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From Japan to Venezuela

All plugs match

When travelling from Japan to Venezuela: Good news: all your Japan plug types fit in Venezuela. Voltage is different (100V → 120V). Check your charger label; if it doesn’t list 120V you’ll also need a voltage converter. Frequency differs (50Hz / 60Hz → 60Hz). Modern phone and laptop chargers are usually fine, but some clocks, motors, and appliances may behave incorrectly.

JapanJapan
VenezuelaVenezuela

Your plugs

Plug A

Type A

Fits

Plug B

Type B

Fits

Accepted in Venezuela

Plug A

Type A

Plug B

Type B

2 of 2 plug type(s) match

You: A, B • Venezuela: A, B

Voltage: 100V → 120V

Different voltage

You may need a voltage converter.

Frequency: 50Hz / 60Hz → 60Hz

Different frequency

Check device supports both 50/60 Hz.

Plugs fit, but voltage differs

Adapters you may need

Voltage differs; check for 100–240V support.

About electricity in Venezuela

Venezuela is 120V/60Hz with Type A and B sockets.

VE

Grid & history

The Guri dam on the Caroní river is one of the world’s largest hydroelectric plants and historically provided most of Venezuela’s electricity. Years of underinvestment and drought have caused recurring nationwide blackouts since 2019.

Availability

Unreliable. Nationwide blackouts have occurred repeatedly. Most accommodation has generator backup.

Sockets & hotels

Standard North American sockets.

Energy mix

Renewables70%
Fossil30%

Hydropower-dominated; chronic underinvestment.

Practical tips

  • US plugs fit local sockets directly, so US travellers do not need an adapter.
  • A high-capacity power bank is essential because outages are routine.
  • The supply matches the US 120V, so US chargers work directly.

Need an adapter?

Find reliable travel adapters for VE on Amazon.

Browse adapters on Amazon →