This is a question we get all the time in our shop:
“What’s actually the difference between Japanese and Chinese tea?”
On the surface, they can look similar—especially green teas—but once you understand how they’re made, where they’re grown, and how they’re processed, the differences become very clear.
Let’s break it down in a simple, honest way based on what really matters: processing, flavour, and growing conditions.
1. The Most Important Difference: How the Tea Is “Fixed”
The biggest difference between Japanese and Chinese green teas is how oxidation is stopped after harvest.
This step is called “fixing” or “kill-green” (in tea processing terms). It locks in the freshness of the leaf.
Japanese Method: Steaming
In Japan, tea leaves are steamed shortly after harvest.
This does a few things:
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Preserves a very fresh, green character
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Locks in vibrant colour
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Keeps vegetal and seaweed-like notes
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Produces a softer, more umami-driven profile
Because steaming is quick and gentle, Japanese teas often taste:
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Grassy
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Brothy (umami-rich)
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Sweet and oceanic
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Very fresh and vibrant
This is especially true for teas like sencha, gyokuro, and matcha.
Chinese Method: Pan-Firing
In China, most green teas are pan-fired in hot woks.
This creates a completely different effect:
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Slight roasting or nutty notes
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Reduced vegetal sharpness
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A drier, more aromatic profile
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Greater variety of flavour depending on technique
Chinese green teas often taste:
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Nutty
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Toasted
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Floral
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Sometimes slightly smoky or chestnut-like
This is why teas like Long Jing (Dragon Well) feel so different from Japanese sencha, even if they are both “green tea”.
2. Flavour Profile: Fresh vs Roasted Expression
Because of the processing difference, the flavour direction is almost opposite.
Japanese Teas Tend To Be:
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Umami-rich
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Marine / oceanic notes
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Fresh grass, spinach, seaweed
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Smooth but sometimes slightly astringent if overbrewed
Chinese Teas Tend To Be:
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Nutty and roasted
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Floral and aromatic
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Softer vegetal notes
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Often more fragrance-driven than umami-driven
Neither is better—it’s just a different expression of the same plant.
3. Terroir: Where the Tea Is Grown Matters
Another major difference is terroir—the environment the tea grows in.
Japan
Japanese tea is often grown:
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In carefully managed tea gardens
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At relatively lower altitudes compared to China’s mountain teas
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In humid, coastal climates
Japan also uses:
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Shading techniques (especially for gyokuro and matcha)
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Precision farming and uniform cultivars
This leads to:
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Consistent flavour profiles
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High umami content
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Very controlled production styles
China
China has a much wider range of terroirs:
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High mountain regions
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Wild or semi-wild tea trees in some areas
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Huge variation in climate and soil
Tea can come from:
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Zhejiang (green teas like Long Jing)
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Yunnan (pu-erh and black teas)
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Fujian (oolongs and white teas)
This results in:
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More variation between batches
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Strong influence of altitude and microclimate
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More artisanal and regional expression
Some Chinese teas come from very high elevations, which often results in:
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Slower growth
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More complex aromas
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Thicker, more layered mouthfeel
4. Cultivation Style: Precision vs Diversity
Japanese Cultivation
Japanese tea farming is highly controlled:
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Clonal cultivars are common
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Fields are neatly structured
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Harvesting is highly standardized
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Emphasis on consistency and refinement
This is why Japanese teas often taste very “clean” and predictable in a good way.
Chinese Cultivation
China is far more diverse:
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Many ancient tea tree varieties
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Mixed cultivars and wild trees
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Small farms and family-run production
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Traditional, less standardized harvesting
This leads to:
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Greater variation in flavour
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More rustic or complex profiles
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Unique regional character
5. Harvesting Methods
Japan
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Mostly machine-harvested or semi-mechanised for sencha
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Very precise picking standards (young leaves only)
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Multiple harvest seasons (first flush is highly prized)
For premium teas like gyokuro or matcha:
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Hand-picked or carefully selected leaves
China
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Often hand-picked
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Selective plucking depending on tea type
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Buds, single leaves, or mixed leaf grades used depending on tradition
Some teas are:
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Highly artisanal (like fine oolongs)
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Others more rustic and traditional (like certain pu-erh)
6. What This Means When You Drink the Tea
When you put it all together, the difference becomes quite clear:
Japanese Tea Experience:
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Clean, precise, umami-rich
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More “vegetal freshness”
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Focused and structured flavour
Chinese Tea Experience:
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Aromatic, diverse, layered
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More roasted, floral, or fruity notes
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Greater variation between teas
Final Thoughts (From Us)
We always tell customers this:
Japanese tea feels like precision.
Chinese tea feels like diversity.
Both are incredible, just expressed in different ways.
If you enjoy:
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Fresh, savoury, umami-rich tea → start with Japanese teas like sencha or gyokuro
If you enjoy:
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Aroma, complexity, roasted or floral notes → explore Chinese green teas and oolongs
Most tea drinkers eventually enjoy both, because they complement each other beautifully.
That’s the joy of tea—you’re not choosing a side, you’re exploring two different philosophies in a cup.