Japan passed legislation to lower the voting age to 18 from its current 20 today, allowing teenagers into polling booths for the first time.
The move will bring Japan - where political power resides firmly with the burgeoning older generations - into line with other developed countries and will extend the franchise to an extra 2.4 million 18- and 19-year-olds.
These young people are expected to cast their first votes in the upper house election scheduled for summer 2016, unless the lower house is dissolved for a snap election before then.
More From This Section
Japan last changed its voting rules in the punch-drunk months after its 1945 surrender in World War II, altering the age at which citizens could cast their ballot from 25 to 20.
Around a quarter of Japan's 127-million population is aged 65 or over, a result of low birth rates over the last few decades and no significant immigration. The proportion is expected to grow to around 40 per cent in a few decades.
The inverted age pyramid that this represents - combined with a Confucian respect for elders - has left Japan a country primarily run by, and for the benefit of, old people.