DateRHazai v Vendég-
01/16 05:05 2 Toshiba Brave Lupus v Shizuoka Blue Revs 34-22
01/16 05:05 48 Kubota Spears v Toyota Industries 19-30
01/16 05:00 48 Sungoliath v Honda Heat 45-14
01/16 05:00 2 Wild Knights v Kobelco Steelers 42-10
01/16 03:00 48 Toyota Verblitz v NTT Shining Arcs 32-21
01/16 03:00 48 Green Rockets v Ricoh Black Rams 5-31
01/16 02:40 48 Coca Cola Red Sparks v Red Hurricanes 39-21
01/16 02:40 48 Canon Eagles v Kintetsu Liners 24-18
01/09 05:00 3 Toshiba Brave Lupus v Toyota Verblitz 29-17
01/09 05:00 14 Sungoliath v Coca Cola Red Sparks 52-7
01/09 05:00 14 Kubota Spears v Green Rockets 30-20
01/09 04:00 3 NTT Shining Arcs v Shizuoka Blue Revs 7-26
01/09 04:00 3 Wild Knights v Canon Eagles 46-6
01/09 02:40 14 Ricoh Black Rams v Toyota Industries 17-27
01/09 02:40 14 Honda Heat v Red Hurricanes 23-20
01/09 02:04 3 Kintetsu Liners v Kobelco Steelers 10-42
12/26 05:00 7 Sungoliath v Toshiba Brave Lupus 14-25
12/26 05:00 7 Kintetsu Liners v NTT Shining Arcs 20-18
12/26 05:00 7 Red Hurricanes v Green Rockets 14-14
12/26 04:00 7 Kobelco Steelers v Toyota Verblitz 25-32
12/26 04:00 7 Wild Knights v Honda Heat 64-5
12/26 02:40 7 Toyota Industries v Coca Cola Red Sparks 70-17
12/26 02:40 7 Kubota Spears v Ricoh Black Rams 31-22
12/26 02:40 7 Canon Eagles v Shizuoka Blue Revs 19-33
12/20 04:00 6 Red Hurricanes v Toyota Industries 28-29
12/20 04:00 6 Sungoliath v Ricoh Black Rams 37-20
12/20 04:00 6 Kintetsu Liners v Toshiba Brave Lupus 12-58
12/20 04:00 6 Kubota Spears v Wild Knights 27-30
12/19 05:00 6 NTT Shining Arcs v Honda Heat 29-15
12/19 04:00 6 Shizuoka Blue Revs v Kobelco Steelers 14-43

Japan Rugby League One (formerly the Top League) is a rugby union competition in Japan. It is the highest level of professional rugby competition in the country. The Japan Rugby Football Union created the competition in 2003, by absorbing the Japan Company Rugby Football Championship. The chief architect of the league was Hiroaki Shukuzawa who strongly felt the urgency of improving Japanese domestic company rugby to a professional level which would allow Japan to compete more convincingly at Rugby World Cups.

Until 2022, it was an industrial league, where many players were employees of their company and the teams were all owned by major companies. While the competition was known for paying high salaries, only world-class foreign players and a small number of Japanese players played fully professionally, which meant most of the players still played in an amateur capacity. The delayed 2021 season was the final season of the Top League, with the JRFU adopting a new fully-professional three-tier system from 2022. More details about the new structure was announced to the media in January 2021. Featuring 25 teams, the 12 top-tier clubs would be split into two conferences, with seven teams competing in division two and six in division three. The new competition was formally announced as Japan Rugby League One in July 2021.

The first season in 2003–04 featured 12 teams. The league was expanded to 14 teams in 2006–07 and 16 teams in 2013–14. The Top League is played during the off-season of the Super Rugby, Therefore, many full-time foreign professionals from Southern Hemisphere countries have played in the Top League, notably Tony Brown, George Gregan and Dan Carter. In the 2010s, salaries in the Top League have risen to become some of the highest in the rugby world; in 2012, South Africa's Jaque Fourie, now with Kobelco Steelers, was widely reported to be the world's highest-paid player.

A japán rögbi szakszervezetek versenyének második szintje. A csapatok három részre osztott bajnokságban versenyeznek, minden bajnokság 7–10 csapattal, és a bajnokok és a második helyezettek felkerülnek a Divízió 1-be.

A bajnokság 2014-ben jött létre, amikor a Japan Top Challenge League-t kettéosztották.