Sake Polishing Ratio (Seimaibuai) Explained: Why It Matters for Flavor

Every bottle of premium sake carries a number that most drinkers glance at but few truly understand: the sake polishing ratio. This single figure — called seimaibuai in Japanese — tells you how much of each rice grain was shaved away before brewing began. It shapes the flavor in your glass more directly than almost any other factor on the label, and it determines which grade category a sake qualifies for.

Understanding the sake polishing ratio is the fastest way to predict what a bottle will taste like before you open it. Once you know how the system works, the entire world of sake classifications makes sense.

Daichi Takemoto

Supervised by

Daichi Takemoto

Authentic Bartender & Owner of Obanzai Nanchatte, Kobe

With 8 years of experience as a professional bartender and now the owner of "Obanzai Nanchatte" in Kobe, Daichi brings hands-on expertise in Japanese sake, whisky, and food pairing to every article on Kanpai Navi.

Table of Contents

What Is Seimaibuai (Rice Polishing Ratio)?

Seimaibuai (精米歩合) is the Japanese term for rice polishing ratio. It expresses the percentage of the original rice grain that remains after polishing. This is a critical distinction — the number tells you what’s left, not what’s been removed.

A sake labeled 60% seimaibuai means that 40% of each grain was polished away during milling, and only 60% of the original grain remains. A sake at 35% seimaibuai has had 65% of the grain removed — an extreme level of polishing that takes days of careful, continuous milling.

The lower the number, the more rice has been removed.

Seimaibuai (% Remaining) % Polished Away What This Means
70% 30% Light polish — outer layers partially removed
60% 40% Moderate polish — significant outer removal
50% 50% Heavy polish — half the grain removed
40% 60% Extreme polish — mostly starchy core remains
30% 70% Ultra-extreme polish — nearly pure starch center

Think of a sake rice grain like an egg. The outer shell and white contain fats, proteins, and minerals. The yolk at the center is concentrated starch. Polishing is the process of carefully grinding away the outer portions to expose more of that starchy center — and the seimaibuai number tells you how much of the whole egg is left when the brewer starts making sake.

Why Rice Polishing Matters

Rice polishing isn’t cosmetic — it fundamentally changes the raw material the brewer works with. The outer layers of a sake rice grain contain compounds that directly affect fermentation and final flavor.

What’s in the Outer Layers

The exterior of each rice grain is rich in fats, proteins, and minerals. During fermentation, these compounds produce unwanted flavors and off-notes that can make the finished sake taste rough, heavy, or muddled. Fats in particular create harsh flavors that mask the clean, refined characteristics that premium sake aims for.

By polishing away these outer layers, brewers remove the source of those off-flavors before fermentation even begins. The result is a cleaner, more controlled fermentation that allows the brewer’s intended flavors to come through clearly.

The Shinpaku: The Heart of Sake Rice

At the center of a premium sake rice grain sits the shinpaku (心白) — a white, opaque core of concentrated starch. This is the treasure that polishing reveals. The shinpaku is the ideal raw material for sake brewing: pure starch that ferments cleanly and predictably, producing the smooth, refined flavors associated with premium sake.

The more you polish, the higher the proportion of shinpaku in the remaining grain. This is why heavily polished rice produces sake with greater purity and clarity of flavor — the brewer is working with increasingly pure starch, free from the fats, proteins, and minerals that complicate fermentation.

Understanding what sake is made of helps explain why this raw material preparation step has such a dramatic impact on the final product.

How Polishing Affects Sake Flavor

The relationship between polishing level and flavor is one of the most reliable patterns in the sake world. While individual breweries add their own signature through water, koji, yeast, and technique, the polishing ratio sets the baseline flavor direction.

Polishing Level Seimaibuai Flavor Profile Sake Grade Territory
Light polish 70% or higher Fuller body, robust, savory, earthy, strong umami Junmai / Honjozo
Moderate polish Around 60% Balanced, fruity-floral notes with some body Ginjo
Heavy polish 50% or less Elegant, complex, delicate, tropical fruit, flowers Daiginjo

Less Polished: Rich and Full-Bodied

Sake made from rice polished to around 70% or higher retains more of the outer-layer compounds. These fats, proteins, and minerals contribute to a richer, fuller-bodied sake with earthy character and pronounced umami. This style pairs exceptionally well with food — the savory depth and robust body stand up to grilled meats, stews, and bold flavors. Many experienced sake drinkers prefer this style for everyday drinking precisely because it offers more complexity and texture.

Moderately Polished: The Sweet Spot

At around 60% seimaibuai, a balance emerges. Enough outer material has been removed to allow fruity and floral aromatics to develop during fermentation, but enough body remains to give the sake structure and presence. This is ginjo territory — often considered the most food-versatile style, offering the best of both worlds.

Heavily Polished: Elegant and Aromatic

When polishing goes to 50% or below, the sake enters daiginjo territory. The flavor becomes elegant, delicate, and complex, with pronounced aromatics of tropical fruit and flowers. The texture is lighter, the finish longer and cleaner. These sakes reward contemplative sipping and are often best enjoyed slightly chilled on their own.

Daichi Takemoto

Daichi Takemoto

The biggest misconception I encounter is people thinking heavily polished sake is “better” than lightly polished sake. They are different styles, not different quality levels. A rich, full-bodied junmai at 70% is not an inferior version of a daiginjo at 40% — it is a completely different expression of what sake can be. The best approach is to appreciate both ends of the spectrum.

Polishing Ratio by Sake Grade

Japan’s sake classification system uses seimaibuai as a primary gatekeeper for grade designations. Each premium grade requires a minimum polishing level. Here are the exact requirements.

Sake Grade Maximum Seimaibuai Meaning
Junmai No minimum requirement No polishing threshold since 2004; pure rice sake with no added alcohol
Honjozo 70% or less At least 30% of each grain must be polished away
Ginjo / Junmai Ginjo 60% or less At least 40% of each grain must be polished away
Daiginjo / Junmai Daiginjo 50% or less At least 50% of each grain must be polished away

A few important notes about this system. The junmai category had a 70% polishing requirement until 2004, when Japan’s National Tax Agency removed the restriction. Today, a sake labeled junmai can technically have any polishing ratio — though most junmai sakes fall in the 60-70% range in practice.

The “or less” language matters. A sake polished to 40% exceeds the daiginjo requirement of 50% or less. Many premium daiginjo sakes push well beyond the minimum — polishing to 40%, 35%, or even 23% — to achieve increasingly refined flavors.

For a full breakdown of how these grades relate to each other, see our complete guide to sake types explained.

Does More Polishing Mean Better Sake?

This is the most important question in the entire polishing discussion — and the honest answer is no.

A lower polishing ratio does not automatically mean better sake. It means a different style of sake, produced at higher cost. The relationship between polishing and quality is far more nuanced than the numbers suggest.

Why the Numbers Can Mislead

A well-crafted junmai at 70% seimaibuai can be significantly more enjoyable than a poorly made daiginjo at 40%. Polishing is one factor among many that determine the quality of the finished sake. Water quality, koji cultivation, yeast selection, fermentation management, and the brewer’s skill all play equally critical roles.

A brewer who uses exceptional water, cultivates flawless koji, and manages fermentation with precision can produce a stunning sake from rice polished to only 70%. Conversely, no amount of polishing can compensate for poor technique, low-quality water, or careless fermentation.

The Cost Factor

More polishing means more rice wasted. A sake at 50% seimaibuai has discarded half of every grain before brewing begins. At 35%, two-thirds of the rice is gone. This waste drives the price up substantially — and consumers sometimes mistake higher prices for higher quality. In reality, you’re paying for the raw material cost, not necessarily a better drinking experience.

The Practical Takeaway

Instead of chasing the lowest polishing ratio, focus on finding well-made sake at every polishing level. A great junmai offers richness and food-pairing versatility that no daiginjo can match. A great daiginjo offers elegance and aromatic complexity that no junmai attempts. They are different tools for different occasions — not rungs on a quality ladder.

Daichi Takemoto

Daichi Takemoto

When someone tells me they only drink daiginjo because it’s the “best grade,” I pour them a great junmai alongside a mediocre daiginjo and ask them to pick which one they prefer. The junmai wins almost every time. Numbers on a label are a starting point, not a verdict. Trust your palate over the polishing ratio.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 60% seimaibuai mean?

A seimaibuai of 60% means that 40% of each rice grain was polished away during milling, and 60% of the original grain remains. This level of polishing qualifies the sake for the ginjo or junmai ginjo classification, and typically produces a balanced flavor profile with both fruity-floral aromatics and moderate body.

Is a lower sake polishing ratio always better?

No. A lower polishing ratio produces a different style — lighter, more aromatic, more delicate — but not an objectively better sake. A well-crafted junmai at 70% can be more enjoyable than a poorly made daiginjo at 40%. Polishing is one factor among many, including water, koji, yeast, and the brewer’s technique.

Why is highly polished sake more expensive?

Because polishing wastes rice. A sake at 50% seimaibuai discards half of every grain before brewing even starts. At 35%, two-thirds is removed. This wasted rice must still be purchased, and the milling process itself requires days of careful, continuous operation. These material and labor costs are passed to the consumer.

What is shinpaku and why does it matter?

Shinpaku (心白) is the white, opaque starchy core at the center of a sake rice grain. It contains concentrated starch that ferments cleanly, producing smooth and refined flavors. Polishing removes the outer layers of fats, proteins, and minerals to expose more of this starchy core — which is why more polished rice tends to produce cleaner, more elegant sake.

Can junmai sake have a low polishing ratio?

Yes. Since 2004, the junmai classification has no minimum polishing requirement. While most junmai sakes fall in the 60-70% range, a brewery can polish to 50% or even 40% and still label the sake as junmai — as long as no brewer’s alcohol is added. Some breweries intentionally produce junmai with heavy polishing to combine the pure-rice character with the refinement of extensive milling.

The Bottom Line

The sake polishing ratio is the single most useful number on a sake label for predicting flavor style. Higher percentages (less polishing) point toward richer, fuller-bodied sake with earthy depth and umami. Lower percentages (more polishing) point toward lighter, more aromatic sake with elegance and fruity complexity. The official grade boundaries — 70% for honjozo, 60% for ginjo, 50% for daiginjo — give you a reliable framework for navigating any sake menu or shop shelf.

But the most important thing to remember is this: polishing ratio indicates style, not quality. A masterfully brewed junmai at 70% can deliver more pleasure than a mediocre junmai daiginjo at 40%. Use the number to guide your expectations about flavor direction, then let your own palate be the final judge. The best sake is the one you enjoy drinking — regardless of how much rice was polished away to make it.