Compact Discs
It is happening, again
Skating & Surfing
These were one of the most lucrative flips of 2023
The Japanorak retailed for ¥141,900 JPY (~$920 USD) and sold out within seconds online
Early resale listings show prices around $2,000, representing roughly double retail but below initial expectations
BEAMS implemented strict purchase limits of one jacket per label
After a decade of waiting and months of hype, BEAMS and Ralph Lauren finally reissued the coveted Japanorak jacket in collaboration with Dak Westmountain. The jackets went on sale through BEAMS’ Shinjuku store on January 31, and it was available online for the rest of the world earlier today. Unsurprisingly, the available stock sold out fast, but the jackets are reselling for less than we anticipated.
Originally released in 2010 to commemorate the Vancouver Winter Olympics, the Japanorak has spent the past 15 years building serious street cred. The jacket’s journey from overlooked Olympic merch to grail status is wild. Back then, Ralph Lauren wasn’t exactly on its A-game when it came to consistently dropping iconic pieces. The Japanorak was one of those gems people either recognized immediately or slept on completely.
BEAMS brought it back for their 50th anniversary, updating the construction with modern fabrics while keeping the heritage details that made it special. The matte navy exterior features premium leather hardware on zippers and drawstring toggles, with that vibrant royal blue lining inside. The bold “JAPAN” text across the front utility pocket and Japanese flag patch are the unmistakable signatures.
For this reissue, BEAMS went all-in on the drop mechanics. The in-store release happened January 31 at BEAMS Shinjuku with a lottery/raffle system and a dress code requirement that made people show up wearing at least two Polo Ralph Lauren items just to enter the store. Today’s online release dropped at ¥141,900 JPY (approximately $920 USD) for the jacket, with matching caps at ¥16,500 JPY (approximately $110 USD).
For this reissue, BEAMS went all-in on the drop mechanics. The in-store release happened January 31 at BEAMS Shinjuku with a lottery/raffle system and a dress code requirement that made people show up wearing at least two Polo Ralph Lauren items just to enter the store. Today’s online release dropped at ¥141,900 JPY (approximately $920 USD) for the jacket, with matching caps at ¥16,500 JPY (approximately $110 USD).
The relatively modest resale prices (compared to expectations) might reflect a few factors. First, BEAMS produced enough stock that some serious collectors actually copped at retail. Second, the $920 retail price was significantly higher than the initial $500+ estimates that circulated before launch, which means resellers need to clear a higher bar to see meaningful profits. After eBay’s 13% fees, someone buying at retail and selling at $2,000 is looking at around $760 profit per jacket.
The Japanorak occupies a specific lane in streetwear collecting. It’s not Supreme box logo hype, and it’s not vintage archive hunting. This is heritage Americana filtered through Japanese sensibility, which appeals to a more specific collector base. People buying this jacket care about Polo lore, they understand the cultural context, and they’re not just chasing whatever TikTok says is hot this week.
Six months from now, the Japanorak’s value depends on whether BEAMS does another production run. If this was truly limited to the 50th anniversary drop, expect prices to climb gradually as people realize they missed their chance. The jacket’s connection to both Polo collecting culture and Japanese streetwear gives it crossover appeal that should support steady appreciation.
Compare this to other heritage reissues: pieces with strong cultural backstories and limited production tend to age well in the market. The original 2010 Japanorak proves the design has staying power beyond hype cycles. This version benefits from better construction and modern fabrics, which means people will actually wear them instead of keeping them deadstock.
The BEAMS x Polo Ralph Lauren Japanorak reissue is exactly what it should be: a well-executed heritage piece for collectors who care about design provenance and cultural storytelling. Current resale around $2,000 represents a decent flip if you copped at retail, but this isn’t a get-rich-quick situation. The real opportunity is recognizing that jackets with this kind of backstory and limited production tend to appreciate slowly but steadily.
If you’re holding, don’t panic about modest early resale. The right buyers for this piece aren’t impulse shopping on eBay right now, they’re carefully considering whether they want to add it to their collection. If you’re trying to buy, the $2,000 range might actually be fair value considering the retail was already $920. This is streetwear for people who’ve graduated from hype chasing and started building wardrobes with pieces that tell stories.
For collectors who understand what the Japanorak represents in both Polo and Japanese streetwear history, this reissue gives them something that’s been nearly impossible to find for 15 years. That’s worth more than a quick flip.
Compact Discs
It is happening, again
Skating & Surfing
These were one of the most lucrative flips of 2023