free-symbols
🈵

Japanese “no vacancy” button Emoji

The 🈵 symbol shows a Japanese “no vacancy” or “fully booked” sign for services and rooms.

U+1F235

🈵 is a Japanese sign-style emoji often used to indicate that something is full. It’s commonly seen for reservations, hotels, and limited availability. You can copy it directly or use its Unicode details in apps and code.

Japanese “no vacancy” button Emoji Meaning

🈵 (Unicode U+1F235, HTML 🈵) represents the Japanese “No Vacancy” button. Visually, it reads as a sign that there is no availability—such as rooms being fully booked, slots being taken, or a service not accepting new requests. While it comes from Japanese signage, it’s widely understood in digital communication as “fully booked” or “no more openings.” Use it when you want a quick, clear availability indicator without extra text. It works well in listings, status updates, and user notifications where clarity matters.

Common uses

  • Marking a hotel or rental listing as fully booked
  • Notifying followers that reservations or appointments are no longer available
  • Indicating a class/workshop has reached capacity
  • Updating customer service or support channels as temporarily closed to new requests
  • Labeling event tickets or seats as sold out

Examples

🈵 Japanese “No Vacancy” Button

  • 🈵🈵 Fully booked this weekend—check back soon!
  • 🈵No vacancy: 🈵 We’re currently at capacity for appointments.
  • 🈵Rooms are 🈵 and cannot accept new reservations today.
  • 🈵Workshop status: 🈵 Waiting list only.
  • 🈵Event seats are 🈵. Thanks for your interest!

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F235
HTML Entity🈵
HTML Code🈵
CSS\1F235

FAQ

What does the 🈵 emoji mean?

🈵 means “Japanese No Vacancy,” commonly understood as “fully booked” or “no availability.”

How do I copy 🈵 to use it in my posts or designs?

Copy the character directly (🈵) or use the provided Unicode/HTML forms: U+1F235, 🈵, \\1F235, or \\u{1F235}.

Is 🈵 only for hotels and rentals?

No. It can indicate full capacity for any reservation-based service, appointments, classes, or tickets.

Will it work in code and web pages?

Yes. You can use the Unicode code point U+1F235 or the HTML entity 🈵 depending on your environment.

Related symbols