Orders, decorations, and medals of Japan


The Japanese honours system originated in the 1870s, shortly after the Meiji Restoration, and was modeled on European honours system. The first order, the Imperial Order of Meiji was established in 1875, and was later renamed as the Order of the Rising Sun.

Current Orders

As of November 2019, a total of 134,179 orders have been conferred upon living Japanese nationals since 2003, when the honours system was overhauled. These include 19 awards of the Order of the Paulownia Flowers, 30,646 awards of the Order of the Rising Sun and 103,514 awards of the Order of the Sacred Treasure. Of those decorations, the Order of the Sacred Treasure is the most commonly conferred decoration, followed by the Order of the Rising Sun. The Order of the Paulownia Flowers is conferred the most rarely, at only 0.14% of the total number of decorations awarded since 2003.
Per class of decoration, excluding the Order of the Chrysanthemum, the breakdown of decorations awarded by level since 2003 is as follows:
Since 2003, the most commonly conferred decorations by class and level in the top 10 categories as of 2019 have been:
  1. Silver Rays of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  2. Gold and Silver Rays of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  3. Gold Rays with Rosette of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  4. Gold and Silver Rays of the Order of the Rising Sun
  5. Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  6. Gold Rays with Rosette of the Order of the Rising Sun
  7. Silver Rays of the Order of the Rising Sun
  8. Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon of the Order of the Rising Sun
  9. Gold and Silver Star of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  10. Gold and Silver Star of the Order of the Rising Sun
For the year 2018, 8,230 decorations were conferred in the following numbers upon living Japanese: