Today’s exchange rate puts the Australian dollar in a comfortable position against the yen for travelers heading to Japan — and checking it before you leave means you can actually stretch your spending money further. At around ¥113.95 per AUD, the pair is trading near the top of its recent range, giving Australian visitors better purchasing power than they’ve had in months.

Current mid-market rate: 1 AUD = ¥113.95 · 24-hour change: +0.03% · Recent high: 114.16 JPY · Top converter sites: Wise, XE, Revolut · Historical chart available: 12-month on Travelex

Quick snapshot

1Confirmed facts
2What’s unclear
  • Official Bank of Japan spot rate for same-day verification
  • Full 2025–2026 historical timeline beyond 90-day window
  • Exact credit card acceptance rates for foreign visitors in Japan
3Timeline signal
  • Current rate near 90-day high of ¥114.16
  • Rate climbed from Feb 2026 low of ¥106.71
  • OFX recorded ¥113.49 on April 15, 2026
4What’s next
  • AUD/JPY forecast beyond published outlooks is speculative
  • Rate movements depend on RBA and Bank of Japan policy decisions
  • Check live rates on XE or Wise before any conversion
Metric Value Source
Mid-market rate ¥113.95 per AUD Xe (April 27, 2026)
24h change +0.03% Xe
Chart source TradingView Xe / Wise
History 12-month on Travelex Travelex
Reverse rate 1000 JPY via Revolut Revolut
90-day high ¥114.1590 Wise
90-day low ¥106.7130 Wise
Tokyo metro single trip ¥210 SMoney Blog

Is AUD strong against the yen?

At around ¥113.95 per AUD, the Australian dollar is holding near the top of its recent range. The 90-day high of ¥114.16 means the pair is trading within a hair’s breadth of its strongest level in three months, according to Wise’s live rate data. For Australians heading to Japan right now, this is a favorable window compared to the February low of ¥106.71 — roughly a 6.6% difference over that span.

Whether that’s “strong” depends on your baseline. The Japan National Tourism Organization notes that older rates for Australian visitors were closer to ¥74 per AUD, though that reflects a very different monetary era. Comparing against the 2024 annual high of ¥109.10 set on July 12, today’s rate actually represents a meaningful improvement for travel conversion purposes.

Against other major pairs, AUD/JPY sits in the upper tier of Asia-Pacific currency combinations. The Australian dollar’s commodity-linked character typically keeps it bid against the yen, which has faced persistent deflationary pressure and near-zero interest rate policy.

The catch

The mid-market rate — the true interbank rate you see on XE — is not what you’ll receive when converting cash. Providers like Wise and Revolut come closer, but airport kiosks, banks, and credit cards typically add margins of 2–5% on top.

AUD/JPY current strength signals

Multiple converters confirm the AUD/JPY rate hovering in the ¥113–114 band across providers. Xe shows ¥113.95 as of April 27, 2026, while SMoney’s aggregated rate reports the best available at ¥113.936 for the same date. OFX’s last recorded live rate on April 15 came in at ¥113.494792, suggesting relatively stable movement over that two-week window. The consistency across sources indicates the rate isn’t experiencing anomalous volatility right now.

Comparison to other currencies

For context, USD/JPY was trading around 143–145 yen per dollar in the same period (a significantly lower purchasing power per currency unit). EUR/JPY hovered near 156–158, while GBP/JPY held around 185–188. The Australian dollar’s ¥113.95 places it competitively against these benchmarks, meaning your AUD goes further in yen terms than it would against most other major currencies.

Bottom line: The implication: Australian travelers enjoy better relative purchasing power in Japan than holders of several other major currencies. This is partly structural (AUD’s commodity tailwind) and partly cyclical (yen weakness persisting as the Bank of Japan maintains its gradualist policy normalization).

How much is $100 Australian in Japan?

At the current mid-market rate of ¥113.95, 100 AUD converts to approximately ¥11,395 in raw exchange rate terms. That’s the theoretical figure — the number you’ll actually receive depends heavily on which provider you use for the conversion.

The difference isn’t trivial. Using Wise (which typically applies the mid-market rate with a small margin), 100 AUD converts to around ¥11,060. At an airport kiosk applying a 4% spread, that same 100 AUD might yield only ¥10,937. The gap between the best and worst scenarios for a A$1,000 transfer: roughly ¥4,580 — enough to cover three days of mid-range meals in Tokyo.

Why this matters

Choosing Wise over a bank for a ¥100,000 transfer (roughly AUD 877 at current rates) can save you AUD 40–80 in unnecessary fees and poor exchange, according to SMoney’s exchange rate analysis. That’s money that stays in your travel budget.

Live 100 AUD to JPY conversion

Here’s how the conversion shakes out across major providers:

  • Xe mid-market: ¥11,395.00
  • Wise AU rate: ¥11,060.00 (with minimal margin)
  • Revolut rate: ¥11,386.17
  • SMoney best rate: ¥11,393.60
  • Bank/teller average: ¥10,950–11,050 (with markup)

The Tokyo metro charges ¥210 per single trip, according to SMoney’s Japan travel budget data. At the mid-market rate, 100 AUD covers roughly 54 metro rides — enough for a week’s daily commute, or about 9 days of round-trip travel assuming two rides per day.

Fees and real rates from providers

Wise has built its reputation on transparency: the platform shows the mid-market rate and charges a flat percentage fee (typically 0.5–0.7% for AUD-JPY). Revolut similarly advertises no hidden fees, though its promotional rates via Remitly occasionally offer ¥114.23 per AUD for first-time transfers. That’s actually above the mid-market rate in some cases — a marketing play worth knowing about if you’re comparing introductory offers.

Banks and credit unions tend to be the worst options for international currency conversion, often applying spreads of 3–5% above mid-market. The Japan National Tourism Organization guide specifically advises Australian visitors to avoid card charges denominated in AUD and instead opt to pay in yen to sidestep poor dynamic currency conversion (DCC) rates.

How much is 1000 Japanese yen in AUD dollars?

Running the reverse calculation, 1,000 JPY converts to roughly AUD 8.77 at the mid-market rate of ¥113.95 per dollar. Using Revolut’s rate of ¥113.8617, 1,000 JPY equals approximately AUD 8.78 — a negligible difference that reflects the tight spreads on major digital platforms.

At first glance, 1,000 yen seems like a small amount. In practical Japan terms, though, it buys a canned coffee from a vending machine, a small convenience store snack, or a single metro stop in central Tokyo. Understanding this scale helps when you’re mentally converting prices during shopping or dining.

Reverse conversion 1000 JPY to AUD

The reverse rate matters most when you’re returning home with leftover yen and want to know what you’re actually getting back. Most currency exchange services in Japan (and Australian banks) will offer a poor rate for buying back AUD, often 3–5% below mid-market. If you have ¥5,000 in coins and notes at the end of your trip, converting back could cost you AUD 15–25 in value lost to spread.

A practical tip from the Japan National Tourism Organization: spend as much of your yen as possible before leaving, or exchange AUD for yen only in amounts you realistically expect to spend. Carrying ¥50,000 home and losing 4% on conversion burns AUD 17–35 in value.

Revolut rates

Revolut’s currency exchange feature runs on the same mid-market principles as Wise, though the platform has faced occasional scrutiny over the exact rates applied during volatile market periods. The Revolut converter page shows 1 AUD = 113.8617 JPY, which is within 0.08% of Xe and SMoney’s figures — tight enough that the practical difference for most travelers is negligible.

One caveat: Revolut’s rate table has occasionally shown historical data (like a reported 1 AUD = 93.00 JPY figure) that appears outdated or incorrectly displayed. Always verify against the live rate at the time of transaction, not cached or historical figures.

Is AUD expected to rise or fall?

Exchange rate forecasting is notoriously unreliable, and AUD/JPY is no exception. Business-focused currency analysts and platforms like TradingView publish AUD/JPY charts and commentary, but these represent opinions backed by models — not guarantees. What we can say with confidence from current data: the pair has trended upward since the February 2026 low of ¥106.71, and is currently trading near the top of its 90-day range.

The direction from here depends on several macro factors: Reserve Bank of Australia interest rate decisions, Bank of Japan policy normalization speed, commodity price movements (especially iron ore, Australia’s largest export), and risk sentiment in global markets.

AUD forecast 2026

No published forecast available from verified sources reaches far enough into 2026 to cite with confidence. Analyst consensus on AUD/JPY typically revolves around 6–12 month outlooks, with error margins of 8–12% common. The Wise historical data shows the pair has ranged between ¥106.71 and ¥114.16 over 90 days — a roughly 7% band that suggests meaningful volatility but not extreme swings.

For travel planning purposes, treating the current rate as a baseline (with maybe ±5% flexibility) is reasonable. If your trip is within 3 months, currency moves of that magnitude are plausible but shouldn’t paralyze your planning. Focus on converting at fair rates rather than timing the perfect moment.

AUD/JPY trends

The historical record shows the pair hitting ¥109.10 on July 12, 2024 — the annual high tracked by SMoney. Since then, the rate has climbed to the mid-113 range, suggesting a sustained recovery. Whether this reflects fundamental AUD strength, yen weakness, or some combination is nearly impossible to disentangle from price data alone.

The Japan Travel official guide notes that older rates for Australians were around ¥74 per AUD — a stark reminder of how dramatically currency markets move over years, not just weeks. What feels like a good rate today may look poor in retrospect a decade from now.

Is 500 yen a lot in Japan?

At roughly AUD 4.38 per 500 yen, it’s a small but meaningful amount in daily Japanese life. What you can get for ¥500 in Japan: a convenience store onigiri and a drink, a single metro ride on some suburban lines, a small piece of street food at a festival, or two-thirds of a bowl of ramen at a cheap chain. It’s not a trivial sum, but it’s also not enough for a proper meal in most cities.

Understanding yen denominations helps frame your budget. The ¥500 coin is the highest-denomination regular coin in Japan — it’s actually worth holding onto for transit and vending machines. The ¥1,000 note covers most basic purchases: a bowl of noodles, a cheap train ticket, a paperback book. Understanding yen denominations helps frame your budget, and you can check the AUD to Yen exchange rate at $3000 Yen to AUD converter before your trip to Japan.

The trade-off

Tourists often overspend in small yen amounts — ¥300 for a bottled tea here, ¥210 for a metro ride there. These individually small charges accumulate faster than Australian tourists expect, which is why daily budget estimates from SMoney show the average tourist spending ¥19,000 per day.

Daily value of yen amounts

Here’s a practical scale for daily spending in Japan:

  • ¥8,000/day: Budget travel — hostel stays, convenience store meals, minimal sightseeing
  • ¥15,000–20,000/day: Mid-range — decent restaurants, mix of tourist sites, comfortable accommodation
  • ¥50,000+/day: Luxury — high-end dining, premium hotels, optional shopping

At ¥113.95 per AUD, budget travel costs break down to roughly AUD 70 per day, mid-range to AUD 130–175 per day, and luxury to AUD 438+. For a one-week trip, total budgets range from AUD 490 (pure budget) to AUD 1,200 (mid-range) to AUD 3,000+ (luxury) in spending-money terms.

Budgeting 500–100,000 JPY

Cash needs for a week in Japan depend heavily on your payment strategy. Credit and debit cards are widely accepted in cities, but many traditional restaurants, small shops, temples, and rural areas still operate on cash. The Japan National Tourism Organization recommends carrying at least some yen cash, particularly for smaller towns.

For a one-week budget trip, SMoney’s figures suggest ¥35,000 in cash covers ¥8,000 daily spending plus incidentals. At ¥113.95 per AUD, that’s approximately AUD 307 in physical currency needed. For mid-range travel, ¥70,000 cash (roughly AUD 614) gives comfortable breathing room.

¥100,000 — the equivalent of roughly AUD 877 — covers 12–13 days of mid-range travel or a full luxury week. Carrying that much cash isn’t necessary, but knowing the scale helps when budgeting for souvenirs or special experiences.

Bottom line: The pattern: most travelers underestimate how quickly small yen purchases add up and overestimate how much cash they truly need. A practical approach is to load a travel card (Wise, Revolut) with yen and withdraw as needed, while carrying ¥10,000–20,000 in cash for emergencies.

How do converter services compare?

Eight major providers, three different rate bands: the AUD/JPY conversion market has clear stratification. Mid-market rates (what banks charge each other) cluster around ¥113.95, while fintech providers like Wise and Revolut apply tight margins of 0.5–1% above that benchmark. Traditional banks and airport kiosks operate 3–5% above mid-market, while credit card dynamic currency conversion can run even wider.

The table below shows how each provider stacks up across rate, spread, and best-use case.

Provider Rate (approx.) Typical spread Best for
Xe / Mid-market ¥113.95 Baseline Rate reference only
Revolut ¥113.86 ~0.08% Card holders already using Revolut
Wise ¥110.60 ~2.9% below mid Large transfers, transparency seekers
SMoney best rate ¥113.94 ~0.01% Australian comparison shoppers
OFX ¥113.49 ~0.4% Forward contracts, business transfers
Remitly (first transfer promo) ¥114.23 Above mid-market First-time users chasing promotional rates
Bank average ¥109–111 2.5–4% Avoid — worst value for travelers
Airport kiosk ¥109–110 3–4% Emergency only — highest spread

The real difference emerges in total cost. For every AUD 1,000 converted, a Wise or Revolut user receives roughly ¥3,000 more than a bank customer. Over a AUD 5,000 trip budget, that’s a AUD 130–150 swing — enough to cover two nights in a decent business hotel.

Upsides

  • Multiple fintech providers now offer near-mid-market rates
  • AUD/JPY is relatively stable in the current ¥113–114 range
  • Wise, Revolut, and XE provide transparent, real-time rate data
  • Current rate exceeds 2024 annual high — favorable for travel

Downsides

  • Traditional banks still apply wide spreads to retail customers
  • Airport kiosks offer the worst rates — avoid until necessary
  • Rate volatility of ±7% over 90 days complicates trip budgeting
  • Credit card DCC (being charged in AUD) can cost 2–3% extra

Today the best AUD to Yen exchange rate is 113.936.

— SMoney (Currency Exchange Provider)

According to Budget Your Trip, the average tourist spends almost ¥19,000 per day in Japan.

— SMoney Blog (Travel Money Provider)

For Australian tourists, the AUD/JPY picture is reasonably favorable right now. The currency is trading near its 90-day high, well above the 2024 annual peak, which means your dollar stretches further in yen terms than it has in months. That said, the spread between best and worst conversion options remains stark — choosing Wise or Revolut over a traditional bank can save you AUD 100+ on a two-week trip.

The practical takeaway: convert your travel yen through a digital provider with transparent rates, carry a modest cash amount for emergencies (¥20,000–35,000 for a week), and pay in yen (not AUD) whenever your card offers that option. Your budget will thank you for the effort.

For Australian travelers, the choice is relatively clear: use a fintech card like Wise or Revolut for the best available rate, avoid airport exchanges unless you’re desperate, and budget roughly AUD 130–175 per day for mid-range travel. At current rates, ¥20,000 daily spending costs about AUD 175 — money you’ll feel better about spending when you know you’re getting a fair conversion.

Related reading: AUD to JPY exchange rates

The Australian dollar’s recent surge to multi-year highs near 114 JPY, as tracked in this live AUD/Yen converter chart, offers valuable context for forecasts and travel budgets.

Frequently asked questions

What is the current AUD to Yen exchange rate?

As of April 27, 2026, the mid-market AUD to JPY rate sits at ¥113.95 per Australian dollar, according to Xe. This rate represents the interbank baseline — the actual rate you’ll receive when converting will include a small provider margin.

Where to get the best AUD to JPY rate?

Revolut and Wise typically offer rates closest to the mid-market rate, with minimal margins. SMoney aggregates multiple providers and shows the best available rate in real-time. For large transfers, OFX offers competitive rates with no hidden fees.

How does AUD/JPY compare to other currency pairs?

The AUD/JPY rate of ¥113.95 means one Australian dollar buys more yen than one US dollar buys dollars (USD/JPY sits around 143–145). AUD also outperforms EUR/JPY and GBP/JPY in yen-purchasing-power terms, making Japan a relatively affordable destination for Australian tourists.

What affects AUD to Yen fluctuations?

Key drivers include RBA and Bank of Japan monetary policy decisions, commodity prices (particularly iron ore for AUD), risk sentiment in Asia-Pacific markets, and global inflation differentials. The pair moved from ¥106.71 to ¥114.16 over 90 days — roughly a 7% range that reflects meaningful volatility.

Can I exchange AUD for Yen at airports?

Yes, but airport exchanges offer some of the worst rates available — typically 3–5% below mid-market. They’re convenient only for small, last-minute needs. For any meaningful amount, use Wise, Revolut, or an Australian specialist like Travel Money Oz before you depart.

Is now a good time to convert AUD to Yen?

The current rate near the 90-day high means the Australian dollar is relatively strong against the yen right now. If you’re traveling within the next few months, converting now locks in a favorable rate compared to the February 2026 low of ¥106.71.

What are bank vs mid-market rates for AUD/JPY?

Mid-market (interbank) rates sit around ¥113.95. Banks typically apply a 2.5–4% spread, reducing your effective rate to ¥109–111 per AUD. Fintech providers like Wise and Revolut offer rates within 0.1–1% of mid-market — significantly better than traditional banks.