Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) are Japan’s national industrial standards used across manufacturing, product verification, and laboratory testing. In material testing work, JIS designations frequently appear in metal tensile testing, hardness testing, textile evaluation, plastics film testing, paper testing, and related calibration activities.

For laboratories, suppliers, and buyers working with Japanese requirements, a JIS reference usually does more than name a topic. It points to a defined method, apparatus, specimen format, conditioning approach, calculation path, or reporting expectation that can affect both compliance planning and equipment selection.

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JIS Standards

JIS is the national standards system used in Japan for a wide range of industrial and technical subjects. In testing environments, it is especially relevant when a customer specification, procurement document, export requirement, or internal quality program names a JIS designation.

Because JIS spans many technical divisions, the same family can connect to very different lab workflows. One designation may lead to a tensile frame, another to a hardness tester, another to a textile instrument, and another to a tear tester or calibration setup.


Quick Definition

JIS is Japan’s national industrial standards system. In materials testing, it includes recognized methods for measuring mechanical properties, hardness, tear resistance, textile performance, and related verification activities.


Why JIS Standards Matter in Testing

JIS matters because it provides a recognized framework for testing products and materials used in Japanese industrial supply chains. When a requirement cites JIS, laboratories and manufacturers need to match the specified method closely enough to support purchasing, quality control, technical comparison, and formal reporting.

JIS also matters in cross-border work. Many JIS documents are aligned with or compared against international standards, so buyers often review JIS together with ISO or IEC references when products move between Japanese and global markets.


Common Materials or Application Areas Covered

JIS covers a broad industrial range. In materials and laboratory buying decisions, the most common touchpoints include the following areas.

  • Metallic materials and mechanically tested industrial products
  • Plastics films and sheets
  • Textiles, woven fabrics, and knitted fabrics
  • Paper and related sheet materials
  • Testing-machine verification and quality-control programs tied to Japanese specifications

Common Test Types

JIS can point to both product test methods and the calibration or verification work that supports reliable results.

  • Tensile testing
  • Hardness testing
  • Tear resistance testing
  • Textile physical property evaluation
  • Testing-machine and reference-block verification

How to Read a JIS Designation

Official JIS numbers use the prefix JIS, followed by a division letter and a numeric identifier. The division letter shows the technical field.

Common letters in testing work: B for Mechanical Engineering, K for Chemical Engineering, L for Textile Engineering, P for Pulp and Paper, and Z for Miscellaneous.

Examples: JIS Z 2241, JIS K 7128-2, and JIS L 1096.

Revision format: Official publications commonly add a colon and year, such as JIS Z 2241:2022. The year changes when a standard is established or revised, while a later confirmation keeps the existing year in the designation.


Featured Standards / Methods / References

The examples below show the range of JIS documents commonly encountered in materials testing. The exact edition and part number still matter when selecting equipment, fixtures, reference blocks, and calibration documents.

JIS Z 2241:2022: Metallic materials — Tensile testing — Method of test at room temperature. Common equipment: universal testing machine, suitable metal grips, and an extensometer where required.

JIS Z 2243-1:2018: Brinell hardness test — Part 1: Test method. Common equipment: Brinell hardness tester, ball indenter, and hardness reference blocks.

JIS Z 2244-1:2024: Vickers hardness test — Part 1: Test method. Common equipment: Vickers hardness tester, optical measurement system, and certified reference blocks.

JIS Z 2245:2021: Rockwell hardness test — Test method. Common equipment: Rockwell hardness tester, indenters, anvils, and reference blocks.

JIS L 1096: Testing methods for woven and knitted fabrics. Common equipment depends on the clause used and may include textile tensile fixtures, tear testers, air permeability instruments, thickness gauges, and conditioning equipment.

JIS K 7128-2:1998: Plastics — Film and sheeting — Determination of tear resistance — Part 2: Elmendorf method. Common equipment: Elmendorf tearing tester and specimen cutting tools.

JIS P 8116:2022: Paper — Determination of tearing resistance — Elmendorf tearing tester method. Common equipment: Elmendorf tearing tester and paper specimen preparation tools.

Edition sensitivity: Older citations may still refer to JIS Z 2243 or JIS Z 2244 without the newer part structure. Before ordering equipment or calibration items, confirm the exact edition and part number cited in the customer, procurement, or regulatory requirement.


Standards / Methods by Application Area

Some JIS workflows cluster naturally by material family and laboratory use case.

Metals: Tensile and hardness methods are common for mill documentation, product qualification, heat-treatment review, and production quality control.

Textiles: Fabric property and related textile documents are used for apparel, interiors, and performance-material evaluation.

Plastics films and sheets: Tear-resistance methods help compare handling performance and damage resistance.

Paper and paperboard: Tear testing supports packaging, converting, and comparative material evaluation.

Machine verification: JIS also includes calibration and verification work that supports traceable, repeatable results.


Equipment Commonly Used with These Standards / Methods / References

Equipment choice depends on the exact JIS document, edition, material form, and property being measured. A tensile method, a hardness method, a textile clause, and a tear test will not point to the same machine path.

Universal testing machines: Common for metallic tensile work and some textile strength methods. Typical accessories include wedge grips, flat grips, extensometers, and alignment tools.

Hardness testers: Brinell, Vickers, and Rockwell systems are common for metallic hardness workflows. Typical accessories include indenters, anvils, optics, and certified blocks.

Elmendorf tearing testers: Common for plastic film, sheeting, paper, and related tear-resistance workflows. Typical accessories include pendulum sets, cutting templates, and calibration weights.

Textile physical-property instruments: Used where a JIS textile method calls for tensile, tear, air permeability, thickness, or other fabric-property measurements.

Calibration devices: Force proving devices, extensometer calibrators, and hardness reference blocks are relevant where verification documents support the main test method.


Related Standards Organizations or Related Frameworks

JIS is often used alongside other standards bodies and publication channels in global technical work.

Japanese Industrial Standards Committee (JISC): JISC plays a central role in Japan’s national standardization system and in the development process for JIS.

Japanese Standards Association (JSA): JSA publishes JIS and English editions, which is important for procurement, method review, and multinational supplier communication.

ISO and IEC: Many JIS documents are harmonized with or commonly reviewed against international standards, so these frameworks often matter when products are sourced globally or sold across multiple markets.


Talk with NextGen Material Testing About JIS Equipment Paths

If your requirement cites a JIS method, the most efficient starting point is the exact designation, edition, material, and property to be measured. That combination determines whether you need a tensile frame, hardness system, textile instrument, tear tester, calibration device, or a broader lab setup.

NextGen Material Testing can help match JIS-driven workflows to practical equipment configurations, accessories, and reporting needs for metals, plastics, textiles, paper, and related quality-control programs.

Standards In JIS

JIS 7212

JIS K 7212 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for evaluating the thermal stability of sheet-form thermoplastics using an oven-based heat exposure procedure. This standard...

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JIS 7757

JIS B 7757 is a Japanese Industrial Standard for forced air circulation oven type thermal accelerated aging testers used to evaluate heat-aging resistance of polymeric materials...

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JIS B 7731

JIS B 7731 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that specifies how to calibrate Shore hardness reference blocks used when indirectly verifying Shore hardness testing machines. If...

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JIS G 3112

JIS G 3112 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that specifies requirements for steel bars used as reinforcement in concrete, including both round (plain) bars and deformed...

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JIS K 6268

JIS K 6268 specifies test methods for determining the density of vulcanized rubber. Density results are widely used for incoming material checks, compound and product QA/QC,...

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JIS K 6545

JIS K 6545:1994 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for evaluating the flexing endurance of light leathers (including shoe upper leather) and their surface finishes....

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JIS K 7128-2

JIS K 7128-2 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for determining tear resistance of thin, flexible plastic film and sheeting using the Elmendorf (pendulum) tear...

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JIS K 7210

JIS K 7210 is a plastics test method used to measure melt flow performance of thermoplastics—commonly reported as melt mass-flow rate (MFR) and, where applicable, melt...

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JIS L 0844

JIS L 0844 specifies test methods for evaluating the colour fastness of dyed textile products when subjected to washing and laundering. It is commonly used to...

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JIS L 0849 Type 1

JIS L 0849 Type I is a textile colorfastness test method that evaluates how readily dye or pigment transfers from a dyed textile surface onto a...

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JIS L 0860

JIS L 0860 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that specifies laboratory test methods for evaluating the colour fastness of dyed textiles when subjected to dry cleaning...

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JIS L 0862 Type 1

JIS L 0862 Type 1 is a Japanese test method used to evaluate how well a dyed textile resists color transfer and/or appearance change when rubbed...

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JIS L 0879

JIS L 0879 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method used to evaluate the colour fastness of dyed textile products when exposed to dry heat. This...

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JIS L 1018.6.17

JIS L 1018.6.17 is the bursting strength test section within JIS L 1018 (test methods for knitted fabrics). It is used to characterize how a knit...

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JIS L0849

JIS L 0849 is a textile colorfastness standard that evaluates how readily dye can transfer from a dyed fabric to another surface through rubbing (often called...

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JIS L1058

JIS L 1058 specifies test methods used to evaluate snagging resistance in woven fabrics and knitted fabrics. Snagging is a surface damage mechanism where yarns or...

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JIS L1096

JIS L 1096 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that compiles test methods used to evaluate key performance and quality characteristics of woven and knitted fabrics. Because...

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JIS P 8116

JIS P 8116 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for measuring the out-of-plane tearing resistance of paper using an Elmendorf-type tearing tester (pendulum method). It...

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JIS Z 2204

JIS Z 2204 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that defines standard test piece (specimen) configurations used when performing bend testing on metallic materials. Because bend testing...

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JIS Z 2241

JIS Z 2241 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for determining tensile properties of metallic materials at room temperature. It is commonly cited for mill...

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JIS Z 2242

JIS Z 2242 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that defines the Charpy pendulum impact test method for metallic materials using V-notch and U-notch specimens. It is...

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JIS Z 2243

JIS Z 2243-1:2018 specifies a Brinell hardness test method for metallic materials, applicable to both stationary and portable (mobile) Brinell hardness testing machines. If you need...

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JIS Z 2244

JIS Z 2244 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that specifies a Vickers hardness test method for primarily metallic materials. It is used when a Vickers “HV”...

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JIS Z 2245

JIS Z 2245 is a Japanese Industrial Standard that defines how to perform Rockwell and Rockwell superficial hardness testing for metallic materials using stationary or portable...

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JIS Z 2248

JIS Z 2248 is a Japanese Industrial Standard test method for bend testing of metallic materials. It is commonly used to evaluate a material’s ability to...

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JIS Z 2249

JIS Z 2249 specifies a method for measuring the conical cup value (CCV) of thin steel sheet. The result is used as an index of sheet-metal...

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JIS Z2201

JIS Z 2201:1998 defines standardized tensile test piece (specimen) geometries for metallic materials. It is used to help labs and manufacturers prepare consistent specimens so tensile...

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