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Short Description: Japan’s Designated Activities status is a flexible, case-specific residence status covering many special situations, from job hunting to digital nomads.
Last Verified On: April 3, 2026
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Japan |
| Visa name | Designated Activities |
| Visa short name | Designated Activities |
| Category | Residence status / status of residence with corresponding visa issuance where needed |
| Main purpose | Special activities individually designated by Japan’s Minister of Justice that do not fit neatly into other standard residence statuses |
| Typical applicant | Job seekers after graduation, interns in certain programs, dependents in special cases, digital nomads, long-stay tourists for recreation, certain domestic workers, and other special-category applicants |
| Validity | Varies by subcategory and visa issued by embassy/consulate |
| Stay duration | Varies widely: often 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, or other period individually designated |
| Entries allowed | Depends on visa issued and re-entry status |
| Extension possible? | Yes, for some subcategories; no or very limited for others |
| Work allowed? | Limited/explain: only if the specific Designated Activities permission allows it, or if separate permission is granted where legally possible |
| Study allowed? | Limited/explain: incidental study may be possible, but this is not the standard route for full-time academic study unless the specific designation covers it |
| Family allowed? | Sometimes; depends entirely on the designated subcategory |
| PR path? | Possible/explain: some long-term Designated Activities periods may count toward residence history, but many short-term or special-use streams are not practical PR routes |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect: only if the person later builds qualifying long-term lawful residence and meets naturalization rules |
Japan’s Designated Activities status of residence is a special catch-all residence category used for activities that the Immigration Services Agency of Japan and the Minister of Justice recognize, but that do not fit squarely into the standard statuses such as Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, Student, Business Manager, or Dependent.
In Japanese, it is commonly referred to as:
- 特定活動 (Tokutei Katsudō)
This is not one single uniform visa in the way people often think of a tourist visa or work visa. It is better understood as:
- a status of residence under Japan’s immigration system, and
- where relevant, an overseas applicant may receive a visa from a Japanese embassy or consulate to enter Japan under that status.
So this route is a hybrid concept: – the legal category inside Japan is a status of residence – the travel document used to enter may be a visa sticker or other entry authorization depending on nationality and application route
Why it exists:
- Japan’s residence system is highly categorized.
- Some real-life cases do not fit standard categories.
- Instead of creating a full new public visa class for every niche situation, Japan uses Designated Activities for ministerially designated cases.
Examples of situations often handled under Designated Activities include:
- graduates of Japanese universities who stay to seek work
- graduates of top overseas universities seeking work in Japan under a specific scheme
- digital nomads and their spouses/children
- long-stay sightseeing/recreational stays by wealthy visitors
- some domestic employees of diplomats or highly paid foreign professionals
- some internship/training or transition arrangements
- certain family-related or humanitarian cases
- start-up/pre-business preparation cases in some contexts
- specified preparation for departure after divorce/death in certain narrow scenarios
- other publicly notified and individually designated cases
How it fits into Japan’s immigration system
Japan’s immigration system broadly includes:
- statuses based on work
- statuses based on family/personal relationship
- statuses based on study/training
- statuses based on legal standing
- special statuses like Designated Activities
Designated Activities can arise in two ways:
-
Publicly notified designated activities
These are based on publicly announced categories by the Minister of Justice. -
Individually designated activities
These are granted case by case where the activity is approved specifically for that person.
Warning
“Designated Activities” is not one visa with one set of rules. Every applicant must identify the exact subcategory that applies.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
This route is suitable only for people whose purpose falls into a recognized Designated Activities subcategory.
Ideal applicants
Job seekers
Good fit for: – graduates of Japanese universities or certain institutions who have completed studies and are authorized to remain for job hunting – in some cases, graduates of designated top overseas universities under specific programs
Digital nomads
Good fit for: – remote workers employed outside Japan – freelancers with foreign clients – people who meet income and insurance requirements under Japan’s digital nomad framework
Founders/entrepreneurs
Good fit for: – people entering under a recognized start-up preparation arrangement, where available through specific local government frameworks or immigration arrangements
Special family/dependent situations
Good fit for: – spouses or children under a Designated Activities derivative arrangement where the primary applicant’s category allows accompaniment – some former dependents or family-related humanitarian cases where immigration authorizes continued stay
Long-stay recreational visitors
Good fit for: – wealthy retirees or long-stay visitors who want to remain in Japan for sightseeing or recreation under the long stay for sightseeing and recreation framework
Special category employees
Good fit for: – some domestic workers attached to diplomats, highly paid foreign nationals, or similar narrowly defined categories
Usually not the right visa for
Ordinary tourists
Most tourists should use: – visa exemption, if eligible – temporary visitor visa, if required
Standard employees
Most workers should use: – Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services – Intra-company Transferee – Skilled Labor – Business Manager – other standard work statuses
Full-time students
Most students should use: – Student status
Spouses of Japanese nationals or permanent residents
Most should use: – Spouse or Child of Japanese National – Spouse or Child of Permanent Resident
Ordinary dependents
Most family members should use: – Dependent status
Investors/business owners launching a normal business
Most should consider: – Business Manager – start-up support route first, then Business Manager if applicable
Transit passengers
Usually should use: – Temporary Visitor or transit arrangements, not Designated Activities
Medical travelers
Usually should use: – Temporary Visitor for medical stay where applicable, not Designated Activities unless specifically instructed by a consulate or immigration authority
3. What is this visa used for?
Because this status is broad, the permitted and prohibited activities depend on the exact notification or designation.
Common permitted purposes
Depending on subcategory, Designated Activities may be used for:
- job hunting after graduation
- preparation to start a business under an approved framework
- staying in Japan as a digital nomad
- accompanying a digital nomad as spouse or child
- long-stay sightseeing/recreation by affluent visitors
- certain domestic service arrangements
- some internship or practical training situations
- certain research or academic transition arrangements
- some family-based humanitarian continuation of stay
- specific activities individually designated by immigration
Prohibited or restricted purposes
Unless your exact designation permits it, you generally cannot:
- take ordinary employment
- start freelance work in Japan for Japanese clients
- enroll in long-term study as your main activity
- run a business outside the approved scope
- work beyond a permitted part-time or special authorized limit
- engage in entertainment/performance work unless your designation allows it
- do journalism unless specifically covered
- treat the status as a general-purpose open residence permit
Specific activity guide
| Activity | Allowed? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Tourism | Sometimes | Possible under long-stay recreation subcategories, but normal tourists usually use Temporary Visitor |
| Meetings | Sometimes | If incidental to the designated purpose |
| Employment | Limited | Only if the exact Designated Activities authorization permits it |
| Remote work | Sometimes | Yes for digital nomad route, subject to conditions |
| Internship | Sometimes | Depends on exact category |
| Study | Limited | Not the normal route for degree study |
| Volunteering | Sometimes | Must not violate the permitted activity scope |
| Paid performance | Usually no | Unless the specific designation permits it |
| Journalism | Usually no | Unless specifically designated |
| Medical treatment | Usually no as primary purpose | Usually handled differently |
| Transit | Generally no | Not the proper route |
| Marriage | No special marriage visa | Marriage itself does not create this status; family statuses may apply separately |
| Religious activity | Usually no | Use Religious Activities status if appropriate |
| Long-term residence | Sometimes | In special notified/individual cases only |
| Family reunion | Sometimes | Only for covered dependent/family streams |
| Investment/business setup | Sometimes | In narrow start-up or preparation contexts |
Grey areas and misunderstandings
Remote work in Japan
A major grey area historically has been whether remote work for a foreign employer is “work” in Japan. Japan now has a specific digital nomad framework under Designated Activities. If you fit that framework, use it. Do not assume a temporary visitor status is enough for sustained remote work.
Job hunting
Some graduates believe they can freely work while job hunting. In reality: – the job-hunting Designated Activities route is specific – work rights, if any, may require separate permission or be limited
Family members
Not every Designated Activities holder can automatically bring family. It depends on the exact notice and conditions.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
- Designated Activities
- Japanese: 特定活動
Long name
The long name is effectively the same: Designated Activities.
Internal structure
There are many sub-streams under public notices and individual designations. Japan does not present this as one consumer-friendly visa product; it is an umbrella legal category.
Related permit names
Common related terms include:
- Status of Residence
- Certificate of Eligibility (COE)
- Visa for entering Japan
- Permission to engage in activity other than that permitted
- Residence Card
Old vs current naming
The core name Designated Activities / 特定活動 remains in use. What changes more often are the specific subcategories notified by the Minister of Justice.
Often confused with
- Temporary Visitor
- Highly Skilled Professional
- Business Manager
- Student
- Dependent
- Long-Term Resident
5. Eligibility criteria
Eligibility is entirely subcategory-specific.
Core rule
You must fit a recognized designated activity approved by the Minister of Justice or immigration.
Common eligibility factors by subcategory
| Criterion | General position |
|---|---|
| Nationality rules | Some subcategories are open broadly; some require visa issuance procedures that vary by nationality |
| Passport validity | Must generally hold a valid passport; embassy-specific minimum validity may apply |
| Age | Usually no universal age rule, but some subcategories may have age-linked practical expectations |
| Education | Required for some streams such as job-hunting after graduation or top university graduate pathways |
| Language | No universal Japanese requirement for all Designated Activities categories |
| Work experience | Required only in certain streams |
| Sponsorship | Often required: employer, school, family member, host, or inviting institution depending on stream |
| Invitation | Sometimes required |
| Job offer | Not always; for job-hunting streams, the point is often that the person is still seeking one |
| Points requirement | Not generally, unless linked to other statuses or special frameworks |
| Relationship proof | Required for spouse/child accompanying streams |
| Admission letter | Only where education-linked |
| Business/investment thresholds | Relevant only to business/start-up related streams |
| Maintenance funds | Often required |
| Accommodation proof | Often required in practice or by post-arrival registration |
| Onward travel | May be relevant for temporary-type designated activities |
| Health | Some categories require insurance or practical ability to support stay |
| Character/criminal record | Immigration may refuse based on legal disqualifications |
| Insurance | Required in some streams, especially digital nomad |
| Biometrics | Consular or immigration process may require photos/fingerprints depending on procedure |
| Intent requirements | Must match the exact designated purpose |
| Return intent vs dual intent | Japan does not formally use “dual intent” terminology like some countries; your declared purpose must remain credible |
| Residency outside Japan | Relevant for some consular applications and digital nomad conditions |
| Local registration rules | Residence-card holders usually must register address after arrival |
| Quota/cap/ballot | Generally no public lottery system for Designated Activities as a whole |
| Embassy-specific rules | Yes, document submission rules can vary |
| Special exemptions | Possible under specific notices |
Examples of subcategory-specific rules
Job hunting after graduation
Usually requires: – graduation from a qualifying Japanese educational institution – recommendation or supporting documents from the school – evidence of ongoing job search – funds for living expenses
Digital nomad
Officially announced rules include conditions such as: – nationality from a visa-exempt country/region for short stays and tax treaty/social security related eligibility structure as announced by authorities – high annual income threshold – private medical insurance – remote work for a foreign employer or foreign clients – no employment by a Japanese entity as the main activity
Because details can evolve, applicants must check the latest ministry and embassy guidance.
Long stay for sightseeing and recreation
Usually requires: – sufficient assets/income – no remunerative activity – recreation/sightseeing purpose – often age and financial profile expectations in consular practice
Official-rule note
Japan often publishes high-level category summaries, but exact documentary expectations can differ by: – embassy/consulate – nationality – whether applying with a COE – whether changing status from inside Japan
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Common ineligibility factors
- your purpose fits a standard visa better than Designated Activities
- your intended activities are not covered by any designated notice
- you want to work in Japan but your stream does not permit it
- insufficient proof of funds
- lack of sponsor or host documents where required
- inability to prove your educational or family relationship claims
- prior overstay or immigration violation
- criminal or security concerns
- no credible explanation for long stay
- trying to use this as a workaround for ordinary employment
Frequent refusal triggers
- mismatch between your stated purpose and submitted documents
- incomplete or inconsistent application forms
- weak or vague activity plan
- poor evidence of graduation/job search in job-hunting cases
- inadequate insurance in digital nomad cases
- unexplained large deposits in bank statements
- sponsor documents missing company registration or identity proof
- passport issues
- low-quality translations or untranslated required documents
- applying under the wrong category
- failure to respond to additional document requests
Common Mistake
Applicants often say “I’m applying for a Designated Activities visa” without identifying the exact subtype. That makes the case look unprepared.
7. Benefits of this visa
Benefits depend on stream, but may include:
- lawful stay for a special purpose not covered elsewhere
- ability to remain in Japan during a transition period, such as job hunting
- ability to accompany a principal applicant in some categories
- lawful residence card issuance for many medium-term stays
- possible extension in some categories
- possible later switch into a standard work or family status
- access to legal stay while preparing next steps
- flexibility for modern categories like digital nomads
- in some longer stays, possible accumulation of lawful residence history
Family benefits
Some streams allow: – spouse and children to accompany – family residence in Japan during the principal’s designated stay
Travel flexibility
If you become a mid-to-long-term resident and maintain valid status: – you may use special re-entry permission for short trips abroad within the permitted rules
Conversion benefit
Some people later move from Designated Activities to: – work status – Business Manager – spouse/family status – another residence status if they qualify
8. Limitations and restrictions
This is where many applicants run into trouble.
Main restrictions
- activity is limited to what is individually or publicly designated
- no general open work authorization
- some categories are strictly temporary and non-renewable
- family accompaniment is not universal
- address registration and immigration compliance apply
- re-entry rights depend on holding valid residence status and following re-entry rules
- extensions may require proof that the underlying activity is continuing exactly as approved
Work restrictions
Many Designated Activities categories: – prohibit work entirely, or – allow only defined work, or – require separate permission for limited part-time activity
Sponsor dependence
If your stay depends on: – school support – employer support – family support – local government start-up support
then a change in that underlying support can affect your status.
Reporting obligations
Mid-to-long-term residents typically must: – register address with local municipality – carry residence card – report certain changes to Immigration Services Agency when required
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Duration of stay
For Designated Activities, periods often include: – 3 months – 4 months – 6 months – 1 year – 3 years – 5 years
But the actual period depends on the designated activity and immigration decision.
Visa validity vs stay period
These are different:
- Visa validity: how long you have to use the entry visa
- Period of stay: how long you may remain in Japan after entry under the granted status
When the clock starts
Your stay normally starts on: – the date of landing/admission in Japan under that status
Entries
Depends on: – whether you enter with a single-entry or multiple-entry visa where applicable – whether you later use special re-entry permission as a resident
Overstay consequences
Overstaying can lead to: – detention – removal/deportation procedures – future visa refusal – difficulty changing or extending status
Renewal timing
Extension applications in Japan are generally filed before expiry. Immigration commonly permits filing from around 3 months before expiry for many statuses, but exact practice can vary by case and office.
Bridging/interim status
Japan does not use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries. If a proper extension or change application is filed before current status expiry, applicants may remain under a form of lawful interim stay while the application is pending, under the rules applicable to pending applications. Verify current procedural details with the Immigration Services Agency.
10. Complete document checklist
Because Designated Activities is not one uniform route, the checklist below is a master list. Use only what applies to your exact subtype.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application form | Official visa/status application form | Basic legal request | Using wrong version or leaving blanks |
| Certificate of Eligibility (if applicable) | Pre-screening approval from Japan immigration | Simplifies embassy visa issuance for many long-term stays | Assuming every Designated Activities case needs or does not need a COE |
| Explanation letter | Applicant statement | Clarifies exact subcategory and purpose | Too vague, too emotional, not factual |
| Designated-activity support documents | Stream-specific evidence | Shows eligibility | Not identifying exact stream |
B. Identity/travel documents
- passport
- passport copy
- recent photo
- current residence permit for country of application if applying from a third country
- previous Japanese residence card copies if relevant
C. Financial documents
- bank statements
- scholarship/support letters
- tax records
- proof of income
- sponsor financial documents
D. Employment/business documents
- employer letter
- remote work contract
- proof salary or annual income
- business registration documents
- activity plan or business preparation plan
E. Education documents
- diploma
- graduation certificate
- transcript
- school recommendation letter
- proof of enrollment/completion
F. Relationship/family documents
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- family register equivalent where available
- custody documents for minors
- consent letter from non-traveling parent where relevant
G. Accommodation/travel documents
- hotel booking or housing plan
- host address
- itinerary
- flight reservation where requested
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- invitation letter
- letter of guarantee if required
- sponsor ID/passport/residence card
- employment certificate of sponsor
- company registration papers
I. Health/insurance documents
- private medical insurance certificate
- coverage summary
- health declaration if required
- medical documents only if requested for a specific stream
J. Country-specific extras
Embassies may request: – local residence permit – proof of legal stay in country of application – additional translation – appointment confirmation – local format photos
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- birth certificate
- parental consent
- school records if relevant
- proof of dependency
- vaccination/medical records only if requested
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
Japan often requires documents in Japanese or sometimes English, depending on office and document type. If a document is not in an accepted language, a translation may be required.
Apostille/notarization: – not universally required for all immigration documents – may be requested or practically helpful for civil status documents in some cases – consular practice can vary
M. Photo specifications
Use the latest official Japanese visa/photo specifications from the embassy or Immigration Services Agency. Do not rely on old templates.
Pro Tip
Include a one-page cover sheet at the front: – exact subtype – main purpose – list of enclosed documents – your contact details
11. Financial requirements
There is no one universal minimum fund rule for all Designated Activities categories.
General principles
You must usually show that: – you can support yourself during stay, or – a sponsor can legally and credibly support you
By subcategory
Job-hunting after graduation
Usually requires enough funds to live while seeking work.
Digital nomad
Officially requires a high annual income threshold and private insurance. Check the current official amount on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Immigration Services Agency pages.
Long-stay sightseeing/recreation
Typically requires substantial assets/savings and evidence of ability to live without working.
Family accompaniment
Usually requires proof that the principal applicant has enough support for dependents too.
Acceptable proof
- bank statements
- salary slips
- employment letter with income
- tax certificates
- scholarship or sponsor letters
- company financial support documents
- pension income proof for retirees where relevant
Large deposits
Large recent deposits are not automatically fatal, but they should be explained with: – sale documents – bonus letter – inheritance records – account transfer explanation
Common Mistake
Submitting a healthy bank balance with no explanation for how you got it can trigger doubts about credibility.
12. Fees and total cost
Fees vary depending on whether you are: – applying for a visa abroad – obtaining a COE in Japan – changing or extending status in Japan
Typical fee structure
| Cost item | Official position |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Varies by nationality and reciprocity; check embassy/consulate page |
| COE application fee | Typically no government fee for COE itself, but verify latest rules |
| Change of status fee | Payable in Japan if changing status |
| Extension of stay fee | Payable in Japan if extending |
| Biometrics fee | Usually built into process if required; no separate global standard |
| Medical exam fee | Only if required for specific case; not universal |
| Police certificate cost | Usually local issuing authority cost if needed |
| Translation/notary/apostille | Varies by country |
| Courier fee | If used |
| Insurance cost | Especially relevant for digital nomads and long stays |
| Legal/consultant fee | Optional, private cost |
| Travel/relocation cost | Variable |
Official-rule note
Japan’s immigration fee schedules can change. Always check the latest official fee pages of: – Immigration Services Agency for in-country procedures – Japanese embassy/consulate for overseas visa fees
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the exact Designated Activities subtype
This is the most important step.
2. Check whether you need a COE
Many long-term residence cases use a Certificate of Eligibility obtained in Japan first.
3. Gather stream-specific documents
Do not use a generic checklist alone.
4. Complete the correct form
This may be: – COE application – visa application at embassy – change of status application in Japan – extension of stay application in Japan
5. Submit to the correct authority
- Immigration Services Agency office in Japan, or
- Japanese embassy/consulate abroad
6. Attend interview/biometrics if requested
Not all applicants are interviewed.
7. Respond to additional document requests
Japan often issues requests for supplementary documents.
8. Receive COE or approval
If applying via COE, the COE is then used for visa issuance abroad if needed.
9. Apply for visa at embassy/consulate
Submit passport, COE, form, photo, and required supporting papers.
10. Receive visa and travel to Japan
Border officers still make final landing decision.
11. Arrive and receive residence card if applicable
At major airports, many mid-to-long-term residents receive a residence card on arrival.
12. Register address
Usually within 14 days of settling at an address.
13. Enroll in required local systems
Potentially: – National Health Insurance – pension, if applicable – My Number registration process through local authorities
14. Processing time
Official position
Processing times vary significantly by: – subtype – whether COE is required – office workload – nationality – completeness of documents – additional screening
Practical timing
- COE can take weeks to months
- embassy visa issuance may take days to weeks after COE submission
- in-country change/extension can also take weeks to months
What affects timing
- missing documents
- ambiguous purpose
- peak seasons
- security checks
- local immigration office backlog
- need for headquarters review for unusual categories
Priority options
Japan does not generally market broad premium processing for all Designated Activities cases.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
Japan collects immigration data during procedures and at border control, but there is no one global biometrics appointment system for all Designated Activities applications like some countries use. Embassy procedures vary.
Interview
Possible but not guaranteed.
Typical questions: – Why are you using Designated Activities instead of another status? – What exactly will you do in Japan? – Who supports you financially? – Why do you need the requested length of stay? – Do you intend to work?
Medical
Not universally required.
Police certificates
Not universally required for every subtype. More likely in sensitive, long-term, or individually assessed cases if requested.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Japan does not publish a simple official approval rate for “Designated Activities” as one consumer-facing visa class in a way that is easy to apply to applicants.
Practical refusal patterns
Most refusals arise from: – choosing the wrong category – weak subtype-specific proof – financial insufficiency – vague activity plans – using Designated Activities as a substitute for a proper work or family status – sponsor credibility problems – inadequate insurance for subcategories that require it
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Practical legal steps
- Identify the exact subcategory in your cover letter
- Cite the official purpose in plain language
- Organize evidence in the same order as your claim
- Explain any unusual financial transactions
- Include proof of current employment if applying as digital nomad
- Include school recommendation and job-search plan if applying after graduation
- Show accommodation plan clearly
- Use professional translations
- Ensure names and dates match across all documents
- If applying through a sponsor, include sponsor contact details and identity documents
- File early enough to handle document requests
Pro Tip
Treat the application like a legal file, not a travel scrapbook. Clarity beats volume.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
- Put the exact stream name on page 1 of your file.
- Add a document index with tabs or PDF bookmarks.
- If your bank statements show large deposits, attach a one-page explanation and proof.
- If you are job hunting, document actual activity:
- employer applications
- interviews
- recruitment emails
- career center support
- If you are a digital nomad, align:
- employer letter
- contract
- income proof
- insurance certificate
- statement that no Japanese remuneration will be received
- Families should submit relationship evidence in a separate mini-section for each dependent.
- If embassy instructions differ from immigration instructions, follow the embassy for submission mechanics, but ensure immigration eligibility evidence is still complete.
- Contact the embassy only after reading its checklist carefully; many delays come from asking questions already answered online.
- If refused previously, disclose it honestly and explain what changed.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
When needed
Not always mandatory, but highly recommended.
What to include
- exact Designated Activities subtype
- your background
- purpose of stay
- planned activities in Japan
- funding source
- accommodation plan
- duration requested
- confirmation you understand work limitations
- list of supporting documents
What not to say
- “I will do any work I can find”
- “I hope to stay permanently somehow”
- vague statements unsupported by documents
Sample outline
- Introduction
- Legal basis/subtype
- Personal circumstances
- Planned activity
- Financial support
- Compliance statement
- Closing
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor
Depends on the stream: – school – employer – family member – host institution – Japanese company – local government/start-up support body
Sponsor documents often needed
- invitation letter
- letter of guarantee if requested
- ID/residence card/passport copy
- certificate of employment
- tax/income proof
- company registration or organizational documents
Sponsor mistakes
- unclear relationship to applicant
- vague explanation of why applicant is needed in Japan
- missing contact details
- inconsistent salary/support statements
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Sometimes.
Who qualifies
Usually: – legally married spouse – minor children
But this depends on the principal applicant’s exact Designated Activities stream.
Unmarried partners
Japan generally does not treat all unmarried partners the same as spouses for immigration. Some exceptional treatment may exist in narrow contexts, but it is not a general rule for this category.
Same-sex spouses
Recognition can be complex and route-specific. Japan’s immigration treatment of same-sex spouses has evolved in some contexts, but exact eligibility depends on the applicant’s status, nationality, marriage validity, and current policy. Verify directly with Immigration Services Agency or the relevant embassy.
Children
Need: – birth certificate – proof of dependency – custody/consent documents if one parent is absent
Work/study rights of dependents
Not automatic. Any work rights depend on the dependent’s status conditions and any separate permission required.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
There is no universal answer.
| Situation | Work rights |
|---|---|
| Digital nomad | Remote work for foreign employer/clients within that framework; not ordinary Japanese local employment |
| Job-hunting graduate | Often limited; may require separate permission if any part-time work is allowed |
| Long-stay recreation | No remunerative activity |
| Family accompaniment under some streams | Usually restricted unless separately authorized |
Self-employment
Only if the exact designated activity permits it.
Remote work
Allowed only in streams that clearly permit it, such as the digital nomad route.
Internships
Possible only where specifically covered.
Volunteering
Must be genuine unpaid volunteering and must not contradict your status or displace ordinary paid work.
Passive income
Generally less problematic than active work, but tax and status implications can still arise.
Study rights
Incidental study may be possible, but this is not the normal route for full-time degree study.
Receiving payment in Japan
A key issue. If your stream does not allow work, payment connected to activity performed in Japan may cause problems. For digital nomads, the structure is specifically designed around foreign-source work arrangements, but verify current tax and immigration guidance.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Entry clearance vs final admission
A visa does not guarantee entry. Final admission is decided by border authorities.
Carry these documents
- passport
- visa, if issued
- COE copy if applicable
- sponsor contact details
- accommodation details
- return/onward ticket if relevant
- proof of funds
- insurance documents if applicable
Re-entry
Residents leaving Japan temporarily usually need to follow re-entry permission rules. Special re-entry permission is commonly available for eligible residents departing and returning within the allowed period.
Dual passports
Use caution and be consistent. Travel and immigration records should align.
Expired passport with valid visa/residence status
This can be manageable, but you should travel with both old and new passports if relevant and verify current airline/consular guidance.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
Examples
- job-hunting stay may be extendable within allowed framework
- digital nomad stay may be limited and non-renewable or subject to cooling-off conditions depending on current rules
- long-stay recreation has specific limits
- individually designated stays depend on the original approval basis
Switching
Possible in some cases if you qualify for another status, such as: – work status after getting a job offer – Business Manager after meeting business requirements – spouse status after marriage and meeting criteria
Risks
Do not assume switchability. Some categories are meant to be temporary and narrow.
Deadline
Apply before current status expires.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
PR path
Designated Activities is not generally marketed as a direct PR route.
However: – some periods under a valid status of residence may count as lawful residence history depending on the case – many short-term special-use streams are not practical pathways to PR – if you later switch into a stable long-term work or family status, that later residence usually matters much more
Citizenship
Japan naturalization is separate and depends on: – length of residence – good conduct – financial stability – other legal requirements
A short or temporary Designated Activities stay alone usually does not create a realistic direct citizenship path.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax risk
Immigration permission and tax treatment are not the same.
You may become taxable in Japan depending on: – length of stay – source of income – tax residency rules – treaty application
This is especially important for: – digital nomads – remote workers – business preparatory stays
Registration obligations
Mid-to-long-term residents usually must: – register address at local city/ward office within 14 days of moving in – carry residence card – report certain changes
Insurance
Some residents must enroll in: – National Health Insurance – other systems depending on employment situation
Compliance
You must: – stay within permitted activities – avoid unauthorized work – keep passport and residence card valid – update address and personal changes where required
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Nationality matters
Yes, especially for: – visa exemption eligibility – embassy document requirements – digital nomad eligibility framework – reciprocal visa fee arrangements
Visa waivers
Some nationalities may enter Japan visa-free for short stays, but that does not automatically authorize a long-term Designated Activities stay.
Applying from a third country
Some embassies accept only: – nationals – legal residents of that country
Bilateral agreements
Relevant mainly to fee reciprocity, tax treaties, and some stream-specific conditions.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Need parental/custody proof and often extra consent paperwork.
Divorced/separated parents
Expect requests for: – custody orders – consent letter – proof of legal authority to relocate child
Adopted children
Need formal adoption papers recognized for immigration purposes.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Possible but highly case-specific. Verify current policy.
Stateless persons/refugees
May face additional document and identity verification challenges.
Prior refusals
Must be disclosed honestly where asked.
Overstays
Past immigration violations are serious red flags.
Criminal record
May trigger refusal depending on offense and legal disqualification rules.
Applying from a third country
Allowed only if the embassy accepts such applications.
Name changes / gender marker mismatch
Provide linking documents: – deed poll/court order – amended passport – medical/legal documentation only if necessary and requested
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| Designated Activities is one easy backup visa | False. It is a complex umbrella category |
| Anyone can use it to live in Japan temporarily | False. You need a recognized designated purpose |
| It always allows work | False. Work rights are stream-specific |
| It is a loophole into Japan after graduation | False. Post-graduation job hunting has specific rules |
| Digital nomads can just enter as tourists instead | Risky and often wrong for sustained remote work |
| Family can always accompany | False. Depends on the specific stream |
| A visa guarantees entry | False. Border officers make final admission decision |
| Bank balance alone guarantees approval | False. Source and purpose matter too |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
The applicant is usually informed of refusal by: – embassy/consulate, or – immigration office in Japan
Appeal or review
Japan does not always offer a broad consumer-style appeal process for visa refusals abroad. In many cases, the practical option is: – clarify the reason if possible – correct the deficiency – reapply
For in-country immigration decisions, there may be administrative procedures depending on the exact decision type, but these are not always simple or fast.
Refund
Government fees are generally not refunded after processing, unless official rules state otherwise.
Reapplication
Best when: – you understand the refusal reason – you have materially stronger evidence – circumstances actually changed
Warning
Reapplying immediately with the same weak documents usually leads to the same result.
31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?
At immigration
You may need to show: – passport – visa – COE if applicable – purpose documents on request
Residence card
If you are entering as a mid-to-long-term resident, you may receive a residence card at a major airport.
Within the first 14 days after settling
Register your address at the local municipal office.
After registration
Potential next steps: – residence card address update – My Number notification – National Health Insurance enrollment if applicable – pension enrollment if applicable – school/employer reporting where required
First 30 days
Usually a good time to: – open a bank account if eligible – obtain SIM/mobile service – complete housing formalities – confirm tax and insurance obligations
32. Real-world timeline examples
Solo graduate job seeker
- Month 0: graduate from Japanese university
- Weeks 1–3: collect graduation and recommendation documents
- Weeks 2–4: apply for change to Designated Activities for job hunting
- Months 1–3: job search, attend interviews, maintain records
- Month 5 or 6: if job offer obtained, prepare switch to work status
Digital nomad
- Month 0: confirm nationality eligibility and income threshold
- Weeks 1–2: gather contract, income proof, insurance
- Weeks 2–4: apply through embassy if required
- Weeks 4–8: receive decision
- Arrival: enter Japan, comply with designated conditions
- End of stay: depart or switch only if legally qualified for another status
Spouse/child accompanying principal applicant
- Month 0: principal confirms family accompaniment is allowed
- Weeks 1–3: gather marriage/birth certificates
- Weeks 3–6: submit family-related application documents
- Arrival: register address together
Entrepreneur/start-up preparation
- Month 0: confirm local government or official support framework
- Months 1–2: prepare business plan and sponsor/local support papers
- Months 2–4: immigration review
- Arrival: implement business setup milestones
- Later: switch to Business Manager if thresholds are met
33. Ideal document pack structure
Suggested order
- cover page
- table of contents
- application form
- passport copy
- photo
- COE or eligibility section
- purpose explanation letter
- subtype-specific evidence
- finances
- sponsor documents
- relationship documents
- accommodation/itinerary
- translations
- annexes
Naming convention
Use filenames like: – 01_Application_Form.pdf – 02_Passport.pdf – 03_Cover_Letter.pdf – 04_Employment_Letter.pdf
Scan quality tips
- color scans
- straight pages
- readable stamps
- full edges visible
- no shadows
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- I identified the exact Designated Activities subtype
- I confirmed whether I need a COE
- I checked the correct embassy or immigration office process
- I verified current fees
- I prepared translations where needed
- I checked passport validity
- I prepared financial evidence
- I prepared subtype-specific evidence
Submission-day checklist
- signed forms
- correct photo
- passport
- copies
- appointment confirmation if needed
- fee/payment method
- organized document pack
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- passport
- appointment notice
- originals of key civil and financial documents
- concise explanation of purpose
- sponsor contact details
Arrival checklist
- passport and visa
- COE copy if relevant
- accommodation address
- insurance proof
- address registration plan
- cash/cards for initial expenses
Extension/renewal checklist
- valid current residence card
- proof designated activity continues
- updated finances
- updated sponsor documents if relevant
- application before expiry
Refusal recovery checklist
- understand exact refusal issue
- collect stronger evidence
- fix inconsistencies
- provide explanation for prior refusal
- reapply only after material improvement
35. FAQs
1. Is Designated Activities a real visa category in Japan?
Yes, but legally it is primarily a status of residence. A visa may be issued to enter Japan under that status.
2. Is it one single visa with one checklist?
No. It is an umbrella category with many subtypes.
3. Can I use Designated Activities just because no other visa fits me?
No. Your case must match an officially recognized designated activity.
4. Can I work on this status?
Only if your exact subtype allows it.
5. Can digital nomads use this route?
Yes, if they meet the official digital nomad requirements.
6. Can I work for a Japanese company as a digital nomad under Designated Activities?
Generally no as the main arrangement; check the exact official digital nomad rules.
7. Can I bring my spouse as a digital nomad?
Possibly, if the official framework allows spouse/child accompaniment and all conditions are met.
8. Can I study full-time on Designated Activities?
Usually no, unless the specific designation covers that activity.
9. Can I switch from Temporary Visitor to Designated Activities in Japan?
Sometimes in exceptional lawful cases, but not as a general assumption. Check immigration rules for your subtype.
10. Do I need a Certificate of Eligibility?
Often yes for long-term residence cases, but not always.
11. How long does processing take?
It varies widely by subtype and office.
12. Is there a minimum bank balance?
No universal amount for all streams.
13. Do I need health insurance?
Some streams, especially digital nomad, require private insurance.
14. Can I renew Designated Activities indefinitely?
Usually no. Many streams are temporary or narrowly renewable.
15. Can this lead to permanent residence?
Indirectly in some cases, but it is not generally a direct PR route.
16. Can recent graduates stay in Japan to find work under this status?
Yes, in qualifying post-graduation job-hunting cases.
17. Can I do part-time work while job hunting?
Only if permitted under the applicable rules or separate permission.
18. What if my sponsor changes?
That may affect eligibility. Report changes and check whether a new application is needed.
19. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?
Many embassies will not accept that. They often require nationality or legal residence.
20. Is Japanese language ability required?
Not universally.
21. Do I need to register my address in Japan?
Yes, if you are a mid-to-long-term resident.
22. Will I get a residence card?
Usually yes for mid-to-long-term stays.
23. Can I leave Japan and come back during my stay?
Usually yes if you follow re-entry permission rules and your status remains valid.
24. What happens if I overstay?
You may face removal, future refusals, and serious immigration consequences.
25. Is a refusal permanent?
No, but you should fix the problem before reapplying.
26. Can retirees use Designated Activities to live in Japan long-term?
Only in specific long-stay recreation frameworks, not as a general retirement visa.
27. Can freelancers qualify as digital nomads?
Yes, if they meet the official conditions and work for foreign clients, subject to current rules.
28. Can unmarried partners apply as dependents?
Usually not automatically; this is a difficult area and must be checked case by case.
29. Is a cover letter required?
Not always, but strongly recommended.
30. Do documents need translation into Japanese?
Often yes if not already in an accepted language. Check local instructions.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to Japan’s Designated Activities status and related procedures.
-
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Status of Residence “Designated Activities”
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/status/designatedactivities.html -
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Application for Certificate of Eligibility
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-1.html -
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Application for Extension of Period of Stay
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-3.html -
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Application for Change of Status of Residence
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-2.html -
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Residence Card procedures / mid-to-long-term residents
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/nyuukokukanri10_00009.html -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: Visas
https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: Digital Nomad Visa / Designated Activities-related information
https://www.mofa.go.jp/ca/fna/pagewe_000001_00046.html -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: Visa fees
https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/fees.html -
e-Gov Japan: Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act
https://elaws.e-gov.go.jp/document?lawid=326CO0000000319 -
Ministry of Justice / Immigration Services Agency main portal
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/
Source-use note
Japanese immigration pages are sometimes reorganized. If a page moves, use the main Ministry of Justice or Immigration Services Agency site search for the exact procedure name.
37. Final verdict
Japan’s Designated Activities route is best for people who fit a specific special-purpose category that Japan has already recognized, such as:
- post-graduation job seekers
- digital nomads
- certain accompanying family members
- some long-stay recreational visitors
- narrow start-up or humanitarian cases
Biggest benefits
- flexibility for special situations
- lawful stay where no standard status fits
- possible bridge to a work or other long-term status in some cases
Biggest risks
- misunderstanding it as a generic backup visa
- choosing the wrong subtype
- assuming work rights exist when they do not
- weak documentation for a niche category
Top preparation advice
- identify the exact official subtype first
- build the file around that subtype
- explain your purpose clearly and narrowly
- provide strong financial and supporting evidence
- verify current embassy and immigration instructions before filing
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if you are actually: – a normal tourist – a standard employee – a degree student – a spouse of a Japanese national or permanent resident – a dependent under an ordinary family route – a business owner ready for Business Manager
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Exact eligibility conditions for your specific Designated Activities subcategory
- Whether your case requires a Certificate of Eligibility
- Current digital nomad income threshold and insurance requirements
- Whether your nationality is eligible for the relevant stream or subject to extra consular checks
- Whether your local Japanese embassy/consulate accepts applications from non-residents
- Current visa fees, which may vary by nationality and reciprocity
- Current extension/renewal policy for your exact stream
- Whether family accompaniment is allowed for your subcategory
- Whether part-time work is allowed or requires separate permission
- Required translation language and whether notarization/apostille is expected in your jurisdiction
- Current airport practice for residence card issuance
- Tax treatment of remote work or foreign income during stay
- Any newly added, renamed, suspended, or withdrawn Designated Activities notices since this guide’s verification date