We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.
Short Description: Complete 2026 guide to Japan’s Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b) visa for advanced specialized or technical work, points, documents, family, PR, and rules.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-03
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Japan |
| Visa name | Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b) – Advanced Specialized / Technical Activities |
| Visa short name | HSP(i)(b) |
| Category | Work and residence status under Japan’s points-based highly skilled foreign professional system |
| Main purpose | To allow highly qualified foreign professionals to engage in advanced specialized or technical work activities in Japan |
| Typical applicant | Skilled employees, specialists, engineers, researchers, advanced professionals with a Japanese host organization and enough points |
| Validity | Usually issued in connection with a 5-year period of stay for Highly Skilled Professional (i); visa sticker validity for entry is separate and embassy-specific |
| Stay duration | Highly Skilled Professional (i) is generally granted a 5-year period of stay |
| Entries allowed | Usually single entry for the initial visa sticker unless otherwise issued; after residence starts, re-entry rules depend on re-entry permit system |
| Extension possible? | Yes. Extension/change of period of stay is possible if requirements continue to be met |
| Work allowed? | Yes, within the authorized highly skilled activities covered by HSP(i)(b) and related approved activities |
| Study allowed? | Limited. Incidental study is generally possible, but this is not a student status |
| Family allowed? | Yes. Spouse and children can accompany; additional preferential measures may apply |
| PR path? | Possible. This category is specifically designed to offer accelerated access to permanent residence for qualifying holders |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect. It can help build lawful residence history, but naturalization has separate requirements |
Japan’s Highly Skilled Professional system is a points-based immigration route for foreign nationals considered especially valuable to Japan’s economy and society. HSP(i)(b) is the stream for people engaging in advanced specialized or technical activities.
In plain English, this route is for professionals with strong academic, career, income, and sometimes research credentials who will work in Japan in a role requiring specialized knowledge or technical expertise.
It exists to attract talent by offering immigration advantages beyond ordinary work statuses.
Where it fits in Japan’s immigration system
This is not just a simple “visa sticker.” In Japan, there is an important distinction between:
- the visa placed in a passport by a Japanese embassy/consulate for entry, and
- the status of residence granted under the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act.
“Highly Skilled Professional” is fundamentally a status of residence category. In practice, many applicants first obtain a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) in Japan, then use that COE to obtain a visa from an embassy/consulate and enter Japan.
Official naming
Official English naming commonly includes:
- Highly Skilled Professional
- Highly Skilled Professional (i)
- Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b)
- Advanced specialized/technical activities
Related Japanese naming includes:
- 高度専門職
- 高度専門職1号ロ
- 高度専門職1号(ロ)
The “(i)” level is often also described as Highly Skilled Professional No. 1, while the next stage is Highly Skilled Professional (ii) or No. 2, which has broader and more stable benefits for those who progress.
Main idea of the (i)(b) stream
The (i)(b) stream covers foreign nationals who conduct work requiring specialized or technical knowledge at a public or private organization in Japan.
It is commonly confused with ordinary work statuses like:
- Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services
- Professor
- Researcher
- Business Manager
But HSP(i)(b) is different because it is points-based and comes with special immigration preferences.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Best-fit applicants
Employees
Yes. This is one of the main target groups. If you have a Japanese employer or host institution and a qualifying professional role, this may be ideal.
Researchers
Sometimes yes, but many researchers may fit better under HSP(i)(a), depending on the exact activity. If your work is more employment-based specialized/technical work than pure academic research, HSP(i)(b) may fit.
Founders and entrepreneurs
Usually no for this sub-stream. Founders and business operators are more often aligned with HSP(i)(c) or Business Manager.
Investors
Usually no for this sub-stream unless the person is not primarily investing but instead engaging in specialized/technical professional work.
Spouses/partners and children
Not as principal applicants under this category, but they may come as dependents if the main applicant qualifies.
Students
Usually no as a principal route. Students generally need Student status. Some graduates may later switch if they secure a qualifying job and enough points.
Job seekers
Usually no. This route typically requires a concrete host organization and activity plan. It is not a general job-seeker visa.
Tourists
No. Use Temporary Visitor instead.
Business visitors
No for long-term employment. Short meetings may fall under Temporary Visitor, but not residence and work under HSP(i)(b).
Digital nomads
Usually no. Japan’s HSP(i)(b) is not a general remote-work-for-overseas-clients route. It is tied to authorized activities in Japan with a Japanese organization context.
Retirees
No. This is not a retirement route.
Religious workers
No. A different status applies.
Artists/athletes
Usually no, unless the actual work fits advanced specialized/technical employment rather than performance.
Transit passengers
No.
Medical travelers
No.
Diplomatic/official travelers
No. Diplomat or Official categories apply instead.
Who should not use this visa?
You should usually look at another route if you are:
- coming only for tourism, family visit, or meetings
- studying full-time
- planning to open/manage a business rather than work as a highly skilled employee or specialist
- lacking the required points
- lacking a Japanese host institution or employer
- doing work that fits a normal work status better and does not benefit from the HSP points system
Common alternative categories
| Situation | More suitable route |
|---|---|
| Tourism / family visit | Temporary Visitor |
| Standard professional employment | Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services or other ordinary work status |
| Running a company in Japan | Business Manager |
| Academic research | Potentially HSP(i)(a), Professor, or Researcher depending on facts |
| Study | Student |
| Spouse of Japanese national | Spouse or Child of Japanese National |
| Long-term family route | Dependent or other family-based status |
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
HSP(i)(b) is used for advanced specialized or technical employment-type activities in Japan.
This usually means:
- working for a public or private organization in Japan
- performing duties requiring specialized knowledge, technical expertise, or advanced professional qualifications
- residing in Japan long-term for that work
- using the associated preferential treatment available to highly skilled foreign professionals
- bringing eligible dependents
- potentially qualifying for accelerated permanent residence later
Usually permitted as part of normal life in Japan
- renting accommodation
- opening bank/mobile accounts, subject to local/provider rules
- domestic travel
- short incidental study or training
- attending meetings and conferences related to your authorized work
- receiving salary for your authorized work in Japan
Prohibited or not covered
Tourism as the main purpose
Not the purpose of this status.
General job seeking
Not its main purpose.
Work outside your authorized scope
Not allowed unless separately authorized or clearly within the legal scope of your status.
Unauthorized side business or unrelated paid work
Potentially a violation.
Full-time study as the main activity
Not the intended use.
Informal volunteering that masks unpaid labor replacing a job
Can create immigration issues if it looks like unauthorized activity.
Paid performance, religious work, journalism, or medical stay
Not unless your actual authorized activity legally covers it, which is uncommon for HSP(i)(b).
Grey areas and misunderstandings
Remote work for an overseas employer
Japan’s official materials do not present HSP(i)(b) as a general digital nomad route. If your real activity in Japan is not the authorized highly skilled work tied to the points-based system and Japanese host arrangement, this may be problematic.
Side income
Passive income is generally different from active work. But active freelance work outside the authorized scope may require separate permission or may not be allowed.
Internships
Only if they fit the authorized status and are not really student training or a different work category.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
Highly Skilled Foreign Professional / Highly Skilled Professional
Official stream for this guide
Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b)
Long name
Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b) – Advanced Specialized / Technical Activities
Related internal streams
Highly Skilled Professional (i)(a)
Advanced academic research activities
Highly Skilled Professional (i)(b)
Advanced specialized/technical activities
Highly Skilled Professional (i)(c)
Advanced business management activities
Highly Skilled Professional (ii)
A more advanced status available after meeting progression requirements from Highly Skilled Professional (i)
Commonly confused categories
| Category | Difference from HSP(i)(b) |
|---|---|
| Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services | Ordinary work status; no HSP preferential measures; no points test in the same way |
| Researcher / Professor | May fit some academic roles better |
| Business Manager | For managing/operating a business, not specialized employment work |
| Specified Skilled Worker | Different program for labor shortages; not comparable in benefits/profile |
5. Eligibility criteria
Core eligibility
To qualify, an applicant generally needs:
- a qualifying activity in Japan under the advanced specialized/technical stream
- a host organization/employer in Japan
- a sufficient score under Japan’s points-based system for highly skilled foreign professionals
- compliance with general immigration rules
Points requirement
The key threshold is generally 70 points or more under the official points calculation.
Japan’s Immigration Services Agency and Ministry of Justice provide points calculation tables and preferential treatment guidance. Points can be awarded for factors such as:
- academic background
- professional career
- annual salary
- age
- research achievements
- professional qualifications
- graduation from certain universities
- Japanese language ability
- special bonuses under official criteria
Warning: The exact points framework can be updated. Always use the latest official scoring tables.
Nationality rules
There is no broad official rule limiting HSP(i)(b) to only certain nationalities. It is generally open across nationalities, subject to standard visa issuance and admissibility rules.
However:
- embassy document procedures can vary by nationality or country of application
- some nationalities may face additional screening
- applicants in third countries may face local consular restrictions
Passport validity
A valid passport is required. Exact minimum remaining validity may depend on embassy practice, but your passport should be valid through entry and ideally well beyond it.
Age
There is no published general minimum/maximum age rule specific to HSP(i)(b), but age affects points. Younger applicants may receive more points under the system.
Education
Education is often central to scoring. Advanced degrees usually help significantly.
Language
Japanese language ability may provide points in some cases. It is not always a mandatory baseline requirement, but can materially help.
Work experience
Professional career length can affect points and may also support the underlying work qualification.
Sponsorship / host organization
A Japanese public or private organization is generally needed to employ or host the applicant for the relevant advanced specialized/technical activity.
Job offer
Practically yes, in most cases. You generally need a defined role, employer, and compensation structure.
Relationship proof
Only relevant if bringing family.
Admission letter
Not generally relevant unless there is a special training/study component, which is not standard.
Business/investment thresholds
Not the core test for HSP(i)(b). Those matter more under management/investment categories.
Maintenance funds
Official HSP materials focus more on the employment/activity basis and salary than on a tourist-style bank balance threshold. Still, applicants should be ready to show financial stability if requested.
Accommodation proof
Not always a central COE issue, but may matter at embassy stage or after arrival.
Onward travel
Usually not the main issue for a long-term residence route.
Health
Japan may refuse landing or visa issuance on certain public health, immigration, or admissibility grounds. Routine medical exam requirements are not universally imposed for all HSP cases, but country-specific consular practice may differ.
Character / criminal record
Criminality, prior deportation, immigration violations, or security concerns can affect eligibility.
Insurance
Not typically a pre-visa universal requirement publicly stated for all HSP(i)(b) applicants, but after residence begins, national health insurance or employee social insurance obligations usually arise depending on employment setup.
Biometrics
This can vary by embassy/consulate process. Japan does not operate a universal visa-center model worldwide in the same way some countries do.
Intent requirements
You must genuinely intend to conduct the authorized highly skilled activity in Japan.
Return intent vs dual intent
Japan does not frame this route in classic “temporary intent only” language the way some countries do. Since this is a residence status with possible PR advantages, long-term residence intent is not inherently disqualifying if lawful and consistent.
Residency outside Japan
Not always required, but embassy application rules may differ depending on where you apply.
Local registration rules
After arrival, medium- to long-term residents generally must complete municipal registration.
Quota/cap/lottery
No general public quota or lottery is officially stated for this status.
Embassy-specific rules
Yes, these can vary. Some embassies require:
- local residence proof in country of application
- additional forms
- appointment booking
- original and copy sets
- extra photos
- translated civil documents
Special exemptions
Preferential measures exist for HSP holders, but they are not “exemptions” from the need to qualify.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
- fewer than the required points
- no genuine qualifying role in Japan
- no credible host organization
- role does not fit advanced specialized/technical activity
- inconsistent salary or job description
- inability to prove education/experience claimed for points
- inadmissibility due to criminal or immigration history
Common refusal triggers
Mismatch between visa purpose and documents
For example, claiming an advanced technical role but submitting vague or low-skill job documents.
Weak or unsupported points claims
If you claim points for qualifications, salary, research, language, or experience without proper evidence, the case can fail.
Wrong visa class
Some applicants should use a normal work status, Business Manager, or Student instead.
Incomplete COE file
A missing contract, company explanation, diploma evidence, or salary proof can delay or derail the application.
Unverifiable employer
Immigration may look closely at whether the Japanese company is real, active, and capable of employing the applicant.
Prior overstays or violations
Past immigration noncompliance can hurt credibility.
Criminal/security concerns
These can lead to refusal.
Translation errors
Incorrect or incomplete translations can undermine key facts.
Consular-stage problems
Even after COE issuance, a visa can still be refused in some cases if the applicant is inadmissible or documents are problematic.
7. Benefits of this visa
Core benefits
Japan’s highly skilled system is designed to provide preferential immigration treatment.
Common benefits associated with Highly Skilled Professional status include:
- favorable residence period treatment
- possibility of bringing spouse and children
- in some cases permission for parents of the holder or spouse under limited conditions
- in some cases permission for a domestic worker under strict conditions
- easier or faster permanent residence access for qualifying holders
- broader activity flexibility compared with some ordinary statuses
- smoother treatment in some immigration procedures
Family benefits
HSP holders can usually bring:
- spouse
- children
Additional family-related preferential measures may be available in limited official circumstances.
Work and residence benefits
- work in the authorized highly skilled role
- long period of stay, generally 5 years for HSP(i)
- easier progression to HSP(ii) in some cases
- strong PR pathway potential
Permanent residence advantage
One of the biggest benefits is accelerated PR eligibility for highly skilled foreign professionals who meet the relevant point thresholds and residence requirements.
8. Limitations and restrictions
Even though HSP(i)(b) is favorable, it is not unrestricted.
Main limitations
- you must continue the authorized highly skilled activities
- major changes in job/employer may require immigration notification and possibly status-related review
- unrelated work may not be allowed
- dependents do not automatically get full work rights
- residence card and municipal registration obligations apply
- tax and social insurance compliance is required
- re-entry rules still apply when leaving Japan
Sponsor dependence
The status is strongly linked to your work activity and host/employer circumstances. If your employment ends, you may need to take action quickly.
Reporting obligations
Foreign residents in Japan may need to notify immigration of:
- employer changes
- contract termination
- address changes
- status-relevant life events
No “set-and-forget” residence
If you stop conducting the authorized activity for a prolonged period without justification, your status can be at risk.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Period of stay
Highly Skilled Professional (i) is generally granted a 5-year period of stay.
Visa validity vs period of stay
These are different:
- the visa sticker is for entering Japan
- the period of stay is how long you may reside after landing under that status
When the clock starts
Your residence period starts from landing in Japan with that status.
Entries
The initial embassy-issued visa may be single or otherwise as issued. Once resident, travel is managed under Japan’s re-entry rules.
Re-entry
Residents leaving Japan temporarily should usually use:
- the special re-entry permit system when eligible, or
- a regular re-entry permit if needed
Always confirm before travel.
Renewal timing
Extensions should be filed before the current period of stay expires.
Overstay consequences
Overstaying can lead to:
- loss of lawful status
- detention/removal risk
- future visa problems
- possible bans
Bridging/interim status
Japan does not use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries. However, if a proper extension/change application is filed before expiration, the applicant may continue to stay under the statutory post-filing framework while it is pending, subject to Japanese law and the specific application type.
10. Complete document checklist
Document requirements vary by whether you apply:
- for a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) in Japan first, then visa issuance abroad
- directly through a Japanese embassy/consulate where allowed
Below is the most practical master checklist.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application form | Official immigration or visa form | Starts the case | Old version, blank fields, inconsistent answers |
| Certificate of Eligibility application set or issued COE | Immigration pre-screening document | Core basis for visa issuance in many cases | Treating COE as the visa itself |
| Points calculation sheet | Official scoring worksheet | Shows 70+ points eligibility | Claiming points without evidence |
| Explanation of intended activities | Role and duties in Japan | Shows proper classification | Too vague |
B. Identity/travel documents
- valid passport
- passport copy
- photos meeting official specifications
- sometimes prior passports
- residence permit for country of application, if applying in a third country
C. Financial documents
- salary details in employment contract
- tax or income proof if requested
- bank evidence if requested by consulate
- employer financial support documents where relevant
D. Employment/business documents
- employment contract or appointment letter
- job description
- employer registration/incorporation documents
- company brochure or overview
- company financial statements if required
- proof of the organization’s actual operations
- letter explaining why the applicant is needed
E. Education documents
- degree certificates
- transcripts if requested
- professional licenses/certificates
- proof of research achievements if claiming points
- language test certificates if claiming points
F. Relationship/family documents
For dependents:
- marriage certificate
- birth certificates for children
- custody/consent documents if one parent is absent
- family register equivalent where applicable
G. Accommodation/travel documents
Not always central, but sometimes requested:
- intended address in Japan
- housing arrangement details
- travel itinerary for visa issuance stage
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- invitation letter if used
- guarantee letter if required by the embassy in that jurisdiction
- host organization details
- contact person information
I. Health/insurance documents
Not universally required for all HSP cases, but if requested:
- medical certificate
- insurance evidence
- vaccination or public health forms, depending on current policy
J. Country-specific extras
Some posts may ask for:
- local residence proof
- criminal record certificate
- additional civil documents
- translated documents
- national ID card copy
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- passport
- photo
- birth certificate
- school records sometimes
- parental consent
- custody orders if applicable
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
Japan often requires Japanese translations of foreign-language documents in immigration procedures. Some embassies accept English or local language documents, but this varies.
Important: Apostille/notarization rules are not uniform across all stages and locations. Use the checklist of the relevant embassy/consulate or Immigration Services Agency guidance.
M. Photo specifications
Use the latest official specs from the relevant immigration/consular authority. Japan commonly requires recent passport-style photos with exact size/background standards.
Common Mistake: Using a passport photo size accepted by another country but not by Japanese authorities.
11. Financial requirements
Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?
For HSP(i)(b), there is generally not a tourist-style fixed personal bank-balance threshold publicly stated as the main rule. Instead, financial strength is usually shown through:
- annual salary
- employment contract
- stability of the host organization
- ability to support residence in Japan
- supporting financial documents where requested
Salary matters
Salary is a major part of the points system and a practical credibility marker. The amount must be:
- clearly stated
- realistic for the role
- supported by contract and company documentation
Who can sponsor financially?
Usually:
- the Japanese employer/host through salary and employment
- the applicant personally
- for dependents, the principal HSP holder
Proof that may be accepted
- signed employment contract
- salary statement
- tax records
- bank statements if requested
- employer guarantee/support documentation
Hidden costs to plan for
- housing deposit and key money
- first months of living expenses
- municipal registration-related setup costs
- school costs for children
- translations
- courier/document certification
- flights and relocation
Currency issues
If documents are not in JPY, conversions may be interpreted differently. It helps to provide a simple currency conversion note where appropriate.
12. Fees and total cost
Fees vary depending on whether you are at the immigration stage in Japan or visa issuance stage abroad.
Typical fee categories
| Cost item | Official position / notes |
|---|---|
| COE application fee | Generally no fee for COE issuance itself, but verify current rules |
| Visa application fee | Varies by nationality and reciprocal arrangements; check the embassy/consulate fee page |
| Landing/entry fee | Not typically a separate public visa fee category |
| Extension / change of status fee | Usually payable in Japan when applying for extension/change; check current Immigration Services Agency fee schedule |
| Biometrics fee | Not usually listed as a separate universal Japan visa fee, but local centers may vary if outsourcing exists |
| Translation/notary costs | Private cost, varies |
| Police certificate cost | If required, varies by issuing country |
| Medical exam cost | If required, varies |
| Courier/postal cost | Varies by location |
| Dependents’ visa fees | Usually separate applications and fees where applicable |
Important fee warning
Check the latest official fee page. Japan’s visa fees can differ by nationality due to reciprocity and can change.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct visa/status
Check whether your role truly fits HSP(i)(b), not a standard work visa or another HSP stream.
2. Calculate your points
Use the official points tables and gather evidence for each claimed point.
3. Gather employer and personal documents
This includes contract, company papers, diplomas, career proof, and family documents if relevant.
4. Apply for a Certificate of Eligibility in Japan
In many cases, the employer or an authorized representative files the COE application with Japan’s Immigration Services Agency.
5. Wait for COE decision
If approved, the COE is issued.
6. Apply for the visa at a Japanese embassy/consulate
Submit:
- passport
- visa application form
- photo
- COE
- any embassy-specific extras
7. Attend appointment/interview if required
Some posts may request an interview or extra documents.
8. Receive the visa
Check:
- name spelling
- passport number
- visa category
- validity dates
9. Travel to Japan
Carry supporting documents in hand luggage.
10. Arrival inspection
Immigration officers make the final landing decision.
11. Receive residence card
At certain major airports, medium- to long-term residents are usually issued a residence card on arrival. At other ports, procedures may differ and the card may be issued later via municipal registration.
12. Register your address
Do this at your municipal office within the required timeframe after settling.
13. Complete tax/social insurance and employer onboarding
Your employer usually helps, but the resident is responsible for compliance.
14. Processing time
Official standard times
COE stage
Japan’s Immigration Services Agency publishes general targets for residence-status processing, but actual COE timing varies significantly by office, volume, and case complexity.
Visa issuance stage
Embassy/consulate processing times vary by post and nationality.
What affects timing
- completeness of documents
- complexity of points claims
- company credibility review
- verification of degrees, salary, and experience
- family applications
- peak seasons
- security checks
- embassy-specific workload
Practical expectations
A straightforward HSP case often moves faster than a weak or unusual case, but applicants should still expect the process to take weeks to a few months, especially including COE.
Warning: Do not book non-refundable travel too early.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
There is no single universal public rule that all HSP(i)(b) applicants worldwide must submit biometrics at a visa center. This depends on the consular process in the country of application.
Interview
Sometimes required, sometimes waived.
Typical questions may include:
- what will you do in Japan?
- who is your employer?
- where will you live?
- how were points calculated?
- have you been to Japan before?
- are family members accompanying you?
Medical
Not a universally published standard requirement for all HSP(i)(b) applicants, but may be requested in specific contexts.
Police checks
Not universally listed for every applicant, but may be requested in some consular or special-case situations.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Japan does publish immigration statistics, but not always in a way that gives a clean public approval rate specifically for HSP(i)(b) worldwide.
So:
- No single official public approval percentage should be assumed here.
Practical refusal patterns
Based on official structure and common immigration logic, refusals often center on:
- inadequate proof for points claimed
- role not matching the HSP stream
- weak or questionable employer documentation
- inconsistencies across forms, contract, and company explanation
- missing civil documents for dependents
- prior immigration violations
- poor translation quality
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Use a clean points-evidence map
Create a table showing:
- each points category claimed
- points requested
- exact supporting document
- page number/reference
This makes review easier.
Make the job description precise
A vague title like “consultant” or “manager” is weak. Show the technical/specialized duties clearly.
Keep salary evidence consistent
The salary on:
- the contract
- employer letter
- points sheet
- any tax/payroll documents
should match.
Explain unusual facts
Examples:
- mixed career path
- name differences across documents
- recent large salary increase
- previous Japanese status history
- third-country application
Translate properly
Use complete and accurate translations. If the translator is not official, identify who translated it if required by the authority.
File early
Apply early enough to handle document requests, but not so early that documents become stale.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Organize around the points table
Most strong applicants build the entire file around the official points categories. This helps the reviewer verify the threshold quickly.
Pro Tip: Put a one-page “Points Summary and Evidence Index” at the front.
Ask the employer for a detailed support letter
A strong employer letter should explain:
- why the role is advanced/specialized
- why your background fits
- why the company needs you in Japan
- salary and reporting line
Avoid title inflation
If your role is ordinary but the papers exaggerate it, that can hurt credibility.
Handle large bank deposits transparently
If a consulate asks for bank evidence and there was a recent large deposit, add a short explanation and source proof.
Keep family documents perfectly aligned
Marriage dates, name spellings, and children’s birth records should all match. If not, explain why.
Use the exact official forms
Do not recycle an old form from a blog or forum.
Contact the embassy only when necessary
Good reasons: – unclear local checklist – passport collection rules – third-country application eligibility
Bad reasons: – asking them to pre-approve your chances – requesting updates too early
After refusal, fix before reapplying
A fast reapplication with the same weakness often leads to the same result.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often helpful.
When it helps most
- complex points claims
- unusual job titles
- third-country filing
- prior refusals
- family applications with special circumstances
- discrepancies needing explanation
Good structure
- Applicant identity
- Purpose of application
- Summary of role in Japan
- Why HSP(i)(b) is the correct category
- Points threshold summary
- List of key attached evidence
- Explanation of any unusual issue
- Polite closing
What not to say
- exaggerated claims not supported by documents
- emotional or irrelevant detail
- statements contradicting the application forms
- complaints about immigration policy
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor?
Usually the Japanese employer or host organization supports the case.
What they should provide
- clear employment contract
- company profile
- registration documents
- reason for hiring
- role description
- salary details
- contact person information
Common sponsor mistakes
- vague description of duties
- inconsistent salary figures
- outdated corporate documents
- unclear business activity
- failing to explain why the foreign national qualifies as highly skilled
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, generally spouse and children can accompany or follow.
Who qualifies?
Usually:
- legally married spouse
- biological or legally adopted children
Unmarried partners
Japan’s immigration system is generally stricter on legal marriage than some countries. Unmarried partner recognition is limited and fact-specific. If not expressly recognized under the applicable rule, do not assume eligibility.
Same-sex spouses
Treatment can be legally and practically complex and may depend on the exact status route, recognition of the marriage, and current administrative practice. This area can be sensitive and should be verified directly with Japanese immigration or the relevant embassy.
Dependent work rights
Dependents do not automatically get unrestricted work rights. They may need separate permission for work, and limits can apply.
Children’s study rights
Dependent children can usually attend school in Japan.
Minor/custody issues
If one parent is not traveling:
- consent letter may be needed
- custody documents may be needed
- divorce orders or death certificates may be relevant
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Principal applicant work rights
Yes, the HSP(i)(b) holder may work in the authorized advanced specialized/technical activity.
Self-employment
Not a general free pass. If your actual activity changes into business management or unrelated freelance work, immigration implications arise.
Side work
Potentially restricted unless within the authorized scope or separately permitted.
Remote work
Not clearly an unrestricted feature. If done, it should not conflict with your authorized status and tax obligations.
Internships
Only if consistent with the status.
Volunteering
Casual volunteering is not the same as employment, but if it resembles a job, caution is needed.
Passive income
Generally different from active work, but tax issues may still arise.
Study rights
Incidental study may be possible, but this is not a Student status.
Receiving payment in Japan
Allowed for the authorized employment/activity. Unrelated paid activity may be unauthorized.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Entry clearance is not final admission
Even with a visa and COE, landing permission is decided at the border.
Carry these on arrival
- passport with visa
- COE copy/original as applicable
- employment documents
- Japanese address details
- employer contact details
- family relationship documents if traveling with dependents
Onward ticket
For long-term residence, a return/onward ticket is usually less central than for visitor cases, but airline or border staff may still ask practical questions.
New passport with valid visa
If your passport changes, treatment can depend on the visa and travel circumstances. Check with the embassy/consulate before travel.
Dual nationals
Use a consistent identity and passport strategy. Mixed-name or mixed-passport travel can cause delays if not documented properly.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Yes, if you still qualify and continue the authorized activities.
Can you switch employers?
Potentially yes, but this is not trivial. You may need to notify immigration and ensure the new role still supports HSP qualification.
Can you change to another status?
Yes, in principle, if you qualify for that other status and apply properly.
Inside-country renewal
Yes, extensions are generally handled in Japan.
Risk points
- waiting too close to expiry
- assuming any new job automatically preserves HSP points
- not reporting employer changes
- falling below qualifying conditions
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
PR pathway
Yes. This is one of the strongest attractions of HSP status.
Japan provides accelerated permanent residence possibilities for highly skilled foreign professionals who meet the relevant point thresholds and residence periods.
Commonly referenced frameworks include:
- possible PR eligibility after 1 year for certain very high point holders
- possible PR eligibility after 3 years for those meeting the standard highly skilled threshold conditions
But exact eligibility depends on the official rules in force, your points, tax/payment compliance, and other PR requirements.
Citizenship pathway
Indirect only. HSP(i)(b) can help build lawful residence history, but naturalization is separate and usually considers:
- continuous residence
- conduct
- livelihood stability
- tax compliance
- other legal conditions
Japan’s naturalization process is separate from visa/status approval.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence
Living and working in Japan can make you a Japanese tax resident, depending on facts and duration.
Social security
If employed in Japan, you may be enrolled in:
- employees’ health insurance
- pension
- employment-related social insurance systems
depending on your employer and contract structure.
Address registration
Medium- to long-term residents generally must register their address at the municipal office after moving in.
Residence card compliance
Carry and keep your residence card updated as required by law.
Employer reporting and individual notifications
You may need to notify immigration of contract and employer changes.
Health insurance
Enrollment obligations often arise after arrival.
Overstay / status violations
These can seriously damage future immigration prospects and may lead to revocation or removal.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Visa waivers
Visa waiver arrangements for short-term visitors generally do not replace the need for the proper long-term work/residence route.
Fee reciprocity
Visa fees can vary by nationality due to reciprocal arrangements.
Embassy-specific application rules
Some embassies only accept applicants who are nationals or lawful residents of that country.
Special passport types
Diplomatic/official passports may have separate handling, but that does not change the underlying need for the correct status if taking up residence and work.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Not typical as principal applicants under HSP(i)(b), but possible only in unusual circumstances. Dependents are more common.
Divorced/separated parents
Custody and travel consent documents can be critical for children.
Adopted children
Legal adoption proof is required.
Stateless persons / refugees
Possible in theory, but document and travel-paper issues are complex and must be checked directly with authorities.
Prior refusals
Must be disclosed honestly if asked. Inconsistency can be worse than the refusal itself.
Overstays
Past overstays in Japan or elsewhere may affect credibility and admissibility.
Criminal records
Case-specific. Even old records can matter.
Applying from a third country
Possible only if the relevant embassy accepts it. Check local consular jurisdiction rules.
Change of name
Provide documentary chain linking old and new names.
Gender marker mismatch
Use a brief explanation with consistent supporting civil records where possible.
Previous deportation/removal
Serious issue. Official admissibility rules should be checked carefully.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “HSP is just a premium version of any work visa.” | No. It is a specific points-based status with its own criteria and benefits. |
| “If I have 70 points, approval is automatic.” | No. You still need a real qualifying role, proper documents, and admissibility. |
| “The COE means I cannot be refused at the embassy.” | Not always. A COE helps, but final visa issuance and landing remain separate steps. |
| “I can do any side job once I get HSP.” | No. Activities must remain within authorized scope. |
| “Dependents can automatically work full-time.” | No. Separate rules and permissions apply. |
| “Any skilled worker should choose HSP.” | Not necessarily. Some applicants fit ordinary work statuses better. |
| “Tourists can enter visa-free and switch easily.” | Do not assume this. Change of status from temporary visitor is restricted and fact-specific. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
What happens after refusal?
You may receive a refusal notice or explanation, but detail can be limited.
Is there an appeal?
Japan does not always offer a straightforward formal appeal path for every visa refusal in the way some countries do. Review options depend on whether the refusal occurred:
- at the COE/status stage in Japan
- at the embassy visa issuance stage
Reapplication
Usually possible, but best done only after addressing the reason.
Refund
Visa fees are generally not refunded once processing has begun, but check the specific fee rules.
Best practice after refusal
- identify the actual weak point
- gather better evidence
- fix inconsistencies
- consider whether another visa class is more appropriate
- reapply only when improved
31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?
At immigration
You present:
- passport
- visa
- COE if applicable
- landing documents
- supporting documents if asked
Residence card
At major airports, medium- to long-term residents are generally issued a residence card on arrival.
First 14 days
After deciding where you live, you generally need to register your address at the municipal office within 14 days.
My Number
You will generally be assigned a My Number for tax and social security administration.
Health insurance / pension
Your employer may enroll you, or municipal procedures may apply depending on your setup.
Employer onboarding
Expect payroll, tax withholding, benefits, and HR procedures shortly after arrival.
32. Real-world timeline examples
Example 1: Skilled employee abroad
- Weeks 1-3: points review, employer collects documents
- Weeks 4-8+: COE filing and processing
- Weeks 9-10+: visa application at embassy
- Week 11+: visa issuance and travel
- First 2 weeks in Japan: address registration, employer onboarding
Example 2: Worker bringing family later
- Main applicant files first
- After settling in Japan, dependent applications are prepared
- Family joins after relationship documents are reviewed and visas issued
Example 3: Applicant with complex points claim
- Extra 2-4 weeks spent obtaining degree proof, language certificates, research evidence, and employment verification
- COE may take longer due to document review
33. Ideal document pack structure
Suggested file order
- cover letter
- document index
- points summary sheet
- passport copy
- application form
- employment contract
- employer support letter
- company registration/profile
- education documents
- experience proof
- salary proof
- language/research evidence
- family documents
- translations
- explanation notes
Naming convention
- 01_Cover_Letter.pdf
- 02_Document_Index.pdf
- 03_Points_Calculation.pdf
- 04_Passport.pdf
- 05_Employment_Contract.pdf
Scan tips
- full color where possible
- no cut-off edges
- upright orientation
- legible stamps/signatures
- one PDF per topic unless the post wants merged files
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- confirm HSP(i)(b) is the correct stream
- calculate points
- confirm at least 70 points with evidence
- secure job offer/contract
- gather education and experience proof
- collect employer documents
- prepare translations
- check embassy jurisdiction
- verify latest official forms
Submission-day checklist
- signed forms
- correct photo
- passport
- COE or COE application support set
- points evidence
- employer documents
- family documents if applicable
- copies as required
- fee/payment method confirmed
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- appointment confirmation
- passport
- originals of key documents
- employer contact details
- concise explanation of role
- consistent answers with application
Arrival checklist
- passport and visa
- COE copy
- Japanese address
- employer contact
- register address within required time
- start insurance/tax setup
- keep residence card safe
Extension/renewal checklist
- apply before expiry
- updated employment certificate
- updated salary/tax proof
- notification records of any changes
- valid passport and residence card
- supporting family updates if relevant
Refusal recovery checklist
- read refusal reason carefully
- identify missing or weak document
- fix category mismatch if any
- prepare explanation letter
- reapply only after evidence improves
35. FAQs
1. What is the minimum points score for HSP(i)(b)?
Generally 70 points under the official points system.
2. Is HSP(i)(b) the same as a normal Japanese work visa?
No. It is a points-based highly skilled status with special benefits.
3. Do I need a job offer?
In most practical cases, yes.
4. Can I apply without a Japanese employer?
Usually not for this stream.
5. Is the Certificate of Eligibility mandatory?
Often used and strongly practical, but exact procedures can vary by case and post.
6. How long is the period of stay?
Usually 5 years for Highly Skilled Professional (i).
7. Can I bring my spouse and children?
Yes, generally.
8. Can my spouse work in Japan?
Not automatically without limit. Separate rules/permissions apply.
9. Can I apply from a country where I am not a citizen?
Maybe, if the embassy accepts third-country residents. Check local rules.
10. Does a COE guarantee visa approval?
No.
11. Can I switch from Temporary Visitor to HSP inside Japan?
Do not assume yes. This is restricted and fact-specific.
12. Can I freelance on the side?
Not freely. It must fit authorized activities or separate permission may be needed.
13. Is Japanese language mandatory?
Not always, but it can help with points.
14. Does age matter?
Yes, because age can affect points.
15. Can I count overseas work experience?
Yes, if properly documented and recognized under the points criteria.
16. Can I include my PhD for more points?
Usually yes, if supported by proper evidence.
17. What if my degree certificate is in another language?
You may need a Japanese translation, depending on the process and authority.
18. Can unmarried partners qualify as dependents?
Usually not automatically. This is limited and must be checked carefully.
19. Can same-sex spouses qualify?
Possibly in some contexts, but this is legally sensitive and should be verified directly.
20. Can this visa lead to permanent residence?
Yes, and faster than many other statuses if you meet the criteria.
21. What happens if I lose my job?
Your status may be at risk if you stop the authorized activity. You should take action promptly.
22. Can I change employers and keep HSP?
Possibly, but you must remain eligible and follow notification rules.
23. Is there a quota or lottery?
No general public lottery is announced for this status.
24. Do I need proof of personal savings?
Not always as a primary rule, but financial evidence may still be requested.
25. Are visa fees the same for all nationalities?
No. They may vary due to reciprocity.
26. Can my parents come with me?
In limited circumstances, special preferential measures may allow this. Check official HSP preferential treatment rules.
27. Can I hire a domestic worker?
In limited cases, yes, under strict HSP preferential rules.
28. Is HSP(ii) better than HSP(i)?
Yes, generally it offers broader stability and benefits, but you must first qualify.
29. Can I study while on HSP(i)(b)?
Incidental study may be possible, but it is not a student status.
30. What is the biggest reason strong candidates get delayed?
Weak document organization and inadequate proof for claimed points.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources only. Check the latest version before applying.
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan visa portal: https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, visa information / general procedures: https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Highly Skilled Foreign Professionals: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/resources/newimmiact_3_system_index.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Procedures for Certificate of Eligibility: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-1.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Procedures for extension of period of stay: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-3.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Procedures for change of status of residence: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-2.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, notifications by affiliated organization / contract changes: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/nyuukokukanri10_00014.html
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan, residence card and resident procedures: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/publications/materials/newimmiact_4_index.html
- Ministry of Justice / Immigration permanent residence guidance: https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-4.html
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, overseas establishments directory: https://www.mofa.go.jp/about/emb_cons/over/index.html
37. Final verdict
HSP(i)(b) is best for highly qualified professionals who have:
- a real specialized or technical role in Japan
- a credible Japanese employer
- strong evidence supporting at least 70 points
Biggest benefits
- 5-year stay framework
- special immigration preferences
- strong family benefits compared with ordinary routes
- accelerated permanent residence potential
Biggest risks
- choosing the wrong category
- weak evidence for points
- vague job descriptions
- inconsistent employer paperwork
- assuming a COE guarantees everything
Top preparation advice
- build the entire case around the official points table
- make the job description technically precise
- keep salary and employment evidence perfectly consistent
- prepare clean translations
- verify embassy-specific rules before submitting
When to consider another visa
Consider another route if:
- you do not reach 70 points
- your role is ordinary rather than highly skilled
- you are mainly opening/managing a business
- you are only visiting temporarily
- your main purpose is study rather than work
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- exact current points table and bonus-point categories
- current visa fees by nationality and embassy
- whether your embassy accepts third-country applicants
- whether translations must be certified in your jurisdiction
- whether your specific role fits HSP(i)(b) versus HSP(i)(a), HSP(i)(c), or a normal work status
- current processing times for the specific regional immigration office handling the COE
- whether same-sex spouse or unmarried partner recognition applies in your exact case
- whether police certificates or medicals are requested by your embassy
- current re-entry and residence card procedures at your intended arrival airport
- current PR accelerated pathway guidance and whether your present point total meets 1-year or 3-year PR treatment thresholds