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Short Description: A complete guide to Japan’s Highly Skilled Professional (i)(c) visa for advanced business managers, including points, documents, dependents, PR, and renewal.

Last Verified On: April 3, 2026

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Japan
Visa name Highly Skilled Professional (i)(c) – Advanced Business Management Activities
Visa short name HSP(i)(c)
Category Work/residence status for highly skilled foreign nationals
Main purpose To conduct advanced business management activities in Japan under the highly skilled foreign professional system
Typical applicant Senior executives, founders, company directors, and business managers who meet Japan’s highly skilled points threshold
Validity Visa issuance validity varies by embassy/consulate; the residence status itself is generally granted for 5 years under the Highly Skilled Professional status
Stay duration Typically 5 years per grant of status
Entries allowed The visa sticker may be single or multiple entry depending on issuance practice; once resident status is granted, re-entry rules apply under Japan’s re-entry system
Extension possible? Yes. Renewal/extension of period of stay is generally possible if eligibility continues
Work allowed? Yes, for the authorized highly skilled business management activities
Study allowed? Limited. Study is possible if incidental and does not conflict with status; this is not a student status
Family allowed? Yes. Spouse and children can usually accompany; additional family benefits may apply under the highly skilled system
PR path? Yes, possible. This route has accelerated permanent residence options if conditions are met
Citizenship path? Indirect. It can support long-term residence leading to naturalization, but it is not a citizenship visa

Japan’s Highly Skilled Professional (HSP) system is a preferential immigration route for foreign nationals who score highly under a points-based assessment. The (i)(c) subcategory is for people who will engage in advanced business management activities in Japan.

In plain English, this route is designed for people such as:

  • company executives
  • representative directors
  • founders
  • senior managers
  • investors actively managing a business in Japan
  • business leaders opening or running a company in Japan at an advanced level

It exists because Japan wants to attract and retain highly skilled foreign talent by offering immigration incentives beyond ordinary work statuses.

Under Japanese law, this is not just a “visa” in the casual sense. It is primarily a status of residence under Japan’s immigration system. In practice, many applicants also need:

  1. a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) from Japan before travel, and then
  2. a visa from a Japanese embassy/consulate, unless exempt from the visa-sticker requirement for entry formalities

So this route is best understood as a hybrid of immigration status plus, where needed, an entry visa process.

Official naming

The official umbrella program is:

  • Highly Skilled Professional

The main stages are:

  • Highly Skilled Professional (i): initial highly skilled status
  • Highly Skilled Professional (ii): a more stable follow-on status available after a qualifying period

The official subcategories under HSP(i) are:

  • (a) Advanced academic research activities
  • (b) Advanced specialized/technical activities
  • (c) Advanced business management activities

This guide is about (i)(c) only.

Japanese-language naming

Official Japanese materials commonly refer to the system as:

  • 高度専門職
  • The point-based treatment is often described under 高度人材ポイント制

How it fits into Japan’s immigration system

HSP(i)(c) sits above ordinary business-management immigration routes in terms of benefits. Many applicants compare it with the standard Business Manager status. The key difference is that HSP requires a points score and offers extra benefits.

Warning: Many people call this a “business investor visa.” That is not the official name. Japan’s current framework uses statuses of residence such as Business Manager and Highly Skilled Professional rather than an old-style standalone investor visa label.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Ideal applicants

This visa is best for:

  • Founders/entrepreneurs starting and actively managing a company in Japan
  • Investors who are not passive investors, but will actually manage the business
  • Senior executives transferred or hired to run a Japanese company or Japanese subsidiary
  • Representative directors and corporate officers
  • Business managers with strong education, career, salary, and other point-scoring factors
  • Professionals planning fast-track PR through the HSP system

Who this visa is not for

Tourists

Not suitable. Use a short-stay visitor route if your purpose is sightseeing.

Business visitors

Not suitable if you will actually manage a company in Japan long-term. Short business trips for meetings are normally handled under short-stay rules, not HSP(i)(c).

Job seekers

Generally not suitable if you do not yet have a concrete business management activity in Japan and cannot document your HSP points basis.

Employees

If you will work as a regular employee rather than manage a business, you may need:

  • HSP(i)(b) if highly skilled and points-qualified, or
  • Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, or another standard work status

Students

Not the right route for full-time study. Consider Student status.

Spouses/partners and children

They usually do not apply as main applicants under HSP(i)(c). They normally apply as dependents or another family-based status.

Researchers

Usually HSP(i)(a) or HSP(i)(b), not (c), unless they will manage a business.

Digital nomads

Usually not suitable. Japan’s work/residence categories are purpose-specific. If your activity is remote work for an overseas employer with no real Japan business management role, this is likely the wrong route.

Retirees

Not suitable. Japan does not offer a general retirement visa through this category.

Religious workers

Use the appropriate religious activities status, not HSP(i)(c).

Artists/athletes

Use the specific entertainer, cultural, or other suitable status unless they truly qualify as advanced business managers.

Transit passengers

Not applicable.

Medical travelers

Not applicable.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Not applicable; diplomatic or official visa channels apply.

Best-fit profile

The strongest HSP(i)(c) applicants usually have:

  • a genuine company management role in Japan
  • a coherent business plan
  • sufficient capital or business structure to support the activity
  • education and work experience that score well
  • salary/remuneration that supports the points threshold
  • clear supporting documents from the company and/or founders

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

HSP(i)(c) is used for advanced business management activities in Japan.

This generally includes:

  • starting a business in Japan and acting as its manager
  • managing an existing company in Japan
  • serving as a director or senior executive of a Japanese company
  • overseeing business operations at a high level
  • conducting management duties tied to an actual enterprise in Japan

Activities often allowed as part of the main purpose

  • attending internal and external business meetings
  • negotiating contracts
  • supervising staff
  • corporate governance and strategic planning
  • establishing business premises and operational systems
  • visiting clients and business partners in Japan in connection with management duties

Activities not suitable as the main purpose

  • tourism
  • casual business visits without residence
  • full-time academic study
  • ordinary employment outside the authorized management role
  • undeclared side work unrelated to the approved status
  • passive investment without active management
  • work as a freelancer in unrelated fields
  • religious work
  • journalism as the main activity
  • performing as an entertainer
  • medical treatment as the main reason for stay
  • transit

Grey areas and misunderstandings

Remote work

If you live in Japan under HSP(i)(c), your main activity must match your status. Purely remote work for an overseas company unrelated to your approved management activity is risky unless it is clearly incidental and lawful under your actual authorized activities. Japan’s immigration rules are purpose-specific.

Internship

Not the usual route. If the real purpose is training or intern work, another route may be needed.

Volunteering

Small-scale unpaid volunteering may be possible if truly incidental and lawful, but it cannot replace or obscure your actual immigration purpose.

Marriage

This visa does not exist for marriage itself. Marriage can support dependent/family arrangements, but marriage is not the purpose of HSP(i)(c).

Long-term residence

Yes, it is a long-term residence route for the principal applicant, but only based on qualifying business management activities.

Family reunion

Possible indirectly through dependent/family applications.

Investment/business setup

Yes. This is one of the main uses, provided the applicant is genuinely managing the business and meets HSP criteria.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

  • Highly Skilled Professional

Exact subcategory

  • Highly Skilled Professional (i)(c)

Long name

  • Highly Skilled Professional (i)(c) – Advanced Business Management Activities

Related follow-on category

  • Highly Skilled Professional (ii)

Closely related categories people confuse it with

Category How it differs from HSP(i)(c)
Business Manager Standard business management status without HSP preferential treatment
HSP(i)(a) For advanced academic research, not business management
HSP(i)(b) For advanced specialized/technical work, not business management
Intra-company Transferee For transfers, but not necessarily senior business management under HSP points
Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services For skilled employees, not high-level business managers
Short-Term Stay For temporary visits only, not long-term management residence

Old vs current naming

Japan’s immigration language has evolved over time, and some private sources still use “investor/business manager visa” style labels. Officially, current applicants should rely on the present status names used by the Immigration Services Agency.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core legal idea

To qualify for HSP(i)(c), the applicant must:

  1. engage in advanced business management activities in Japan, and
  2. score at least 70 points under Japan’s highly skilled foreign professional points system

Nationality rules

There is no publicly stated general nationality restriction for eligibility to the status itself. However:

  • visa issuance procedures vary by embassy/consulate
  • some nationals may have different document or interview handling
  • security screening can vary
  • practical visa issuance steps differ by country

Passport validity

Applicants need a valid passport. Exact minimum validity expectations can vary by consulate, airline, and travel circumstances. Japan’s official consular practice should be checked locally.

Age

There is no general published age cap for HSP(i)(c), but age can affect the points score.

Education

Education is a major factor in the HSP points calculation. Higher degrees usually score more.

Language

Japanese language ability and, in some scoring tables, certain other recognized factors can affect points. Check the current official points chart.

Work experience

Professional and management experience is highly relevant and can add points.

Sponsorship / company relationship

The applicant typically needs a real Japanese business platform for the activity, such as:

  • a company in Japan
  • a company being established in Japan
  • a qualifying management role in a Japanese entity

For overseas founders entering Japan to set up a company, the documentation and viability of the business matter significantly.

Job offer

A traditional “job offer” is not always the right way to describe this category, especially for founders. But there must be a genuine basis for the applicant’s management activity in Japan.

Points requirement

The applicant generally needs 70 points or more under the official HSP point calculation.

Common point factors include:

  • academic background
  • professional career
  • annual salary
  • age
  • research achievements or other advanced achievements, where relevant
  • Japanese language ability
  • graduation from certain institutions
  • special innovation or growth-related factors where officially recognized

Warning: Do not rely on outdated private calculators. Use the current official Immigration Services Agency materials.

Business/investment thresholds

This is one of the most misunderstood areas.

HSP(i)(c) overlaps conceptually with business management activities, but applicants should still expect the underlying business activity to be real and credible. In many cases, the practical baseline resembles the standard business management framework, where the enterprise must have substance.

Officially, applicants should verify the relationship between HSP(i)(c) and the underlying Business Manager activity requirements in current immigration guidance.

Common issues include:

  • office premises in Japan
  • business plan
  • capitalization or scale of business
  • employee structure where relevant
  • corporate registration and governance documents

If the company is brand-new, the exact evidence needed can be more complex and fact-specific.

Maintenance funds

Japan does not always express this route in terms of a simple personal bank-balance minimum like some countries do. Instead, financial credibility is assessed through:

  • salary/remuneration
  • company viability
  • capital and business funding
  • ability to support dependents
  • practical settlement capacity

Accommodation proof

May be needed at visa issuance stage or upon arrival preparation, depending on location and case specifics.

Onward travel

Not usually the central issue for a long-term residence status, but airlines and consular posts may ask practical travel questions.

Health

Japan may require compliance with public health rules, but this category does not have a universally published standard medical test requirement like some countries do for all applicants.

Character / criminal record

Immigration violations, criminal issues, or security concerns can affect eligibility.

Insurance

Public health insurance enrollment usually becomes relevant after arrival for residents. Private travel insurance may still be wise before enrollment is complete.

Biometrics

Biometric handling can vary by application location and process channel. Japan does not use the same outsourced biometric model everywhere.

Intent requirements

The applicant must genuinely intend to perform the approved highly skilled management activity in Japan.

Return intent vs dual intent

This route is for residence in Japan, so it is not based on proving short-term visitor-style return intent. However, the application must still be genuine and lawful.

Residency outside Japan

If applying from abroad, local embassy/consulate jurisdiction rules may affect where you can apply.

Local registration rules

After arrival, foreign residents usually must complete municipal address registration and related procedures.

Quota/cap/ballot

No general lottery or annual cap is publicly stated for this visa category.

Embassy-specific rules

Yes, these can vary, especially for:

  • appointment procedures
  • local form requirements
  • photo handling
  • passport submission methods
  • whether original or copy documents are accepted

Special exemptions

Some procedural simplifications may apply to certain applicants, but these are fact-specific and should be verified with official authorities.

Eligibility matrix

Requirement General position
Genuine advanced business management activity in Japan Required
70+ HSP points Required
Valid passport Required
Japanese company/business basis Usually required
Strong education/experience profile Usually important
Salary/remuneration evidence Usually important
Clean immigration and legal history Important
Family relationship proof for dependents Required if family applies
Japanese language Not always mandatory, but can support points

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

You are likely not eligible, or at least at serious risk, if:

  • you do not reach the HSP points threshold
  • your role is not really business management
  • your company setup in Japan looks nominal or undeveloped
  • you are a passive investor rather than an active manager
  • your business plan is vague or inconsistent
  • your corporate documents are incomplete
  • your salary or compensation evidence is weak
  • your claimed achievements cannot be verified
  • your education or work history documents conflict
  • you have prior overstays or immigration violations
  • you submit altered or unverifiable documents
  • your passport is invalid or damaged
  • your family relationships are not properly documented
  • your translations are incomplete or inaccurate

Common refusal triggers

Refusal trigger Why it matters
Wrong visa class If your real activity is not HSP(i)(c), the application can fail
Weak company substance Japan expects a real business, not a paper company
Poor points evidence Claimed points must be documented
Inconsistent narrative Job title, duties, salary, and company facts must align
Insufficient financial credibility Company or personal funding may appear unrealistic
Prior immigration problems Can affect trust and admissibility
Missing translations Officers may not be able to assess documents
Embassy-specific noncompliance Local submission rules matter

Common Mistake: Submitting a generic “CEO” title with no real proof of business operations, office arrangements, capital, or management duties.

7. Benefits of this visa

The HSP system exists because it offers advantages.

Main benefits

  • permission to live in Japan for highly skilled business management activity
  • generally favorable 5-year period of stay
  • easier long-term planning than many ordinary statuses
  • potential for accelerated permanent residence
  • ability to bring family members
  • possible permission for certain additional family-related benefits under HSP rules
  • easier re-entry and residence continuity than short-term routes

Family benefits

Depending on the exact HSP rules and the applicant’s circumstances, benefits may include:

  • spouse and children accompanying the principal
  • in some cases, permission for parents or a domestic worker under strict conditions under the broader HSP preferential framework

Warning: These special family benefits are not automatic and have detailed conditions. Verify carefully with official guidance.

Work and activity benefits

The main applicant can lawfully perform the approved management activities in Japan. Compared with standard routes, the HSP framework is designed to be more attractive and flexible.

PR benefit

One of the biggest advantages is the possibility of applying for permanent residence faster than under ordinary routes, depending on points and residence history.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Even though HSP(i)(c) is favorable, it is not unlimited.

Key restrictions

  • you must continue the authorized highly skilled business management activity
  • you cannot use the status for unrelated work freely
  • you must maintain the basis on which status was granted
  • changes in company structure, role, or compensation may matter
  • you must complete resident registration obligations
  • you must follow tax and insurance rules
  • prolonged inactivity or sham business operations can create immigration problems

Sponsor/company dependence

This route is tied to the actual business management activity. If the company closes, never starts operating, or your role materially changes, immigration consequences can follow.

Re-entry limitations

Residents may usually use Japan’s re-entry system, but departure procedures and timing matter.

No public-funds shortcut

This is not a welfare-based immigration route.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Period of stay

Highly Skilled Professional status is generally associated with a 5-year period of stay.

Visa validity vs period of stay

These are different:

  • Visa validity: how long you have to use the visa to enter Japan after issuance
  • Period of stay: how long you may stay in Japan under your residence status after landing

Entries

The embassy-issued visa may be single or multiple entry depending on issuance mechanics, but long-term residents rely mainly on residence status and re-entry permissions after arrival.

When the clock starts

Your period of stay begins when you are granted landing permission in Japan.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying or staying after status expiry can lead to:

  • status violations
  • difficulty renewing or changing status later
  • removal procedures
  • future visa refusal risks

Renewal timing

Extension applications should be filed before the current period of stay expires. In Japan, residents often apply in advance through the Immigration Services Agency.

Bridging/interim status

Japan does not generally use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries, but if a proper extension or change application is filed before expiry, procedural protections may apply while it is pending. Verify current rules in the specific filing context.

10. Complete document checklist

Document needs vary by whether you are:

  • applying for a COE
  • applying for a visa after COE issuance
  • applying for change of status or extension inside Japan
  • applying with dependents

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Application form Official immigration or visa form Starts the legal request Using outdated version
Certificate of Eligibility application or issued COE Pre-approval document for residence eligibility Central to many long-term cases Mismatch with visa application details
Points calculation sheet Official HSP points documentation Proves 70+ points Claiming points without evidence
Reason/explanatory letter Narrative of role and company Clarifies case Too vague

B. Identity/travel documents

  • valid passport
  • passport copy
  • passport photos
  • national ID if locally required
  • residence permit for current country of residence if applying from a third country

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements
  • salary evidence
  • tax certificates where relevant
  • business capital evidence
  • company financial statements if available
  • proof of remittance/funding sources

D. Employment/business documents

For this visa, this is one of the most important sections.

Possible documents include:

  • company registration documents
  • articles of incorporation
  • certificate of registered matters
  • shareholder register where relevant
  • board resolution or appointment documents
  • employment/appointment contract
  • statement of remuneration
  • office lease documents
  • business plan
  • organizational chart
  • description of the company’s activities
  • evidence of operations, clients, invoices, contracts, website, brochures, licenses if applicable

E. Education documents

  • degree certificates
  • transcripts
  • professional qualifications
  • credential evidence used for points scoring

F. Relationship/family documents

If family applies:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates of children
  • custody documents if needed
  • consent letter from non-traveling parent where relevant

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • initial address in Japan if available
  • lease/housing arrangement if already secured
  • travel itinerary where requested by the consulate

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • company invitation/support letter
  • letter from representative director
  • seal/signature documents if required locally

I. Health/insurance documents

Usually not the central document set for this route, but specific applicants may be asked for additional documents.

J. Country-specific extras

These may include:

  • local application forms
  • proof of lawful residence in the country of application
  • translated civil records
  • extra identity checks

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • birth certificate
  • school records where relevant
  • vaccination or medical items if specifically requested
  • parental authorization

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Japan often requires Japanese translations for foreign-language documents submitted in immigration procedures.

Important points:

  • if a document is not in Japanese, a translation is often needed
  • not every document always needs notarization or apostille, but some foreign civil records may need stronger formal proof depending on context
  • consular and immigration practice can differ by document type

Warning: Do not assume notarization or apostille is universally required. Check the exact official instructions for your filing type and location.

M. Photo specifications

Use the current official Japanese visa/immigration photo standards. Requirements can vary slightly by use case.

Common mistakes:

  • wrong background
  • wrong size
  • old photo
  • face shadow or glasses glare

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

There is no single simple published “minimum bank balance” rule universally stated for HSP(i)(c) in the way some visitor visas work.

Instead, financial assessment usually focuses on:

  • whether the business is viable
  • whether the applicant’s remuneration is credible
  • whether the applicant can maintain residence in Japan
  • whether any dependents can be supported
  • whether capital and startup funds are legitimate and traceable

Salary thresholds

Salary matters because it can affect:

  • points eligibility
  • credibility of the management role
  • ability to support residence in Japan

The exact salary needed varies by the points score and case structure.

Investment amount

For business-management-type cases, investment and capitalization can be important, especially if the company is new. However, applicants should not assume the HSP route abolishes the need for a real business foundation.

Acceptable proof

  • recent bank statements
  • salary slips
  • tax certificates
  • audited accounts or financial statements
  • capital remittance records
  • investor/shareholding documents
  • company bank statements where relevant

Large deposits

Large recent deposits are not automatically fatal, but they should be explained clearly with supporting records.

Pro Tip: If funds came from a sale of property, shareholder contribution, dividend, bonus, or intercompany transfer, include a one-page explanation and documentary trail.

Dependents

There is no simple public per-dependent amount for this visa category, but family applications are stronger when:

  • the principal’s remuneration is clear
  • the company’s finances are stable
  • housing plans are realistic
  • family living costs are considered

12. Fees and total cost

Fees vary depending on the stage.

Common cost categories

Cost item Official position
COE application fee Check current official immigration page; fee structures can change
Visa application fee Check latest embassy/consulate fee page
Residence status extension/change fee Check Immigration Services Agency fee page
Biometrics fee Not always charged separately in the same way as some countries
Medical exam fee Usually case-specific, if required
Police certificate cost Usually paid to issuing authority if needed
Translation/notary/apostille Varies by country
Courier fee Varies by consulate/service arrangement
Legal/consultant fee Optional and private
Relocation/travel cost Variable
Dependent fee Usually separate application costs apply

Important fee note

Japan’s fees can change, and some embassies publish local-currency consular fees that update periodically. Always check the latest official fee page for the embassy or consulate where you apply.

Warning: Do not rely on old blog posts for fee figures.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa/status

Make sure your case is truly:

  • advanced business management, and
  • 70+ HSP points

If not, another route may fit better.

2. Gather documents

Collect:

  • corporate documents
  • role/appointment documents
  • points evidence
  • passport and civil records
  • financial proof

3. Complete the correct form set

This may include:

  • COE application materials in Japan, often filed by a proxy/organization
  • visa application form at the Japanese embassy/consulate after COE issuance
  • or change/extension forms if already in Japan

4. Pay fees

Pay any required fee at the relevant stage.

5. Book interview/appointment if needed

Embassy submission may require an appointment. COE filing procedures are handled through immigration in Japan.

6. Submit application

Typical route from abroad

  1. COE application filed in Japan
  2. COE issued
  3. Visa application filed at embassy/consulate
  4. Passport returned with visa
  5. Travel to Japan

Typical route inside Japan

  1. Change of status or extension application filed with immigration
  2. Review and possible additional document requests
  3. Decision and updated residence status

7. Upload/send documents if required

Some posts require originals; some accept copies for parts of the file.

8. Medicals/police checks if needed

Case-specific, not always universal.

9. Track application

COE and visa tracking options vary.

10. Respond to additional document requests

Prompt response helps avoid delay.

11. Decision

You may receive:

  • approval
  • request for more evidence
  • refusal

12. Visa issuance / permit collection

After approval abroad, collect passport with visa.

13. Arrival steps

At landing, long-term residents are processed for residence status. At major airports, a residence card is often issued on arrival.

14. Post-arrival registration

Register address with your municipality and complete related resident procedures.

15. Residence card activation and local compliance

Update address on residence card and enroll in required local systems.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Processing times vary by:

  • COE stage
  • embassy visa stage
  • extension/change stage

The Immigration Services Agency publishes standard processing-period references for some procedures.

What affects timing

  • completeness of company documents
  • whether the business is new
  • quality of points evidence
  • translation quality
  • nationality and security checks
  • workload and season
  • dependent family applications
  • whether the officer requests further proof

Priority options

Japan does not publicly present this route as having a universal premium processing option in the same style as some countries. Check if any special fast-track handling is officially available for your exact filing type.

Practical expectation

Cases with established companies and clean documentation usually move more smoothly than startup cases with evolving documents.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Japan’s process is not always described in a universal biometric appointment model for all nationalities and routes. Check your local embassy/consulate and filing channel.

Interview

An interview is not always required, but it can happen.

Typical questions

  • What company will you manage in Japan?
  • What is your title?
  • How is the company funded?
  • What will you do day to day?
  • Why Japan?
  • How many employees does the company have?
  • How was your salary decided?
  • What are your qualifications?

Medical

No universally published mandatory medical exam for all HSP(i)(c) applicants was identified in the core public route materials. Case-specific requests may still occur.

Police clearance

Not universally required in every case publicly for this route, but can be requested depending on circumstances or later PR/naturalization steps.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official public approval-rate statistics specifically for HSP(i)(c) are not always published in a simple applicant-facing format. If no precise official approval percentage is publicly available for this exact subcategory, applicants should not trust random online figures.

Practical refusal patterns

Most problem cases appear to involve:

  • weak proof of actual business management
  • poor points evidence
  • startup companies with insufficient substance
  • contradictions between corporate and personal documents
  • unrealistic finances or remuneration
  • missing translations
  • wrong category selection

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Build a coherent narrative

Your file should answer three questions clearly:

  1. Why are you eligible for HSP(i)(c)?
  2. What exactly will you manage in Japan?
  3. Why is the business credible and sustainable?

Use a strong explanatory letter

Include:

  • company overview
  • your title and authority
  • business need in Japan
  • points summary
  • evidence list
  • startup or expansion plan
  • salary/remuneration explanation

Present the points evidence cleanly

Use a table showing:

  • point category
  • points claimed
  • document proving each item

Explain unusual finances

If money moved recently, explain it.

Keep titles consistent

Your: – CV – board resolution – contract – visa form – company letter

should all describe the role consistently.

Translate properly

Poor translation ruins otherwise good cases.

Apply neither too early nor too late

Make sure documents are current, but leave enough time for COE and visa issuance.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Pro Tip: Put a one-page index at the front of the file. Japanese immigration officers appreciate structured submissions.

Best timing windows

  • Avoid filing just before major holidays if your case is complex.
  • Startup cases should wait until core corporate records are finalized rather than filing too early with half-finished documents.

File organization

  • Separate points evidence from company evidence.
  • Use labels like 01_Passport, 02_CV, 03_Points_Table, 04_Degree, 05_Company_Registration.

Handling large bank deposits

  • Add a note and source proof immediately.
  • Do not wait for immigration to ask.

Invitation/support letters

  • The company letter should explain the business, your role, and why your presence in Japan matters now.

Families

  • If applying together, align housing and support evidence across all files.

Old refusals

  • Disclose them honestly if asked.
  • Add a short explanation and what changed.

Contacting the embassy

  • Contact them for procedural issues, not for speculative legal debates already covered on official pages.

Reapplication strategy

  • Reapply after fixing the exact weakness, not by sending the same file again.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

Not always mandatory, but highly recommended for HSP(i)(c), especially in:

  • startup cases
  • founder cases
  • complex corporate structures
  • points-heavy cases requiring explanation
  • family-linked applications

Good structure

  1. Applicant identity
  2. Requested status: HSP(i)(c)
  3. Summary of company/business
  4. Summary of role and authority
  5. Points score summary
  6. Funding/business viability summary
  7. Family details if relevant
  8. Document index
  9. Polite request for consideration

What to say

  • factual summary
  • dates
  • responsibilities
  • business need
  • proof references

What not to say

  • exaggerated claims
  • emotional appeals without evidence
  • vague “I love Japan” statements as a substitute for eligibility
  • unsupported salary or funding claims

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor/support?

Depending on case structure:

  • Japanese company
  • company being established in Japan
  • representative office or corporate group entity where relevant
  • authorized proxy in Japan for filing procedures

Sponsor obligations

The supporting company should usually provide:

  • corporate registration materials
  • activity description
  • reason for bringing/appointing the applicant
  • remuneration details
  • office/location proof
  • tax/financial records if available

Common sponsor mistakes

  • vague invitation letter
  • no proof of actual operations
  • no explanation of why the role is management-level
  • mismatch between corporate records and applicant’s contract

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, generally.

Who qualifies?

Usually:

  • legally married spouse
  • children who qualify under Japan’s dependent rules

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • passports
  • support/maintenance evidence
  • family cohabitation plans where relevant

Work rights of dependents

Dependents do not automatically get unrestricted work rights. Their work rights depend on their own status and permissions.

Study rights of dependents

Children can attend school in Japan. Spouses may study, but their primary immigration basis remains dependent status unless changed.

Unmarried partners

Japan’s immigration treatment of unmarried partners is limited and fact-specific. Same-sex and unmarried partner recognition can be especially complex and may depend on legal documentation, nationality, and current practice. This area should be verified carefully with official authorities.

Age-out rules

Child dependency is not indefinite. Exact treatment depends on age and dependency status.

Family timeline strategies

  • Apply together if documents are ready and housing/support evidence is clear.
  • If the principal must enter first to stabilize housing and registration, dependents may follow later.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Main applicant work rights

Yes, the principal applicant may work in the approved advanced business management activities.

Self-employment

Possible if it matches the approved business management activity and the legal business structure in Japan.

Side income

Unrelated side work can create status problems if it falls outside authorized activities.

Passive income

Passive investment income is generally not the same as unauthorized work, but tax and reporting issues still matter.

Remote work

If remote work is part of the approved management role, it is less problematic. If it is unrelated outside work, it may conflict with status purpose.

Study rights

Incidental study or short courses may be possible, but this is not a student visa.

Receiving payment in Japan

The issue is not just where payment is made, but whether the activity matches the status. Compensation should align with the approved management role.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

A visa or COE does not guarantee entry. Final admission is decided at the border.

Documents to carry

Carry copies of:

  • passport
  • visa
  • COE or COE information
  • company letter
  • address in Japan
  • contact person in Japan
  • return or onward planning if relevant to airline questions

Immigration interview at arrival

Border officers may ask:

  • your purpose in Japan
  • company name
  • address
  • intended length of stay
  • role

Re-entry after travel

Residents leaving Japan temporarily should comply with re-entry rules. Do not assume your residence card alone is enough without checking departure procedures.

New passport

If your passport changes, keep old documents and update records as needed.

Dual nationals

Use care to maintain consistency in identity documentation.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, generally, if you continue to qualify.

Inside-country renewal

Usually yes, through the Immigration Services Agency in Japan.

Switching to another visa/status

Possible in some cases, depending on circumstances, such as:

  • HSP(i)(c) to HSP(ii)
  • HSP to another work status
  • dependent to work status
  • other lawful changes of status

Changing sponsor/company

Possible, but not automatic. Material changes in the business or employer/company structure may require immigration filing or reassessment.

Restoration/reinstatement

Japan does not generally use all the same labels as some countries. If status expires, options become much narrower and riskier. File before expiry.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

PR path

Yes. This is one of the strongest advantages of HSP.

Japan offers preferential permanent residence treatment for certain highly skilled professionals. In general terms:

  • some applicants with 80 points or more may qualify for PR after a shorter residence period
  • some with 70 points or more may qualify after a somewhat longer but still accelerated period

Exact current requirements, residence periods, and evidence must be checked on the official PR guidance.

Residence counting

You must generally maintain lawful residence and continue meeting the relevant standard.

Tax and compliance matter

PR applications are affected not just by time, but by:

  • tax payment compliance
  • pension and insurance compliance
  • residence stability
  • conduct

Citizenship path

This visa does not automatically lead to citizenship. It may support eventual naturalization if you later meet Japan’s naturalization conditions.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence

If you live and work in Japan, you may become a Japanese tax resident depending on your circumstances. Tax treatment is separate from visa status.

Social security

Depending on employment/company setup, pension and social insurance obligations may apply.

Address registration

Residents must generally register their address with the local municipality after moving in.

Residence card

You must keep your residence card updated and carry it as required by law.

Health insurance

Enrollment in National Health Insurance or employer-based health insurance may apply after arrival.

Employer/company reporting

Companies and foreign residents can have reporting obligations tied to immigration and labor law.

Overstays and status violations

These can seriously affect future immigration options, including PR.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Nationality-specific procedure differences

These may affect:

  • where you can apply
  • whether an interview is required
  • local visa forms
  • processing time
  • consular fees in local currency

Visa waiver confusion

Some nationals may be visa-exempt for short visits to Japan, but that does not replace the need for the correct long-term residence status process for HSP(i)(c).

Special passports

Diplomatic or official passport holders may have different entry channels, but that is outside this visa’s normal framework.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not typical as principal applicants for this visa.

Divorced/separated parents

Dependent child applications may require custody orders and travel consent.

Adopted children

Additional proof of legal parent-child relationship may be required.

Same-sex spouses/partners

This is a sensitive and evolving area. Japan’s treatment may depend on the legal validity of the relationship documentation and current immigration practice. Verify with official sources before applying.

Stateless persons / refugees

Possible additional identity-document complexity.

Prior refusals

Disclose if asked and explain changes.

Overstays

Prior overstays can be a serious negative factor.

Criminal records

Case-specific and potentially serious.

Applying from a third country

Often allowed only if you are lawfully resident there and the consulate accepts jurisdiction.

Name changes

Provide legal proof linking all names.

Gender marker/document mismatch

Add a concise explanation and supporting legal/medical/civil documents where applicable.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“This is just a rich investor visa.” No. It is for highly skilled professionals conducting advanced business management activities and meeting a points threshold.
“Any company director qualifies.” No. The role must be genuine, documented, and points-qualified.
“If I register a company, I automatically get HSP.” No. Company registration alone is not enough.
“I can do any side job once I have HSP.” No. Activities must remain consistent with status rules.
“Visa-free entry means I can sort this out after arrival.” Usually no for this route; long-term residence procedures must be followed properly.
“A high bank balance alone guarantees approval.” No. Business substance and points evidence matter more.
“Dependents automatically can work full-time.” No. Their work rights are limited by their own status/permissions.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You may receive a refusal at:

  • COE stage
  • visa issuance stage
  • change/extension stage

Appeal/review

Japan does not always provide a simple broad appeal path in the same way some countries do for every immigration refusal. The available response may depend on the stage and refusal type.

Possible next steps may include:

  • clarifying the reason if possible
  • reapplying with stronger evidence
  • seeking legal help for complex cases
  • considering a better-fitting status category

Fee refund

Usually, application fees are not refunded after processing has occurred, but check the exact official fee rules.

When to reapply

Reapply after:

  • identifying the exact weakness
  • correcting documents
  • improving company evidence
  • fixing translations
  • changing category if necessary

31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?

At immigration

At the airport, you present:

  • passport
  • visa if issued
  • COE-related documents if applicable

If admitted as a mid/long-term resident, you may receive a residence card at certain major airports.

First 7–14 days

  • move into your address
  • register address at city/ward office
  • update residence card address
  • ask about health insurance and pension obligations
  • coordinate with employer/company on payroll and tax setup

First 30 days

  • open bank account if possible
  • obtain phone/SIM
  • finalize housing
  • enroll in insurance if required
  • ensure company registration and tax administration are aligned

My Number

You will usually be issued or associated with Japan’s My Number system for tax and social security administration after resident registration.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Example 1: Founder opening a company in Tokyo

  • Weeks 1–4: business planning, office setup, corporate documents
  • Weeks 5–8: gather points evidence and prepare COE file
  • Weeks 9–16+: COE processing
  • Weeks 17–19: visa application at embassy
  • Weeks 20–22: travel to Japan and municipal registration

Example 2: Executive transfer to Japanese subsidiary

  • Weeks 1–2: company prepares appointment and remuneration papers
  • Weeks 3–6: points evidence and COE filing
  • Weeks 7–12+: processing
  • Weeks 13–15: visa issuance and relocation

Example 3: Principal enters first, family follows later

  • Principal secures status and housing
  • Dependents apply after stronger proof of accommodation and support is available
  • Family joins in a later wave

33. Ideal document pack structure

Naming convention

Use simple file names:

  • 01_Passport.pdf
  • 02_Application_Form.pdf
  • 03_HSP_Points_Calculation.pdf
  • 04_CV.pdf
  • 05_Degree_Certificate.pdf
  • 06_Employment_or_Appointment_Letter.pdf
  • 07_Company_Registration.pdf
  • 08_Business_Plan.pdf
  • 09_Financial_Evidence.pdf

Merge order

  1. Cover letter
  2. document index
  3. application form
  4. passport copy
  5. CV
  6. points summary
  7. education proof
  8. work experience proof
  9. salary/remuneration proof
  10. company documents
  11. financial documents
  12. family documents
  13. translations

Scan quality

  • color scans when possible
  • complete edges visible
  • no shadows
  • searchable PDF if possible

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm HSP(i)(c) is the correct category
  • Confirm 70+ points
  • Confirm company/business substance
  • Gather all identity documents
  • Prepare translations
  • Prepare business plan and corporate records
  • Check local embassy rules

Submission-day checklist

  • Correct form version
  • Signed where required
  • Photos meet specs
  • Passport included if required
  • Fees confirmed
  • Copies organized
  • Contact details accurate

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • appointment confirmation
  • original supporting documents
  • concise explanation of role and company
  • copies of key records

Arrival checklist

  • carry key documents
  • know your Japan address
  • know company contact person
  • register address after move-in
  • enroll in required local systems

Extension/renewal checklist

  • apply before expiry
  • updated company records
  • current tax/payment compliance
  • updated remuneration proof
  • current residence card and passport

Refusal recovery checklist

  • identify refusal reason
  • collect missing evidence
  • correct inconsistencies
  • add explanation letter
  • recheck category selection

35. FAQs

1. Is HSP(i)(c) the same as Japan’s Business Manager visa?

No. They are related but different. HSP(i)(c) is the highly skilled version with a points requirement and extra benefits.

2. Do I need 70 points exactly?

You generally need at least 70 points.

3. Can I qualify if I am the founder of a startup?

Yes, potentially, if the business is real, you are genuinely managing it, and you meet the points threshold.

4. Can a passive shareholder use this visa?

Usually no. Passive investment alone is not the intended use.

5. Is Japanese language mandatory?

Not always, but it can help with points and practical life in Japan.

6. Do I need a Certificate of Eligibility?

In many long-term residence cases from abroad, yes, that is the common route.

7. How long is the stay granted?

Typically 5 years under HSP.

8. Can I bring my spouse?

Usually yes, through the appropriate family status.

9. Can my spouse work?

Not automatically without regard to status. Work permission depends on the spouse’s own status and permissions.

10. Can I bring my children?

Usually yes.

11. Can parents come with me?

Only in limited HSP circumstances under specific conditions. Verify carefully.

12. Can I get permanent residence faster?

Yes, this is one of the main attractions of the HSP route.

13. Do I need a minimum investment amount?

There is no single simple public figure unique to HSP(i)(c); the underlying business management viability still matters.

14. Can I apply from inside Japan?

Sometimes yes, through a change of status, depending on your current lawful status and facts.

15. Can I switch jobs or companies?

Material changes can affect status. Immigration review may be needed.

16. Can I study part-time?

Incidental study is usually possible, but this is not a student visa.

17. Can I freelance on the side?

Not freely if the activity falls outside your authorized status.

18. What if my company is not yet profitable?

A startup need not always be profitable immediately, but it must look genuine and viable.

19. Do I need an office lease?

Often business-management cases are stronger with clear office evidence. Exact requirements depend on the case.

20. Can I use a virtual office?

This can be risky for business-management credibility. Check whether it satisfies the actual immigration expectations in your case.

21. What if I had a visa refusal before?

Disclose it if asked and explain what changed.

22. Is an interview always required?

No, not always.

23. Can I apply through a proxy?

COE procedures in Japan are often handled through company representatives or authorized persons.

24. Does visa-free nationality help?

It may help for short visits, but not as a substitute for the proper long-term HSP process.

25. Can HSP(i)(c) lead to HSP(ii)?

Potentially yes, if you meet the requirements for progression.

26. Can same-sex spouses qualify as dependents?

This is complex and fact-specific. Verify current official practice and acceptable proof.

27. What happens if my residence card address is not updated?

That can create legal compliance problems.

28. Can I keep overseas income while on this visa?

Possibly, but immigration and tax treatment are separate. Make sure the activity does not conflict with your status and get tax advice if needed.

29. What if my passport expires after visa issuance?

Renew the passport and carry both old and new documents as needed; update records where required.

30. Is there a quota for this visa?

No general quota or lottery is publicly stated.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to this visa and the broader HSP framework.

Primary official sources

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Highly Skilled Professional / Points-Based System
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/resources/newimmiact_3_index.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: Permanent Residence information
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-4.html

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: Visa procedures
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: List of Japanese Embassies, Consulates and Permanent Missions
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/about/emb_cons/mofaserv.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Procedures for special re-entry permission / re-entry related guidance
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/minashisainyukoku_00001.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Mid- to long-term residents / residence card information
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/guide/nyuukokukanri07_00014.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Standard processing period references
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/resources/nyuukokukanri07_00140.html

Law and regulation references

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan / Ministry of Justice legal resources on Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/policies/others/other_tetuzuki_00003.html

37. Final verdict

HSP(i)(c) is one of the best Japan immigration routes for:

  • serious founders
  • real investors who will actively manage
  • senior executives
  • high-level business managers who can score 70+ points

Biggest benefits

  • 5-year status
  • stronger long-term stability
  • family options
  • fast-track permanent residence potential
  • prestige and flexibility within Japan’s highly skilled framework

Biggest risks

  • choosing the wrong category
  • weak evidence that the business is real
  • overestimating your points
  • poor translations
  • inconsistent corporate documentation
  • assuming startup status alone is enough

Top preparation advice

  • verify your points carefully
  • build a clean business-management evidence pack
  • explain the company and your role clearly
  • use a structured index and translations
  • check the exact current rules with immigration and your local Japanese consulate before filing

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if:

  • you do not meet 70 points
  • you are just visiting for meetings
  • you will be a regular employee rather than a manager
  • you want to study full-time
  • your company setup is too early or not yet substantive enough

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Some parts of this visa process can vary or are not always stated in one single public page. Verify these before filing:

  • current HSP points table and latest scoring criteria
  • exact document list for HSP(i)(c) versus standard Business Manager support documents
  • whether your case needs a Certificate of Eligibility
  • current embassy/consulate visa fee in your country
  • whether your embassy requires appointments, originals, translations, or local forms
  • current processing times for COE, visa issuance, change of status, and extension
  • whether any medical or police certificate is required in your specific case
  • exact requirements for parents or domestic worker benefits under the HSP framework
  • current treatment of same-sex spouses or unmarried partners
  • whether your corporate setup, shared office, or virtual office arrangement is acceptable
  • current PR fast-track evidence rules and residence-counting standards
  • any nationality-specific security screening or local submission restrictions
  • whether applying from a third country is accepted by your consulate
  • current residence-card and municipal registration rules after arrival
  • current re-entry procedure details if you plan frequent international travel

Rules change. Always verify with the Immigration Services Agency of Japan and the relevant Japanese embassy or consulate before applying.

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