Columns Soapland

Is Working at a Soapland a Job You Can Really Earn at? Plus the Traits of Women Who Earn Big

Is working at a soapland a job you can really earn at? Plus the traits of women who earn big — Taniguchi, with 20-plus years in the trade, breaks it down from firsthand experience.

Is Working at a Soapland a Job You Can Really Earn at? Plus the Traits of Women Who Earn Big

I'll give you the conclusion up front: is working at a soapland a job you can really earn at? And what are the traits of the women who earn big? (Soapland is a bathhouse-style fuzoku format.)

Let me walk you through it step by step.

My experience and this topic

From my 20s into my 40s, I've walked this world the whole way. And this particular topic is a problem I've had to face again and again.

Elon
ElonI have no ambition to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've been to the "famous soaplands" in each region at least once. My takeaway: "service quality and cleanliness don't correlate." Even a dirt-cheap place can have god-tier service.

Points worth knowing

  • Nailing the basics comes first — advanced moves only stand on top of fundamentals
  • Stacking up experience is the best teacher — reading alone won't make it stick
  • Find a shop you can trust — to cut down the time you waste second-guessing
Elon
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your whole paycheck disappears into fuzoku, you naturally develop an eye for it. That's not a brag or a regret — I'm just putting it down as a fact.

The option I'm pushing right now

Elon
ElonAfter getting circumcision surgery and a pearl implant, I now carry a real "I'm fully prepared" kind of confidence. My range in the room widened, sure, but the psychological ease is on another level. To anyone agonizing over getting "work done": I can say "no regrets."

Bottom line, I recommend a visit to First Class Ruby. The service quality, the ease of booking, and the overall standard are all consistently solid.