Reservations for Plant Tours
Coca-Cola Bottlers Japan offers plant tours in the business area of 6 plants.
Click here to experience Coca-Cola Bottlers Japan plant tours and “virtual plant tours”!
Plant Tours
Plant tours are a method of direct communication with stakeholders, especially consumers and business partners. We offer tours of the Zao Plant (Miyagi Prefecture), Tama Plant (Tokyo), Tokai Plant (Aichi Prefecture), Kyoto Plant (Kyoto Prefecture), Hiroshima Plant (Hiroshima Prefecture) and Ebino Plant (Miyazaki Prefecture). Aiming for a partner trusted by everyone, we are using our plant tours to communicate The Coca-Cola Company’s production processes and food safety initiatives so that consumers can feel confident in choosing The Coca-Cola Company’s products.






CCBJI Museum Completed in the Tama Plant Tour Area
In January 2022, the CCBJI Museum was completed at the Tama Plant in Higashi Kurume, Tokyo, by remodeling a tour facility. It is a future-oriented museum that also looks back at the history of Coca-Cola in Japan as well as how CCBJI was founded. The interior of the Museum is divided into a History Area, which presents the history of Coca-Cola and the bottling companies, and a Blue Sky Photo Area, which displays photos of the delivery trucks that operate in our business areas.


Online summer schools
In addition to our regular plant tours, we host an online summer school each year as a special program during the summer break, making it accessible to participants who are unable to visit in person, such as those living in remote areas.
This program provides a valuable learning experience by creatively introducing not only the manufacturing process and history of Coca-Cola products, but also key topics such as hydration and our environmental initiatives. In 2025, the program welcomed a total of 738 participants.


Let's Enjoy the Environment in a Foreign Language
Supported by Kyoto University of Foreign Studies, Kyoto Plant offers “Let’s Enjoy Learning about the Environment in Other Languages,” in which participants enjoy studying about the environment, interspersed with foreign languages.
Families selected from open entry experience programs developed by the students based on the theme of a foreign language and the environment, incorporating “plays” and “experiments,” as they learn about environmental issues while familiarizing themselves with a foreign language.
