Have you ever stepped into an elevator, pressed the wrong floor button, and immediately thought, โOopsโฆ now Iโm stuck making a stop I didnโt needโ?
Well, hereโs a fun little secret: some Japanese elevators actually let you undo your mistake โ if you know the trick.
I recently overheard a Japanese YouTuber talking about this quirky elevator hack. He said that if you double-press the same floor button, it can sometimes cancel your selection. Sounds like a hidden life cheat, right? Exceptโฆ it doesnโt always work.
Thatโs because not all elevators in Japan are created equal. Some brands like Mitsubishi, Toshiba, or Otis may respond to a quick double-tap. Others like Hitachi require you to press and hold the button for a few seconds. And a fewโwell, theyโll just ignore your best efforts entirely.
Apparently, it depends on the manufacturer and settings of the elevator system. In some buildings, this featureโknown as car call cancellationโis turned on. In others, itโs disabled for safety or simplicity.
So next time you press the wrong floor, try this:
๐ Double-tap the same button quickly.
If the light turns off, congratulationsโyouโve just unlocked a hidden feature of Japanese everyday life!
If it doesnโt workโฆ well, youโll just have to enjoy the unexpected detour. Consider it a mini adventure in your day.
This trick isnโt purely Japanese magic. In fact, the feature exists in many countries โ itโs just less well-known elsewhere.
For instance, Toshibaโs elevator manual in Japan clearly states:
โPush the destination floor button twice within 3 seconds to cancel. The light of the destination floor button will turn off.โ
Fujitec, another Japanese manufacturer, adds the same function:
โIf youโve pressed the wrong car-call button, this mistake can be cancelled by pushing the same button twice.โ
But even outside Japan, itโs been spotted. A U.S. patent titled โElevator system and method of cancelling passenger requested floor destinationโ describes how the system allows or restricts cancellations depending on timing or movement. Some European elevator systems list a feature called โFalse car-call cancellingโ or โActive car call cancellation,โ which lets users undo a wrong floor if itโs still early enough โ before the doors close or the car moves.
So yes โ the technology exists worldwide, but in practice, itโs often hit-or-miss. Whether it works depends on how the elevator is programmed, the local safety rules, and sometimes just pure luck.
Now, before you go hammering that button like youโre entering a cheat code in Street Fighter, hereโs a word of advice:
Spam pressing the button wonโt help.
Most elevators arenโt impressed by your frantic tapping โ theyโll just ignore you.
The cancellation only works if itโs programmed to and if you do it correctly (usually a clean double-tap, not a drum solo). So save your energy โ and maybe your dignity โ and just embrace the ride if it doesnโt work.
Japan is full of these small, fascinating design quirks โ little touches that make daily life smoother most of the time but sometimes leave you smiling at the effort it takes to outsmart a machine.
So next time youโre in an elevator, whether in Tokyo, Zurich, or New York โ go ahead, try the double-tap.
If it works, youโll feel like a genius.
If it doesnโtโฆ well, at least you learned something new. ๐








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