a 30% discount on top of our already-discounted MSRP prices across the catalog. That means double savings: our everyday wholesale pricing plus an additional Golden Week treat.
Use this code at checkout
Valid April 21 – May 7
🎏 What is Golden Week?
For those curious about the holiday itself, Golden Week is a cluster of four Japanese national holidays that fall close together, creating one of the longest and most beloved vacation periods of the year. Here's what each day is about:
🌅 April 29 — Showa Day (昭和の日)
Originally the birthday of Emperor Showa (Hirohito), who reigned from 1926 to 1989. After his passing, the day was preserved as a time to reflect on the turbulent yet transformative Showa era, which saw Japan rebuild from wartime devastation into a global economic powerhouse. For car enthusiasts, the Showa era is also when Japan's automotive industry truly came of age, giving the world legends like the Toyota 2000GT, the first Skyline GT-R, and the early Mazda rotary engines 🚗
📜 May 3 — Constitution Memorial Day (憲法記念日)
Marks the day in 1947 when Japan's constitution came into effect, transforming the country into a modern democracy with a strong commitment to peace. It's a reflective holiday, often accompanied by newspaper editorials and civic discussions. Many government buildings, open their doors to the public on this day.
🌿 May 4 — Greenery Day (みどりの日)
A day dedicated to appreciating nature and being thankful for the environment. Parks and botanical gardens often offer free admission, and families head outdoors to enjoy the spring weather, which is usually at its most beautiful — cherry blossoms have just passed and fresh green leaves (新緑, shinryoku) fill the landscape. It's a genuinely peaceful holiday.
👶 May 5 — Children's Day (こどもの日)
The most visually iconic day of Golden Week. Families with sons traditionally fly koinobori — huge colorful carp-shaped streamers — outside their homes, symbolizing strength and perseverance (the carp is said to swim upstream against any current). You'll also see samurai helmet displays (kabuto) inside homes, and families eat kashiwa mochi (rice cakes wrapped in oak leaves) and chimaki (sweet rice dumplings). Historically it was "Boys' Day," but today it celebrates the happiness and well-being of all children.
Golden Week the closest thing Japan has to a nationwide reset — a rare moment when the whole country steps back from its famously intense work culture to enjoy family, travel, and spring weather together.
If you have any more questions, don't hesitate to contact us for help.
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