Pictured: Kento Okura of Warm Relations, Alice Onizuka of Koikano
Time Out Tokyo | Pictured: Kento Okura of Warm Relations, Alice Onizuka of Koikano
Time Out Tokyo

A quick guide to Japan’s rental romance agencies

Single for Valentine’s Day? Why not try a rental romance

Jasmina Mitrovic
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Before your brain goes straight to Kabukicho: relax. This is not a red-light district story, and these services aren’t selling anything physical. Rental boyfriend / rental girlfriend agencies in Japan are basically date companion services. You book someone to spend time with you in public, under clear rules, and the ‘role’ is usually what it says on the label: boyfriend, girlfriend, or just someone to hang out with.

If you’ve been online long enough, you’ve probably seen this concept float by already, either through Vice-era coverage or a streamer trying it out as content. It gets filed under ‘weird Japan’, but the reality is way more normal: a lot of people book these dates because they don’t want to do something alone, their original plus-one bailed, they’re travelling and want someone to show them around, or they just want a low-pressure day where they can talk and feel a bit less in their own head. Think of it as renting company, not true romance – that latter part is mostly atmosphere.

What many don’t realise is that Japan has been ‘renting people’ for a while. The broader rental-companion / stand-in world goes back to the early 1990s, and it’s since grown into a full system of ‘borrowed connection’ services. You can rent a friend, a grandma, and even a handsome guy to cry with you. The boyfriend/girlfriend version is for some reason just the most meme-able branch of that tree – one that started getting more publicly visible in the early 2010s, when this style of dispatch services began getting covered more in not just manga and TV programmes, but foreign films and web projects too.

Culturally, it makes sense in a way that’s easy to miss from the outside. Japan’s whole ‘keep it together in public’ etiquette (the honne meaning the true self and tatemae meaning the face you show the world) means a lot of people aren’t used to dumping their real feelings on friends. Meanwhile, mental health support can still feel stigmatised, or simply not that accessible in the form people actually want (like talk therapy).

So a role-based setup can, weirdly enough, make it easier to open up: you’re not ‘being a burden’, you’re not risking a friendship, and the expectations are already set. You’re paying for someone to show up, listen and treat your time like it matters, which is why so many people use these services. Budget-wise, you’re usually looking at ¥3,000–¥6,000 per hour (often with a minimum booking), and longer plans can easily push past ¥20,000 once you add travel and date costs.

Here are four rental partner agencies to get you started in Tokyo.

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Koikano

Koikano’s angle is soft and gentle, like something built for people who want to breathe a little. Their answers make it clear they’re not pushing some dramatic ‘fall in love’ fantasy. It’s more like: you’re tired, you want a calm day, you want conversation that doesn’t come with expectations.

First-timers are encouraged to keep it simple (café, walk, low-stakes plans), and they’re big on the idea that you don’t need to be good at talking to benefit from the service.

Koikano also gets used a lot by travellers, not as a tour guide thing, but as a ‘someone to explore Japan with’, especially if you’re nervous about language or being alone. They frame it as a safe, rules-first service, and they really lean into matching based on the kind of time you want, not just looks.

Cast pick: Alice Onizuka 
We went out with Alice, and she was exactly what you’d want for a first experience. Honestly, she looked exactly like the idea of a ‘cute girlfriend’ turned into a person. Sweet, a little shy, but with this excited, bouncy energy that keeps the whole date feeling light. Her English is fluent, and the vibe wasn’t awkward or overly performed. Alice isn’t her legal name, but she didn’t hide behind a character either. It felt like she was bringing her real energy into a clearly defined role, which is kind of the whole point when people think these services must be fake or with some ulterior up-selling motive. She’s been doing rental girlfriend work for about a year, and she came across as warm and easy to spend time with. If you’re curious about rental romance, she’s a solid recommendation for first timers.

WarmRelation

WarmRelation has a broader idea of what ‘rental boyfriend’ can mean. Their answers don’t lock you into one fantasy. For one person, it’s a boyfriend-style date. For someone else, it’s a friend, a listener, a confidence reset, or even someone with life experience who can give actual advice. They also push the ‘let’s go places you wouldn’t go alone’ use case hard, and they’re one of the only agencies that really talks about building plans around a cast member’s strengths.

The vibe is less idol-style perfection, more personality and human warmth. They also mention tour-guide style support and local area hosting, so it can double as a companion service for travel days. And unlike some agencies that keep it vague, they address misconceptions head-on and keep things framed as a rules-based, respectful service.

Cast pick: Kento Okura
Kento Okura is the kind of rental boyfriend who makes you understand why this industry exists. He usually wears a kimono as his professional uniform, and the energy matches: confident, fun, well-spoken, and he speaks English too. He told us straight up that he’ll do almost anything someone asks – in case anyone wants to go sky diving. He’s climbed a mountain for a date, and his dream rental date is getting invited overseas. 

He’s been doing rental boyfriend work for four months, and it’s secondary to his main job in education (he used to be a pilot, too). Kento is genuinely worried people are replacing real connection with AI relationships, and he sees this work as a way to help people feel like they have someone to talk to, especially in Japan where opening up can feel harder without a ‘social role’ setting the tone. He’s also fully comfortable being an LGBTQ+ partner if that’s what someone wants, and he gives a ‘real deal’ experience.

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Cattleya

Cattleya reads like the quiet ‘high-standard’ option. Their whole emphasis is on comfort: no forced excitement, no big theatrics, just a date where conversation and even silence can feel normal. They talk about the service as something people use when they want to step out of their usual roles (work stress, social pressure, that constant need to perform), and they also point out how it overlaps with modern oshi culture for some clients, where choosing your favourite cast member becomes part of the enjoyment.

Their recommended first date plans are simple and spacious (café, walking, light activities), because the goal isn’t to distract you – it’s to make it easy to exist with someone for a few hours. They also stress boundaries clearly, and position the service as a ‘safe option’ for people who want connection without the mess of real-life expectations.

Rent-Kano

Rent-Kano is the industry heavyweight. Big network, nationwide reach, standardised system, quick support and a clear promise that even beginners won’t get lost. Their most common use cases are super practical: your plus-one cancels on a concert or event, you want someone to come with you to a place that feels awkward solo, you’re travelling and want a companion to explore with, or you’re on a business trip and you’re tired of eating alone.

They even mention people using their service for dating practice and relationship advice, which is a recurring theme across these offerings. Casting-wise, they don’t pretend it’s an actor roster, and they say most of their cast is not trained performers, which makes the dates feel more like normal hangouts. Also, they’re extremely strict about what this is and isn’t: it’s a date companion service, and anything physical (even hugs/kisses) is off the table. Also worth noting: the Rent-Kano world isn’t only girlfriends – there’s a linked rental boyfriend side too.

Source your Valentine’s Day chocolate here

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