Japan moved eastward by up to 5.3 meters in the March 11, 2011 Tohoku earthquake, with the largest shift measured near the Oshika Peninsula. Across a roughly 420-kilometer-long swath of eastern Honshu, more than 1 meter of horizontal deformation was recorded, so the “Japan moved” line is real, but the maximum happened near the rupture zone, not uniformly across the whole country.
What moved permanently was the crust of northeast Japan’s overriding plate, which had been bent and dragged by the Pacific Plate before the quake and then sprang seaward during the megathrust rupture. The deeper structure of Japan did not slide wholesale across the map; the upper crust was elastically deformed, then partly released, on a national scale by a very large subduction earthquake.
GEONET measured up to 5.3 meters of eastward motion on northeast Honshu
The clearest number comes from Japan’s nationwide GEONET GPS network, which measured the largest horizontal displacement at the electronic reference station at Oshika as about 5.3 meters east-southeast. The same revision by the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan reported about 1.2 meters of subsidence there.
That peak figure was not a one-off outlier invented by a headline writer. A GEONET-based paper in Earth, Planets and Space reported that the mainshock produced a maximum horizontal displacement of 5.3 m and that the zone with more than 1 meter of horizontal displacement extended for about 420 kilometers along eastern Honshu.
Other studies reported the same pattern in slightly rounder terms. A Geophysical Research Letters slip model said the coast of northeast Japan moved eastward by up to 5 meters and generally subsided by about 0.5 meters. A GPS analysis covering all Japan likewise found that northern Honshu shifted eastward by as much as 5.3 meters.
The widely repeated “2.4 to 3 meters” summaries are not exactly wrong; they are just describing a different thing. They usually refer to broader regional motion or rounded representative values for Honshu, while the 5.3-meter figure is the local maximum near the epicenter-facing coast.
One useful way to make the scale concrete: if more than 1 meter of motion stretched across about 420 kilometers, that deformation zone was about 79 times longer than the 5.3-meter maximum shift was large. The point is simple: this was not a local shoreline nudge but a crustal distortion spread across a large fraction of northeast Honshu.
The megathrust rupture permanently deformed Japan’s upper plate
Why did so much of Japan move eastward? Because the Tohoku earthquake was a subduction-zone megathrust event on the boundary where the Pacific Plate dives beneath Japan. Before the quake, that boundary was partly locked, so the overriding plate, the crust under northeast Japan, was being slowly dragged and bent.
When the fault ruptured, that stored strain was released in minutes. The USGS executive summary says slip on the plate boundary reached about 50 to 60 meters over an area roughly 400 kilometers by 150 kilometers. That is why the crustal response was so large and so widespread. A smaller rupture does not usually drag a substantial part of a country sideways.
A Nature paper on coseismic and postseismic slip found that the Mw 9.0 rupture concentrated very large slip near the trench. In plain English, the plate interface lurched, and the upper plate above it snapped seaward like a bent board released from pressure. Not every point moved by the same amount, but the dominant coseismic motion on land in northeast Japan was eastward toward the trench.
That permanent part matters. Earthquakes generate shaking waves that pass, but they also leave behind static deformation: the crust ends up in a new position. The GEONET observations were measuring that new geometry, though early before-and-after daily coordinate comparisons also include small contributions from aftershocks and very short-term postseismic motion.
Japan moved eastward by up to 5.3 meters in the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, with the largest shift measured near the Oshika Peninsula.
GPS and InSAR show which parts of Japan shifted most and which did not
Scientists could map the shift because Japan already had one of the world’s densest continuous GPS arrays. GEONET records station positions continuously, so researchers could compare coordinates before and after the mainshock across the country instead of relying on scattered field surveys.
That network showed a simple pattern first: eastern Honshu, especially closest to the rupture, moved the most. The Oshika station was the standout, but the eastward displacement extended far beyond one peninsula. The all-Japan GPS study found detectable coseismic displacements at a broad scale, with the largest signals in northern Honshu.
GPS alone, though, gives point measurements at station locations. To fill in the spaces, researchers combined it with InSAR satellite radar, which detects ground displacement from changes in radar phase between satellite passes. The combined InSAR and GEONET deformation map confirmed near-eastward motion over a broad area and again found about 5.3 meters of displacement near Oshika.
The split between what moved most and what moved less was governed mainly by geometry and distance from the fault. Places closer to the rupture patch and above the most strongly released strain saw the largest permanent offsets. Farther parts of Japan also moved, but by less, and not every island or region belongs in the same headline bucket as northeast Honshu.
A clean summary of the measurements looks like this:
| Measurement | What the sources show |
|---|---|
| Maximum horizontal shift | 5.3 m near Oshika |
| Broad deformation zone | >1 m across about 420 km |
| Vertical motion near maximum site | About 1.2 m subsidence at Oshika |
| Rupture size driving the motion | About 400 km by 150 km |
| Fault slip on the plate boundary | About 50-60 m |
What did not happen is also worth stating plainly. Japan as a rigid block did not shift east by one single number. The crust deformed unevenly, with the largest permanent displacement on the Pacific side of northeast Honshu and smaller offsets elsewhere. “Japan moved eastward” is accurate shorthand for the geodetic result, but the real map is a gradient, not a conveyor belt.
There was also a sequel. A later Nature study on postseismic deformation found that short-term motion after the quake did not simply continue the same coseismic pattern everywhere; some offshore trench-area sites later moved landward, opposite the initial onshore coseismic motion, largely because of viscoelastic relaxation. Big earthquakes do not just jerk the crust once and stop. They rearrange stresses, and the Earth keeps settling.
Japan as a rigid block did not shift east by one single number.
The bottom line is blunt: northeast Japan’s crust moved eastward by meters in the 2011 Tohoku earthquake because a magnitude-9 megathrust rupture released strain across a huge locked subduction boundary. The cleanest headline figure is the 5.3-meter maximum measured by GEONET near Oshika, while the fuller answer is that more than 1 meter of motion spread across hundreds of kilometers of eastern Honshu.
Key Takeaways
- Japan moved eastward by up to 5.3 meters in the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, with the largest shift near the Oshika Peninsula.
- The broad deformation zone covered about 420 kilometers of eastern Honshu, with more than 1 meter of horizontal motion.
- The quake was a subduction megathrust rupture, and slip on the plate boundary reached about 50-60 meters.
- GEONET GPS stations measured point-by-point ground motion, while InSAR filled in the wider deformation pattern between stations.
- Japan did not move east as one rigid slab; northeast Honshu deformed unevenly, with the biggest offsets nearest the rupture.
Frequently Asked Questions
Did all of Japan move 5.3 meters east?
No. The 5.3-meter figure was the maximum horizontal displacement measured near the Oshika Peninsula. The broader result is that eastern Honshu saw widespread eastward motion, with more than 1 meter across about 420 kilometers.
Why did Japan move east instead of west?
The Pacific Plate subducts beneath Japan, and the plate boundary had stored strain while it was locked. When the megathrust fault ruptured, the overriding plate in northeast Japan rebounded seaward, which for most of that coastline meant eastward motion.
How do GPS and InSAR measure earthquake deformation?
GPS measures precise positions at fixed ground stations before and after the quake. InSAR compares radar signals from satellites on repeated passes to infer ground displacement over wide areas, which is why the two methods together are much better than either alone.
Was the eastward shift permanent?
The main coseismic deformation was permanent in the sense that the crust ended up in a new position after the rupture, and GEONET recorded that offset. But the Earth kept adjusting afterward: postseismic deformation changed some motions, and in some offshore trench-area sites the later movement was even landward.
Did the earthquake also make Japan sink?
In places, yes. Near the Oshika station, the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan reported about 1.2 meters of subsidence. Other studies described the northeast coast as having generally subsided by about 0.5 meters, though the exact value depended on location.
References
- Geospatial Information Authority of Japan, 2011, Revision of Survey Results after the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake
- Geospatial Information Authority of Japan, 2011, Coseismic Deformation and Fault Model of the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake, Based on GEONET
- Ozawa et al., 2011, The 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake and its aftershocks observed by GEONET
- Fujiwara et al., 2011, Crustal deformation map for the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake, detected by InSAR analysis combined with GEONET data
- Ozawa et al., 2011, Coseismic and postseismic slip of the 2011 magnitude-9 Tohoku-Oki earthquake
- Loveless and Meade, 2011, Geodetic slip model of the 2011 M9.0 Tohoku earthquake
- USGS, 2011, Executive summary for the 2011 Great Tohoku Earthquake
- Sun et al., 2014, Prevalence of viscoelastic relaxation after the 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake
- Li et al., 2011, Far-field coseismic displacements associated with the 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake in Japan observed by Global Positioning System
Further Reading
- Revision of Survey Results after the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake, GSI report with the headline Oshika displacement and subsidence figures.
- The 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake and its aftershocks observed by GEONET, GEONET summary paper with the 5.3 m maximum and 420 km deformation zone.
- Crustal deformation map for the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake, detected by InSAR analysis combined with GEONET data, Wide-area deformation mapping from satellite radar and GPS.
- Coseismic and postseismic slip of the 2011 magnitude-9 Tohoku-Oki earthquake, Slip distribution paper linking plate-boundary rupture to onshore deformation.
- Prevalence of viscoelastic relaxation after the 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake, Later work on why some postseismic motions reversed direction offshore.
Last reviewed: 2026-06
