お菓子を探している人I’m Disney souvenir shopping — what should I grab?
What’s this yokan thing I keep hearing about?
kuroToday I’ll walk you through Tokyo Disney Resort’s yokan — a traditional Japanese sweet you can only find here in Japan!
When you’re picking out souvenirs at Tokyo Disney Resort, the sheer number of options can leave you frozen at the shelf. So many cookies, chocolates, and snacks — where do you even start?
Out of the whole lineup, today I’m zooming in on yokan — a Japanese sweet bean jelly with a refined, premium feel. Here’s an honest review based on actually tasting it.
Yokan Product Overview
Here’s a quick rundown of the product specs.
*Based on a purchase made in July 2020.
Price: ¥1,000 (tax incl.)
Count: 6 pieces
Price per piece: about ¥167
Weight: 430g (58g outer box + 62g x 6 pieces)
Packaging: rectangular paper box (outer), individually wrapped paper boxes (inner), each piece sealed in aluminum
Best before: 5 months from purchase
Price-wise, ¥167 per piece sits in the mid-to-high range among Disney Resort’s souvenir sweets. That said, yokan is denser than a cookie or chocolate, so the weight justifies the cost. The paper box is sturdy, and the individual pieces are also boxed up inside — so they hold their shape really well in transit. It’s heavier than most Disney sweets too — roughly the weight of a 500mL plastic bottle. Compact, but it’s got real heft.
Yokan: A Closer Look
(1) A rare Japanese-style design inside the park
The packaging matches the sweet itself — a distinctly Japanese, traditional design. The front features Mickey & Minnie alongside Cinderella Castle (the Tokyo Disneyland icon) and Mount Prometheus (the Tokyo DisneySea icon). The illustration has a woodblock print feel — very, very Japanese. Mount Prometheus almost looks like Mount Fuji! This kind of Japanese-aesthetic packaging is genuinely rare at Tokyo Disney Resort. It’s the kind of souvenir that would land well with older relatives or visitors from overseas.

(2) Individual packaging that feels premium, even on its own
Here’s the standout feature: each piece comes in its own little box. The inner boxes use the same design as the outer one — already so stylish. And go one layer deeper, and even the aluminum wrapper around each piece has Mickey and Minnie on it. The attention to detail is wild. As a gift, you can hand out single pieces and they still scream “Disney souvenir from Japan.” Better yet, that individual box gives the recipient a real premium-gift feel.


One more nice touch: the inner wrapper opens halfway so you can eat the yokan by hand without making a mess. No utensils, no plate, no sticky fingers — perfect for snacking on the go or inside the park.
(3) Crowd-pleasing flavor in an easy bite-size portion
Inside, the yokan looks like a standard rectangular block. Flavor-wise, it lands right in the middle — not too light, not too rich. A safe, crowd-pleasing taste that should work for most palates. It’s denser than the cheap convenience-store stuff, but lighter than the high-end specialty brands.
What struck me eating it was the bite-size portion — substantial enough to satisfy when you’re feeling a little peckish, without being a full snack commitment. Just the right size.
Who Makes It, and Can You Buy a Similar Yokan Outside the Park?
(1) Made by Yamazaki Baking — a household name in Japan
Flip the box over and you’ll see “Yamazaki Baking Co., Ltd.” as the manufacturer. In Japan, Yamazaki Baking is everywhere — bread, pastries, sweets, you name it. Pretty much everyone here has eaten something they made at some point. That kind of mass-market track record makes it a safe, comfortable choice.

Can You Find a Similar Yokan Outside the Park?
I checked whether the same yokan is sold outside the park. According to Yamazaki Baking’s official site, they do sell yokan separately — about 5 flavors, in single-piece units. We can’t say for sure they’re identical to the Disney version, but the bite-size format matches, so they’re very likely the same product. The non-Disney version is sold individually rather than as a set, and runs about ¥50 cheaper per piece than the park version.
[Update: 2023/10/12]
The packaging has been refreshed since this review. The original elegant Japanese-aesthetic design has been replaced with a cuter, more playful style.
The count has also changed — from 6 pieces down to 4. The manufacturer is still Yamazaki Baking.
Here’s a summary of the changes.
A separate review covering the new packaging is in the works.
| *Changes are shown in blue | Before | As of 2023/10/12 |
| Packaging | Elegant Japanese-aesthetic design | Cute, playful design |
| Price | ¥1,000 (tax incl.) | ¥950 (tax incl.) |
| Flavors | Honneri (smooth red bean) only | Honneri + Matcha (2 flavors) |
| Contents | 6 x Honneri (62g x 6 = 362g) | 2 x Honneri + 2 x Matcha (62g x 4 = 248g) |
| Manufacturer | Yamazaki Baking | Yamazaki Baking |
Overall Rating
| Category | Rating |
|---|---|
| Value | 3.5 |
| Taste | 4 |
| Easy to share | 3 |
| Disney factor | 3.5 |
| Overall | 3.5 |
Value
At ¥167 per piece, it’s a touch more expensive than many of Disney’s other souvenir sweets — but each piece has real substance. I once saw a famous pastry chef on a TV show say that ingredient cost scales with weight; by that logic, the dense, hefty yokan delivers solid value for what you pay.
Compared to a similarly sized yokan from Yamazaki Baking sold outside the park, the Disney version runs about ¥50 more — roughly 1.5x the price. Think of that extra as the cost of the premium Disney packaging and the obsessive design details.
Easy to Share
With only 6 pieces in the box, it’s best suited for a small group of close friends, coworkers, your partner, or family. On top of that, each piece comes in its own box, so handing them out individually still feels premium and gets a great reaction.
Another plus: you can eat each piece by hand with no toothpick or fork — so they’re easy to share even in casual settings.
Taste
As I mentioned in the detailed section, the flavor is solidly crowd-pleasing — anyone who doesn’t actively dislike yokan should enjoy it. Nothing wildly memorable, nothing off-putting either, so I landed on a 3 here.
Disney Factor
The box features Mickey and Minnie together with Cinderella Castle and Mount Prometheus — the icons of Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea, respectively. One glance tells you it’s a Tokyo Disney Resort souvenir.
That said, the yokan itself is a standard rectangular block — no Mickey shape — and a near-identical product is available outside the park. Those points knocked it down to 3.5.
Who Should Buy This Yokan
Yokan is one of those treats where people either love or aren’t into red bean paste, so I’d recommend this souvenir specifically if you’re shopping for red-bean fans, family, relatives, or older relatives. The 6-piece count is on the smaller side, which makes it a natural fit for a small, close-knit group. And — admittedly a generalization — older folks in Japan tend to love yokan, so if you’re stuck choosing among Disney sweets for that audience, this is a solid pick. It’s also a great gift for friends from overseas, since the design and the sweet itself capture that uniquely Japanese feel.
Final Verdict
So, what did we find? Tokyo Disney Resort’s yokan stands out for one big reason: its distinctly Japanese aesthetic is genuinely rare in the park’s souvenir lineup. You won’t find this kind of Japan-only character at the overseas Disney parks — that’s the main reason it’s worth picking up here in Japan. The flavor is universally approachable, so almost anyone can enjoy it. If anything in this review caught your eye, definitely give it a try on your next visit.
