5 yen coin#Modern five yen (1948-)

{{Short description|Low denomination of Japanese yen}}

{{Infobox Coin

| Country = Japan

| Denomination = Five yen

| Value = 5

| Unit = Japanese yen

| Mass = 3.75

| Diameter = 22

| Thickness = 1.5

| Center Hole Diameter = 5 mm

| Edge =

| Composition = c. 65% Cu
c. 35% Zn

| Years of Minting = 1870–present

| Catalog Number = KM 72, 72a, 96.1 and 96.2

| Obverse = 5 Yen Heisei.png

| Obverse Design = Rice, water and gear

| Obverse Designer =

| Obverse Design Date = 1959

| Reverse = 5 yen heisei rev.png

| Reverse Design = Tree sprouts

| Reverse Designer =

| Reverse Design Date = 1959

}}

The {{nihongo|5-yen coin|五円硬貨|Go-en kōka}} is a denomination of the Japanese yen. The current design was first minted in 1959, using Japanese characters known as the "new script" and kanji in the kaisho style, and were also minted from 1948 to 1958 using "old-script" Japanese characters in the gothic style.[https://en.numista.com/catalogue/japon-5.html Coins from Japan]: 5 Yen - Shōwa (Kaisho style) – 24-33 (1949-1958)" & "5 Yen - Shōwa (Gothic style) – 34-64 (1959-1989)" Five-yen coins date to 1870 (when, due to the much higher value of the yen, they were minted in gold). The modern-day coin was first produced in 1948 with a differently styled inscription. This was changed in 1959 and the design has remained unchanged since.

The obverse of the coin depicts a rice plant growing out of the water, with "five yen" written in kanji; the reverse is stamped with "Japan" and the year of issue, also in kanji, separated by sprouts of a tree. The three graphic elements of the coin represent agriculture and fisheries, the key elements of the Japanese first-sector economy. Around the central hole, there is a gear that represents industry. It is the only Japanese coin in circulation to lack Arabic numerals on either side.

History

=Gold five yen (1870-1930)=

Five yen coins were first struck in gold for the Japanese government in 1870 at the San Francisco Mint.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R_R7KkL4VeUC&q=5+yen+coin+struck+1870|title=The Coin Collector's Journal|author=Edouard Frossard|publisher=Scott and Company|volume=3|year=1878|page=40}} During this time a new mint was being established at Osaka, which did not receive the gold bullion needed for coinage until the following year.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WInjJ3aId4UC&q=5+yen+coin+struck+1871&pg=PA368|title=Annual Report of the Director of the United States Mint|publisher=United States Mint|year=1895|page=368}} The yen as a unit of currency was officially adopted by the Meiji government in an act signed on June 27, 1871.A. Piatt Andrew, Quarterly Journal of Economics, "The End of the Mexican Dollar", 18:3:321–356, 1904, p. 345 For this particular denomination, its not known if any five-yen coins dated 1871 (year 4) were actually struck that year as official records have coinage beginning in 1872.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JmVoAAAAcAAJ&q=5+yen+coin+struck+in+1871&pg=PA1092|title=Commercial Relations|work=House Documents|author=United States House of Representatives|author-link=United States House of Representatives|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|volume=15; Volume 284|year=1876|page=1092}}{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R_R7KkL4VeUC&q=5+yen+coin+struck+1870|title=The Coin Collector's Journal|author=Edouard Frossard|publisher=Scott and Company|volume=3|year=1878|page=40|quote=and possibly some were struck in 1871, meiji 4, but we have not been able to find any bearing this date.}} The first and second five yen coin designs feature a dragon figure on the obverse surrounded by legends, while the reverse features the emblem of the Imperial family.{{efn|In numismatic terminology, a "legend" is a formal inscription found around the margin of a coin.}} Each coin was initially struck in .900 fine gold with a weight of 8.3g, and a diameter of 23.8mm.{{cite web|url=https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/world/japan-5-yen-y-11-yr.31870-yr.41871-cuid-1207760-duid-1451949|title=Japan 5 Yen Y# 11|publisher=Numismatic Guaranty Corporation|access-date=March 26, 2019}} The diameter was later reduced to 21.8mm when the second design was introduced in 1872.{{cite web|url=https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/world/japan-5-yen-y-11a-yr.101877-yr.91876-cuid-1165903-duid-1449737|title=Japan 5 Yen Y# 11a|publisher=Numismatic Guaranty Corporation|access-date=March 26, 2019}} Five yen coins continued to be struck uninterrupted until 1879, when for an unknown reason none were recorded as minted. Coinage resumed in 1880 and remained unchanged until 1897 when Japan officially switched from a silver standard to a gold standard.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ywR7HXjTU9QC&q=Japan%20gold%20standard%20October%201897|title=New Coinage law of Japan|work=Sound Currency|publisher=Sound Currency Committee of the Reform Club|year=1899|page=28 & 29}} During this time the gold five yen coin was given a third and final new design. The diameter was reduced from 21.8mm down to 16.9mm, and the weight was changed from 8.3 to 4.2 grams. Redemption of old silver coins for new gold coins at par began on October 1, 1897, and lasted until closure on July 31, 1898.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ywR7HXjTU9QC&q=Count+Matsukata+became&pg=RA1-PA29|title=The Gold Standard in Japan|work=Sound Currency|publisher=Sound Currency Committee of the Reform Club|year=1899|page=29}}{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NHWxAAAAIAAJ&q=Japan+20+sen+government+note+1899|title=Supplement to Hundred-year Statistics of the Japanese Economy|author=Statistics Department|publisher=Bank of Japan|year=1966|page=93}}

During the Taishō era the production of five yen coins was impacted by World War I as a gold embargo was imposed in 1917 by the United States. Even though this embargo was later lifted in June 1919, the Japanese government continued it by importing gold heavily to re-enforce the gold reserve of the Bank of Japan. Government officials at the time had the opinion that no inflation could take place so long as the percentage of gold cover had not been lowered.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dxkfAQAAMAAJ&q=Japan+gold+embargo+lifted+June+1919|title=Studies in History, Economics, and Public Law|publisher=Columbia University Press|year=1928|volume=299|page=101|quote=But when America lifted her gold embargo in June, 1919, Japan soon began to import gold heavily. And this naturally reenforced the gold reserve of the Bank of Japan. It had been the opinion of government officials that no inflation could take place so long as the percentage of gold cover had not been lowered.}} This embargo was not absolute however, as it was recorded that some gold coins were paid out between 1920 and 1928 in very small amounts.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MNF590eZrcMC&q=Japan+1-yen+note+convertible+1917&pg=RA22-PA20|title=Bank of Japan Notes|work=Trade Information Bulletin|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|issue=651–675|year=1929|page=20}} The gold embargo was later lifted in January 1930, only for it to be re-imposed on December 31, 1931.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7vDdBMiptNAC&q=Japan+5+yen+gold+embargo&pg=PA231|title=Currency|work=Commercial Travelers' Guide to the Far East|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|year=1932|page=231}} Five yen coins were last minted in gold during this brief time to act as a reserve for gold certificates. None of these coins were in general use afterwards as the medium of commerce consisted of nonconvertible 5 yen banknotes.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k4zJDQAAQBAJ&q=5+yen+gold+coin+1930&pg=PA1074|title=The Statesman's Year-Book|author=M. Epstein|publisher=Springer|year=1932|page=1074|isbn=9780230270619}}

=Modern five yen (1948-)=

Almost 20 years would pass before the Japanese government authorized the production of a new five yen coin. These new coins were first struck in 1948 and are made of a brass alloy consisting of 60 to 70% copper, and 30 to 40% zinc.{{cite web|url=https://www.mof.go.jp/english/currency/coin/circulating_coins/list.htm|title=Current Coins list|work=Ministry of Finance (Japan)|access-date=August 17, 2020}}{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KN2CJ4uZ7kwC&q=new+5+yen+coin+1949&pg=PA82|title=Annual Report of the Director of the Mint|publisher=Department of the Treasury|year=1949|page=82}} Using this type of alloy combination is now a remnant from when World War II era weapons were scrapped to produce the coins.{{cite book|title=Currency of Japan -Guidance for Collection-|publisher=Japan Coin and Merchants Cooperative|year=2010|pages=184–186}} These coins feature a pigeon within a circle on one side and the National Diet on the other and were only minted for two years. Two different varieties were made in 1949 which included the old pigeon type coins, and new coins featuring a hole in the center. These first holed five yen coins use an old style Japanese script known as Kaisho. The Japanese government added the hole in the center of the coin to save material costs.{{cite book|title=500 Common Senses That No One Can Ask Anymore|author=Yoichi Hirakawa|publisher=Kosaido Bunko|page=194|year=2013|isbn=978-4331653395}} The overall design of the coin featuring rice, water and a gear on the obverse, and tree sprouts on the reverse has not changed since this time. The final design which is minted today uses a modern style script which was first added in 1959.

Five yen coins made headlines in 1999 in regards to the nuclear accident at Tokai, Ibaraki. Physicists Masuchika Kohno and Yoshinobu Koizumi showed how the coin could be used to estimate neutron dosage to the surrounding population, by measuring its zinc isotope ratios. They concluded that the coin could offer information about the total neutron effect during the accident. The coins could also give insight about shielding modern Japanese houses as the coins were recovered from indoors.{{cite journal |last1=Kohno |first1=Masuchika |last2=Koizumi |first2=Yoshinobu |year=2000 |title=Tokaimura accident: Neutron dose estimates from 5-yen coins |journal=Nature |volume=406 |pages=693 |doi=10.1038/35021138 |pmid=10963586 |issue=6797|s2cid=4424321 |doi-access=free|bibcode=2000Natur.406..693K }}

Very few five yen coins were minted between 2009 and 2013 ,making them premium coins for collectors as coins for the latter four years are confined to mint sets. This was due to an increase in the usage of electronic currency which inhibited demand for new coins.{{cite web|url=https://www.kosenkaitori.net/premier/|title=プレミア硬貨の価値!種類・査定額・オススメの買取業者をご紹介|work=Kosenkaitori|language=ja|access-date=August 17, 2020}}{{cite web|url=https://dogatch.jp/news/tbs/tbstopics_65197/detail/|title=【あなたも持ってる?】令和でさらに高騰しそうなプレミア硬貨!|work=dogatch.jp|date=6 July 2019 |language=ja|access-date=August 17, 2020}} Mintage figures recovered in 2014 as general production resumed until 2022, when 5 yen coins were again confined to mint sets.

Cultural significance

The Japanese for "five yen," go en (五円) is a homophone with go-en (御縁), "en" being a word for causal connection or relationship, and "go" being a respectful prefix.{{cite web|url=https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2013/10/20/language/you-may-find-mei-mystifying/#:~:text=This%20is%20because%20%E4%BA%94%E5%86%86,such%20as%20bedding%20manufacturer%20%E4%B8%B8%E5%85%AB%20(|title=You may find mei mystifying|work=The Japan Times|date=20 October 2013 |url-access=subscription|access-date=February 18, 2021}} As a result, five-yen coins are commonly given as donations at Shinto shrines with the intention of establishing a good connection with the deity of the shrine.{{cite web|url=http://osaisen.jp/sahou/5yen.html|title=五円玉の魅力!お賽銭に5円玉が必要な18の理由|work=Osaisen|language=Japanese|access-date=February 21, 2021}} Several different interpretations of this "luck" exist depending on how many five yen coins are offered. While it is generally said that offering "lucky" 5 yen coins as tribute is good, there are others who disagree. Those who hold this opposing position argue that "perforated coins" such as "5 yen" and "50 yen" are unlucky due to their central holes. Shrines in general depend on offerings in either case to fund maintenance, repairs, and operations for the deity or deities enshrined.{{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210123095504/https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/ab5d7489cd8494d9d406c888b5fbf5f1de04dc03?page=1|archive-date=January 23, 2021|url=https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/ab5d7489cd8494d9d406c888b5fbf5f1de04dc03?page=1|title=お賽銭が銀行手数料で消えていく 大量硬貨の取り扱いと神社の悲鳴〈AERA〉|work=Yahoo News|language=Japanese|access-date=February 21, 2021}} There are also other forms of offerings welcomed at shrines depending on the place and customs allowed. According to a priest at Chichibu Shrine, harvested rice was historically given as Shinto deities do not like cash itself as tribute. Five yen coins are also sometimes given as gifts of "good fortune" during the Japanese New Year.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P6vMfibKtBsC&dq=5+yen+coin+lucky&pg=PA676|title=Topsy-turvy 1585: A Translation and Explication of Luis Frois S.J.'s Tratado (treatise) Listing 611 Ways Europeans & Japanese are Contrary|first=Robin D.|last=Gill|publisher=Paraverse Press|year=2004|page=676|isbn=9780974261812}} These gifts are traditionally given to children in decorated envelopes called {{nihongo|"Otoshidama"|年玉}}, with the total amount of money included depending on age.

Composition

class="wikitable"

! Years

! Material

1870–193090% gold, 10% copper
1948–present65% copper, 35% zinc

Circulation figures

=Meiji=

File:5yen-M3.jpg

File:5yen-M5.jpg

File:5yen-M30.jpg

The following are circulation figures for the coins that were minted between the 3rd and the 45th (last) year of Meiji's reign. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 明治 (Meiji). One yen trade dollars and/or patterns are not included here.

  • Inscriptions on Japanese coins from this period are read clockwise from right to left:

"Year" ← "Number representing year of reign" ← "Emperor's name" (Ex: 年 ← 五十三 ← 治明)

class="wikitable sortable"
Year of reign

! class="unsortable"| Japanese date

! Gregorian date

! Mintage

03 3rd

| 三

| 1870

| {{nts|273,536}}

04 4th

| 四

| 1871

| align="center" | 00 Unknown

05 5th

| 五

| 1872

| {{nts|1,057,628}}

06 6th

| 六

| 1873

| {{nts|3,148,925}}

07 7th

| 七

| 1874

| {{nts|728,082}}

08 8th

| 八

| 1875

| {{nts|181,728}}

09 9th

| 九

| 1876

| {{nts|146,226}}

10th

| 十

| 1877

| {{nts|136,271}}

11th

| 一十

| 1878

| {{nts|101,198}}

13th

| 三十

| 1880

| {{nts|78,704}}

14th

| 四十

| 1881

| {{nts|149,249}}

15th

| 五十

| 1882

| {{nts|113,015}}

16th

| 六十

| 1883

| {{nts|108,746}}

17th

| 七十

| 1884

| {{nts|113,768}}

18th

| 八十

| 1885

| {{nts|200,607}}

19th

| 九十

| 1886

| {{nts|179,849}}

20th

| 十二

| 1887

| {{nts|179,303}}

21st

| 一十二

| 1888

| {{nts|165,794}}

22nd

| 二十二

| 1889

| {{nts|353,914}}

23rd

| 三十二

| 1890

| {{nts|238,076}}

24th

| 四十二

| 1891

| {{nts|216,089}}

25th

| 五十二

| 1892

| {{nts|263,103}}

26th

| 六十二

| 1893

| {{nts|260,424}}

27th

| 七十二

| 1894

| {{nts|314,337}}

28th

| 八十二

| 1895

| {{nts|320,090}}

29th

| 九十二

| 1896

| {{nts|224,325}}

30th

| 十三

| 1897 (Type 1)

| {{nts|107,352}}

30th

| 十三

| 1897 (Type 2){{efn|Two coin designs were made in 1897, the second type is smaller as the weight was changed from 8.3 to 4.2 grams}}

| {{nts|111,776}}{{cite web|url=https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/world/japan-5-yen-y-32-yr.301897-yr.451912-cuid-1135172-duid-1450097|title=Japan 5 Yen Y# 32|publisher=Numismatic Guaranty Corporation|access-date=March 26, 2019}}

31st

| 一十三

| 1898

| {{nts|55,888}}

36th

| 六十三

| 1903

| {{nts|21,956}}

44th

| 四十四

| 1911

| {{nts|59,880}}

45th

| 五十四

| 1912

| {{nts|59,880}}

=Taishō=

The following are circulation figures for the coins that were minted during the 2nd and 13th year of Taishō's reign. Coins from this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 大正 (Taishō).

  • Inscriptions on Japanese coins from this period are read clockwise from right to left:

:"Year" ← "Number representing year of reign" ← "Emperor's name" (Ex: 年 ← 三十 ← 正大)

class="wikitable sortable"
Year of reign

! class="unsortable"| Japanese date

! Gregorian date

! Mintage

2nd

| 二

| 1913

| 89,820{{cite web|url=https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/world/japan-5-yen-y-39-yr.131924-yr.21913-cuid-1132855-duid-1443767|title=Japan 5 Yen Y# 39|work=Numismatic Guaranty Corporation|access-date=April 11, 2020}}

13th

| 三十

| 1924

| 76,037

=Shōwa=

File:5yen-S23.jpg

File:5yen-S24.jpg

File:5yen-S34.jpg

File:GoEnDamaScan.jpg

The following are circulation dates which cover Emperor Hirohito's reign. The dates below correspond with the 23rd to the 64th year (last) of his reign. All five yen coins that were made before 1959 use kyūjitai, or old script Japanese. In 1949 only, two different styles of writing were used before a more modern one was established in 1950. This second style of writing was used until 1958 when the current script of Japanese took its place in the following year. Coins for this period will all begin with the Japanese symbol 昭和 (Shōwa).

  • Japanese coins are read with a left to right format:

:"Emperor's name" → "Number representing year of reign" → "Year" (Ex: 昭和 → 四十八 → 年).

class="wikitable sortable"
Year of reign

! class="unsortable"| Japanese date

! Gregorian date

! Mintage{{cite web|url=https://www.mint.go.jp/media/2025/02/nenmeibetsu_r6.pdf|title=年銘別貨幣製造枚数【令和6年銘】|publisher=Japan Mint|language=Japanese|accessdate=February 5, 2025}}{{cite web|url=https://www.ngccoin.com/price-guide/world/japan-5-yen-y-51-yr.51930-cuid-1132171-duid-1443471|title=Japan 5 Yen Y# 51|publisher=Numismatic Guaranty Corporation|access-date=March 26, 2019}}{{efn|name=mintage|Mintages on the Japan Mint website are in thousands}}

05 5th

| 五

| 1930 (Gold)

| 852,563{{efn|These coins were not in general use.}}

23rd

| 二十三

| 1948

| 74,520,000

24th

| 二十四

| 1949 (Type 1)

| 179,692,000

24th

| 二十四

| 1949 (Type 2){{efn|Two coin designs were made in 1949, the second type resembles the current one in use today.}}

| 111,896,000

25th

| 二十五

| 1950

| 181,824,000

26th

| 二十六

| 1951

| 197,980,000

27th

| 二十七

| 1952

| 55,000,000

28th

| 二十八

| 1953

| 45,000,000

32nd

| 三十二

| 1957

| 10,000,000

33rd

| 三十三

| 1958 (Old script)

| 50,000,000

34th

| 三十四

| 1959 (New script)

| 33,000,000

35th

| 三十五

| 1960

| 34,800,000

36th

| 三十六

| 1961

| 61,000,000

37th

| 三十七

| 1962

| 126,700,000

38th

| 三十八

| 1963

| 171,800,000

39th

| 三十九

| 1964

| 379,700,000

40th

| 四十

| 1965

| 384,200,000

41st

| 四十一

| 1966

| 163,100,000

42nd

| 四十二

| 1967

| 26,000,000

43rd

| 四十三

| 1968

| 114,000,000

44th

| 四十四

| 1969

| 240,000,000

45th

| 四十五

| 1970

| 340,000,000

46th

| 四十六

| 1971

| 362,050,000

47th

| 四十七

| 1972

| 562,950,000

48th

| 四十八

| 1973

| 745,000,000

49th

| 四十九

| 1974

| 950,000,000

50th

| 五十

| 1975

| 970,000,000

51st

| 五十一

| 1976

| 200,000,000

52nd

| 五十二

| 1977

| 340,000,000

53rd

| 五十三

| 1978

| 318,000,000

54th

| 五十四

| 1979

| 317,000,000

55th

| 五十五

| 1980

| 385,000,000

56th

| 五十六

| 1981

| 95,000,000

57th

| 五十七

| 1982

| 455,000,000

58th

| 五十八

| 1983

| 410,000,000

59th

| 五十九

| 1984

| 202,850,000

60th

| 六十

| 1985

| 153,150,000

61st

| 六十一

| 1986

| 113,960,000

62nd

| 六十二

| 1987

| 631,775,000

63rd

| 六十三

| 1988

| 396,120,000

64th

| 六十四

| 1989

| 67,332,000

=Heisei=

File:5JPY.JPG

The following are circulation dates during the reign of Emperor Akihito (Heisei), who reigned from 1989 until his abdication in April 2019. The first year of his reign is marked with a 元 symbol on the coin as a one-year type. Coins for this period all begin with the kanji characters 平成 (Heisei). Five-yen coins dated between 2010 and 2013 were only released in mint sets.

  • Japanese coins are read with a left to right format:

:"Emperors name" → "Number representing year of reign" → "Year" (Ex: 平成 → 二十六 → 年).

class="wikitable sortable"
Year of reign

! class="unsortable"| Japanese date

! Gregorian date

! Mintage {{efn|name=mintage}}

1st

| 元

| 1989

| 960,660,000

2nd

| 二

| 1990

| 520,953,000

3rd

| 三

| 1991

| 517,120,000

4th

| 四

| 1992

| 301,130,000

5th

| 五

| 1993

| 413,240,000

6th

| 六

| 1994

| 197,767,000

7th

| 七

| 1995

| 351,874,000

8th

| 八

| 1996

| 207,213,000

9th

| 九

| 1997

| 239,086,000

10th

| 十

| 1998

| 172,612,000

11th

| 十一

| 1999

| 60,120,000

12th

| 十二

| 2000

| 9,030,000

13th

| 十三

| 2001

| 78,025,000

14th

| 十四

| 2002

| 143,662,000

15th

| 十五

| 2003

| 102,406,000

16th

| 十六

| 2004

| 70,903,000

17th

| 十七

| 2005

| 16,029,000

18th

| 十八

| 2006

| 9,594,000

19th

| 十九

| 2007

| 9,904,000

20th

| 二十

| 2008

| 9,811,000

21st

| 二十一

| 2009

| 4,003,000

22nd

| 二十二

| 2010

| 510,000{{efn|name=fn7|Not circulated.}}

23rd

| 二十三

| 2011

| 456,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

24th

| 二十四

| 2012

| 659,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

25th

| 二十五

| 2013

| 554,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

26th

| 二十六

| 2014

| 87,538,000

27th

| 二十七

| 2015

| 105,004,000

28th

| 二十八

| 2016

| 35,064,000

29th

| 二十九

| 2017

| 33,927,000

30th

| 三十

| 2018

| 17,960,000

31st

| {{lang|ja|三十一}}

| 2019

| 16,946,000

=Reiwa=

The following are circulation dates in the reign of the current Emperor. Naruhito's accession to the Crysanthemum Throne took place on May 1, 2019, and he was formally enthroned on October 22, 2019. Coins for this period all begin with the Japanese symbol 令和 (Reiwa). The inaugural year coin (2019) was marked 元 (first) and debuted during the summer of that year.{{cite web|title=Reiwa coins to debut summer 2019|url=https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20190403/p2a/00m/0na/013000c}}

  • Japanese coins are read with a left to right format:

:"Emperors name" → "Number representing year of reign" → "Year" (Ex: 令和 → 二 → 年).

class="wikitable sortable"
Year of reign

! class="unsortable"| Japanese date

! Gregorian date

! Mintage{{efn|name=mintage}}

1st

| 元

| 2019

| 20,574,000

2nd

| 二

| 2020

| 29,528,000

3rd

| 三

| 2021

| 10,133,000

4th

| {{lang|ja|四}}

| 2022

| 574,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

5th

| {{lang|ja|五}}

| 2023

| 463,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

6th

| {{lang|ja|六}}

| 2024

| 511,000{{efn|name=fn7}}

7th

| {{lang|ja|七}}

| 2025

| TBD

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}