06 — Glossario
Tipi di carrozzeria

Kei Car

A kei car is a Japanese class of very small, light vehicle built to strict size and engine limits in exchange for tax and insurance breaks.

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Definizione

A kei car is a uniquely Japanese category of very small, lightweight vehicle defined not by a particular body shape but by a set of strict legal limits on its dimensions and engine size. The name is short for keijidōsha, meaning light automobile, and the class was created by the Japanese government after the Second World War to put affordable, economical personal transport within reach of a population rebuilding its economy. In return for staying within the prescribed limits, owners receive a range of meaningful financial and regulatory benefits.

The current regulations cap the vehicle at roughly 3.4 metres in length and 1.48 metres in width, with engine capacity limited to about 660 cubic centimetres and power conventionally restricted to 64 horsepower under a long-standing industry agreement. These figures have been revised upward several times over the decades as roads and safety expectations evolved, but the philosophy has remained constant: keep the car genuinely small and light. Distinctive yellow number plates identify kei cars on Japanese roads, marking them out as a separate legal class.

The incentives are central to the category's enormous popularity. Kei cars attract lower road tax and ownership taxes, cheaper insurance, and, crucially in crowded cities, an exemption from the requirement to prove ownership of an off-street parking space that applies to larger vehicles. Taken together, these savings make a kei car significantly cheaper to buy and run than a conventional supermini, which is why the class accounts for a very large share of all new vehicles sold in Japan.

Within such tight external dimensions, Japanese manufacturers have become masters of packaging, extracting a surprising amount of usable interior space and ingenuity from a tiny footprint. The class encompasses an extraordinary variety of forms, from tall, boxy people-carriers and microvans to convertibles, sporty coupés such as the Honda S660 and Daihatsu Copen, and even rugged off-roaders like the Suzuki Jimny, all engineered to make the most of every cubic centimetre.

The principal limitation is that the kei car is essentially a Japan-only phenomenon, because the entire concept is built around domestic tax and regulatory advantages that do not exist elsewhere. The diminutive engines and bodies are also less suited to sustained high-speed motorway travel and offer less crash protection than larger cars, though modern examples meet contemporary safety standards. In the wider taxonomy of small vehicles, the kei car sits close to the European microcar and below the supermini and compact car, distinguished from them less by its size than by the specific national framework that brings it into being.

Punti chiave
  • Japanese class with strict size and ~660 cc engine limits
  • Earns cheaper tax, insurance and parking rules
  • Clever packaging yields surprising interior space
  • Largely Japan-only, as it is tied to local regulations
Anche noto come
kei vehiclekeikeijidōshalight car