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Short Description: A complete guide to Japan’s Business Manager visa for founders, investors, and company managers: eligibility, documents, process, costs, renewals, family, and PR.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-03
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Japan |
| Visa name | Business Manager |
| Visa short name | Business Manager |
| Category | Work / residence status for business management |
| Main purpose | To start, manage, administer, or invest in and run a business in Japan |
| Typical applicant | Founder, company director, representative director, investor-manager, startup operator, branch office manager |
| Validity | Visa validity for entry varies by issuance; status of residence periods are typically 3 months, 4 months, 6 months, 1 year, 3 years, or 5 years depending on case and decision |
| Stay duration | Based on granted period of stay under the status of residence |
| Entries allowed | Visa sticker may be single or multiple depending on issuance; residents can generally travel with re-entry rules if they hold valid residence status |
| Extension possible? | Yes, if the business remains genuine, viable, compliant, and the holder continues to meet requirements |
| Work allowed? | Yes, but only in the scope of activities permitted under Business Manager status |
| Study allowed? | Limited; incidental study is generally possible, but this is not a student status |
| Family allowed? | Yes, usually spouse and children may apply as dependents if requirements are met |
| PR path? | Possible; time in this status can count toward permanent residence if broader PR conditions are met |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect; it can contribute to lawful residence history for naturalization if all other conditions are met |
1. What is the Business Manager?
Japan’s Business Manager status is a work-related status of residence for people who will start, operate, manage, or administer a business in Japan.
This route exists to let qualified foreign nationals: – establish a new company in Japan, – manage an existing company, – run a Japanese branch office, – serve as a director or senior manager with real managerial responsibility.
In Japan’s immigration system, this is not just a tourist visa and not just an entry visa sticker. It is mainly a status of residence under the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act. In practice, many applicants first obtain a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) in Japan, then use it to apply for a visa at a Japanese embassy or consulate, and after entry they live in Japan under the granted status of residence.
Official English naming commonly appears as: – Business Manager – Previously, older materials and secondary discussions sometimes referred to Investor/Business Manager because Japan used to have an “Investor/Business Manager” category before reforms. The current category is generally Business Manager.
Japanese name: – 経営・管理 (Keiei-Kanri)
This status sits within Japan’s broader work residence system alongside categories such as: – Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services – Intra-company Transferee – Highly Skilled Professional – Skilled Labor – Professor – Legal/Accounting Services
What it is not
It is not: – a short-stay business visitor permission, – a startup visa itself, – a digital nomad route, – a general self-employment visa for freelancers with no Japanese business base, – an automatic investor visa based only on passive capital.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Best suited for
Founders and entrepreneurs
This is one of the main routes for a foreign national who wants to: – incorporate a company in Japan, – open an office, – launch operations, – actively manage the business from inside Japan.
Investors who will actively manage
If you are investing in a Japanese business and will actually operate or manage it, this may fit.
Company directors and senior managers
If a Japanese company, subsidiary, or branch office wants you in Japan as a: – representative director, – director, – executive officer, – branch manager, – senior administrator with genuine management authority.
Foreign companies establishing a Japanese presence
A foreign parent company sending a person to set up and manage a Japan office may use this route if the role is genuinely managerial.
Usually not suited for
Tourists
Do not use Business Manager for sightseeing, family visits, or casual exploration. Use a short-stay visa or visa waiver if eligible.
Ordinary business visitors
For attending meetings, negotiations, conferences, or market research without taking up residence or managing a Japan-based business, the proper route is usually Temporary Visitor.
Employees doing regular non-managerial work
If you are mainly performing technical, sales, language, design, consulting, IT, marketing, or office work rather than managing the business, another work category may be appropriate, often: – Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, – Intra-company Transferee, – Skilled Labor.
Students
Students enrolled in an educational institution should generally use a Student status, not Business Manager.
Digital nomads
Japan has a separate framework for some remote workers and short-term remote work situations; Business Manager is generally for those managing a business base in Japan, not simply working online for foreign clients.
Retirees
Japan does not generally use Business Manager as a retirement residence route.
Religious workers
Use the appropriate religion-related status.
Artists and athletes
Use the specific work or performance-related route where applicable.
Transit passengers
Use transit or short-stay rules, not Business Manager.
Medical travelers
Use a medical stay route if needed, not Business Manager.
Diplomats and officials
Use diplomatic or official channels.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
Business Manager is used for activities such as: – establishing a company in Japan, – opening and operating a branch office, – serving as a representative director or director, – managing day-to-day business operations, – administering a business in Japan, – overseeing staff, finance, contracts, compliance, and strategic decisions, – residing in Japan to run the business continuously.
Prohibited or not-covered purposes
This status is generally not intended for: – pure tourism, – casual business meetings only, – regular employee work with no management function, – unpaid “trying out” business without a proper structure, – freelancing without an established business base in Japan, – passive investing only, – full-time study as the main purpose, – activities outside the approved scope of residence status.
Grey areas and common misunderstandings
“I own shares, so I qualify”
Not necessarily. Passive ownership alone is not enough. Immigration generally looks for active management or administration.
“I can just rent a virtual office”
Risky. Japan’s immigration guidance emphasizes a business office in Japan. Mere virtual arrangements may not satisfy the office requirement if there is no real operational base.
“I can work in any role in my own company”
Not automatically. Your primary permitted activity is business management/administration. If you are mainly doing hands-on work that fits another status, immigration may scrutinize the mismatch.
“I can enter as a visitor and sort it all out later”
Sometimes status changes inside Japan may be possible in some cases, but this should not be assumed. Entering on Temporary Visitor while secretly intending to bypass proper procedures is a bad idea and can create credibility problems.
4. Official visa classification and naming
| Item | Official/Practical Name |
|---|---|
| Official status of residence | Business Manager |
| Japanese name | 経営・管理 |
| Category type | Status of residence for work/business management |
| Older naming often seen | Investor/Business Manager |
| Commonly confused with | Temporary Visitor, Startup Visa, Highly Skilled Professional, Intra-company Transferee |
Internal streams
Japan does not publicly present this as a heavily subclassed visa with many named streams the way some countries do. But in practice, cases often fall into patterns such as: – new company incorporation, – appointment as manager of an existing company, – branch office establishment, – startup-support linked cases through local government startup programs.
Commonly confused categories
Business Manager vs Temporary Visitor
- Temporary Visitor: meetings, conferences, negotiations, market research, short non-remunerated business activity.
- Business Manager: residing in Japan to run or manage a business.
Business Manager vs Startup Visa
The “Startup Visa” is typically a local-government-supported preparatory route under separate frameworks to help certain entrepreneurs get set up. It is not the same as standard Business Manager, though it may lead into it.
Business Manager vs Highly Skilled Professional
Some entrepreneurs or senior executives may qualify under HSP if they meet points rules, but that is a different structure with different benefits.
5. Eligibility criteria
Official rules
Japan’s Immigration Services Agency states that Business Manager covers activities to: – commence trade or other business in Japan and manage that business, – engage in the management of such business, – manage on behalf of foreign nationals who operate such business, subject to meeting standards.
A core public standard generally includes that: – there is a business office in Japan, and – the business is of a certain scale, commonly shown by either: – two or more full-time employees residing in Japan other than those falling into excluded categories, or – capital or total investment of at least JPY 5 million, – or equivalent scale recognized by immigration.
Key eligibility elements
1. Genuine management role
You must be coming to Japan to manage or administer the business, not merely perform ordinary staff work.
2. Business office in Japan
There must generally be an actual office for the business in Japan. This is a major issue in many cases.
3. Business scale requirement
The business usually must meet the scale standard above: – at least JPY 5 million capital/investment, or – at least two qualifying full-time employees, – or recognized equivalent.
4. Stability and continuity
Immigration evaluates whether the business is: – real, – lawful, – stable, – continuing or capable of continuity.
For new businesses, this usually means a credible business plan, setup documentation, and evidence the operation can actually start and continue.
5. Remuneration
If the applicant will be a manager of an existing business, remuneration should be appropriate.
6. For management/administration roles
If acting as a manager or administrator, the applicant’s background may matter. Public guidance commonly refers to: – at least 3 years’ experience in business management or administration (including time spent studying management/administration at graduate level where applicable), and – remuneration at least equivalent to a Japanese national in a comparable role.
This experience point is particularly relevant for “management of an existing business” cases rather than owner-founder cases, and exact application may depend on case structure.
Nationality rules
There is no general public rule limiting this status to particular nationalities. However: – visa issuance procedures can vary by embassy, – some nationalities may face extra scrutiny or document requests, – some applicants may need additional explanation if applying from a third country.
Passport validity
A valid passport is required. Exact minimum remaining validity is not always stated uniformly on every page, so check the embassy/consulate serving your jurisdiction.
Age
No specific general age limit is publicly stated for standard Business Manager, but applicants must be legally capable of holding the role and providing valid documentation.
Education
No universal degree requirement is publicly stated for all Business Manager cases. Practical business viability matters more than a formal degree in many founder cases. But education may support the credibility of the application.
Language
There is no general statutory Japanese-language requirement for this status. Still: – Japanese ability can help with practical operations, – some municipal or startup support routes may function partly in Japanese, – inability to explain business operations at all may raise credibility concerns.
Sponsorship / invitation
For many cases, a Japanese company or authorized representative in Japan handles the COE application. In founder cases, there may be a representative, proxy, or professional handling incorporation and filing.
Job offer
Not always in the usual employment sense. For founders, your own company may be the operating entity. For managers of an existing company, appointment documents are typically relevant.
Points requirement
No general points system applies to standard Business Manager.
Relationship proof
Only relevant for dependents.
Admission letter
Not relevant unless linked to another status or program.
Maintenance funds
While the headline standard is the business scale requirement, applicants should also be prepared to show: – funds to capitalize the business, – ability to support themselves, – startup and operating budget.
Accommodation proof
May be requested at visa issuance or arrival stages, especially if asked by the embassy.
Onward travel
Not usually central for residence-status cases, unlike visitor visas, but border officers may still ask basic travel questions.
Health
Japan may deny status on public health or related grounds in some situations, but there is no routine universal medical exam publicly imposed for every Business Manager case.
Character / criminal record
Serious criminal or immigration history can affect approval.
Insurance
Not usually a pre-issuance visa requirement in the same way as some countries, but after arrival residents generally must comply with Japanese health insurance and local registration rules.
Biometrics
Visa applicants may have fingerprints/photo collected depending on the embassy process and border procedures. At entry, foreign nationals are generally fingerprinted and photographed unless exempt.
Intent requirements
Your documents must show that your true purpose is to manage the business in Japan. If the case looks like disguised employment, sham incorporation, or an immigration-only company, refusal risk rises.
Return intent vs dual intent
Japan does not frame this route around “temporary intent” the same way visitor visas are. It is a residence status, so long-term residence intent consistent with business activity is normal.
Local registration rules
After arrival, mid-to-long-term residents must generally complete: – residence card procedures, – address registration at the municipality, – health insurance/pension compliance where applicable.
Quotas / caps / ballots
No public lottery or quota applies in the way some countries use annual entrepreneur caps.
Embassy-specific rules
Yes, often: – local application forms, – appointment systems, – document format, – translation expectations, – photocopy counts, – jurisdiction rules.
Always check the specific embassy/consulate serving your residence.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
You may not qualify if: – there is no real business office in Japan, – the business does not meet the minimum scale requirement, – you are not actually performing management duties, – the business appears inactive, speculative, or non-viable, – you cannot show lawful and credible funding, – your role is really employee work under another visa category, – the company setup documents are incomplete or inconsistent.
Common refusal triggers
Weak or fake-looking office setup
A non-genuine office arrangement is one of the biggest problems.
Insufficient capital explanation
If JPY 5 million is claimed but not clearly documented, sourced, transferred, and reflected in company records, the case weakens.
Poor business plan
A vague plan with no revenue logic, no customers, and no operating details often fails.
No proof of actual operations
For renewals especially, immigration may expect: – tax filings, – contracts, – invoices, – payroll, – office lease, – bank activity, – accounting records.
Wrong visa class
Applicants sometimes file Business Manager when they are really: – an employee, – a consultant, – a freelancer, – or just a short-term visitor.
Unverifiable documents
Missing translations, inconsistent names, unclear bank records, or questionable corporate documents can trigger refusal.
Immigration history problems
Prior overstays, removals, false statements, or prior misuse of Japanese status categories can damage credibility.
Interview or explanation issues
If asked to explain your business and you cannot describe: – what the company does, – how money is made, – who the clients are, – why you must be in Japan, that is a serious red flag.
7. Benefits of this visa
Main legal benefits
- Live in Japan for the granted period of stay.
- Legally manage a business in Japan.
- Run your own company or manage a qualifying enterprise.
- Apply for extensions if the business remains compliant and viable.
- Bring eligible family members as dependents.
- Build residence history that may count toward permanent residence or naturalization later.
Business benefits
- Operate locally with a lawful resident status.
- Open business relationships, leasing, tax, banking, and hiring structures more easily than as a short-stay visitor.
- Potentially qualify for longer periods of stay after successful renewal history.
Family benefits
- Spouse and children may usually seek Dependent status.
- Dependents may study in Japan.
- Spouses/dependents may in some cases seek separate permission for part-time work if eligible under dependent rules.
Travel flexibility
- Residents with valid passports and residence status can generally leave and re-enter Japan using re-entry rules, including the special re-entry system where applicable.
Long-term pathway
- Business Manager can be a serious long-term route for entrepreneurs.
- It can contribute to future PR eligibility if other conditions are met, especially stable residence, taxes, and compliance.
8. Limitations and restrictions
Scope restriction
You are only allowed to engage in activities covered by the Business Manager status.
No blanket freedom to do unrelated work
If you begin mainly working as a programmer, salesperson, chef, teacher, or consultant rather than managing the business, you may be outside status.
Compliance burden
Business Manager holders often face higher practical scrutiny because they must maintain: – company compliance, – taxes, – office, – accounting, – immigration consistency.
No guarantee of renewal
Renewal depends heavily on whether the business is actually operating and sustainable.
Registration obligations
You must keep your: – address updated, – residence card valid, – immigration records accurate.
Re-entry rules
Leaving Japan for too long or failing to use proper re-entry procedures can create problems.
Public support misunderstandings
This is not a route that automatically grants public benefits. Residence brings obligations, not guaranteed state support.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Period of stay
Japan may grant periods such as: – 3 months, – 4 months, – 6 months, – 1 year, – 3 years, – 5 years.
Not every applicant gets a long period initially. New businesses often receive shorter periods first.
The special 4-month period
A 4-month Business Manager status can be important in some startup cases. It may allow a person to enter Japan and complete certain post-arrival formalities, such as resident registration and practical setup steps, though exact use depends on the case.
Visa validity vs status of residence
These are different: – The visa sticker is for entry. – The status of residence and period of stay control how long you may remain in Japan.
When the clock starts
Your stay as a resident begins upon lawful landing in Japan under that status.
Entries
Embassy-issued visa entry conditions can vary. Once you are a resident, re-entry is governed by Japan’s re-entry permission rules.
Overstay consequences
Overstaying can lead to: – status cancellation issues, – fines or detention, – deportation, – future visa problems.
Renewal timing
Extension applications should be filed before the current period expires. Do not wait until the last minute.
Bridging/interim status
Japan does not use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries. But if you file an extension or change application before expiry, you may remain under special lawful stay rules while it is pending, subject to Japan’s rules. Check current Immigration Services Agency guidance for exact treatment.
10. Complete document checklist
Document requirements vary by: – whether you are applying for a COE, – whether it is a new business or existing business, – whether you are overseas or changing status in Japan, – the embassy or consulate.
Below is a master checklist.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Application form | Immigration or visa form | Starts the case officially | Old form version, missing signatures |
| Certificate of Eligibility (if used) | Pre-screening certificate issued in Japan | Simplifies embassy visa issuance | Assuming COE guarantees visa |
| Written explanation / business plan | Narrative of business, role, finances | Proves viability and purpose | Too vague, no market or revenue details |
| Company registration documents | Articles/incorporation/registry | Proves legal existence of entity | Incomplete registry extracts |
B. Identity/travel documents
- Passport
- Passport copy
- Visa application photo
- Residence card copy if applying from inside Japan
- Proof of lawful stay in the country of application if applying from a third country
Common mistake: names on passport, company records, bank records, and translations do not match exactly.
C. Financial documents
- Proof of capital paid in
- Bank statements showing transfer/source of funds
- Corporate bank statement if available
- Investor remittance records
- Budget and cash-flow forecast
- Tax documents for renewals
- Profit and loss / balance sheet if already operating
D. Employment/business documents
- Office lease agreement
- Photos/layout of office
- Company registry certificate
- Articles of incorporation
- Shareholder register
- Board minutes / appointment resolution
- Employment contracts for staff
- Payroll records if relying on employee-count route
- Contracts with clients/suppliers
- Company brochure/website materials if available
E. Education documents
Not always mandatory, but may help: – degree certificates, – professional certificates, – management-related academic records.
F. Relationship/family documents
For dependents: – marriage certificate, – birth certificates, – custody documents if relevant, – translations.
G. Accommodation/travel documents
Sometimes requested: – planned residence address, – hotel/temporary housing for arrival, – flight reservation if visa issuance stage requires it.
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- Letter from company
- Guarantee/support documents if requested
- Representative’s ID and company seal documents where relevant
I. Health/insurance documents
Usually not a universal pre-approval requirement, but check local embassy instructions.
J. Country-specific extras
Some embassies ask for: – local residence permit, – proof of legal stay, – extra financial evidence, – return envelope, – appointment confirmation.
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- parental consent,
- school records,
- custody orders,
- passport copies of both parents.
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
Japan often accepts documents with Japanese translations where required. Apostille/notarization is not universally required for every document, but local or case-specific needs can arise.
Warning: If a document is not in Japanese, some immigration procedures may require a Japanese translation. Embassy visa stages may also have local language/English acceptance rules. Verify exact requirements.
M. Photo specifications
Use the latest official visa photo requirements from the embassy/consulate or Immigration Services Agency form instructions.
Common mistakes: – wrong size, – old photo, – background not compliant, – digital alteration.
11. Financial requirements
Official rules
The best-known formal financial/business threshold is: – capital or total investment of at least JPY 5 million, or – two or more full-time employees meeting the relevant standard, – or equivalent scale.
Important nuance
This is not always just “show JPY 5 million in a personal account.” Immigration usually wants to see that the business itself is of the required scale and that the funds are lawfully committed to the business.
What counts in practice
Depending on case structure, officers may look at: – paid-in capital, – operating funds, – setup expenses, – office costs, – staffing plan, – source of funds, – whether the funding is genuinely under the applicant’s control.
Who can sponsor
In founder cases, the applicant often funds the business. In other cases: – a parent company may fund the branch/subsidiary, – shareholders may inject capital, – co-founders may contribute.
Acceptable proof of funds
- personal bank statements,
- remittance records,
- corporate bank statements,
- capital payment evidence,
- shareholder resolutions,
- loan agreements if lawful and clearly documented,
- proof of business expenses already paid.
Seasoning rules
Japan does not publicly state a universal “seasoning period” like some visa systems. But sudden large deposits with no explanation can cause concern.
Bank statement period
No single universal public rule. Use enough history to explain: – source, – ownership, – transfer path, – use for capital.
Income thresholds
There is no simple public salary threshold for founders equivalent to a standard employee salary rule. For managers of existing businesses, remuneration must generally be appropriate for the role.
Maintenance amount per dependent
No single public flat number is universally posted for dependents in this category. But you should be able to show realistic ability to support: – yourself, – spouse, – children, – housing and living costs.
Hidden costs
Beyond capital, budget for: – office lease and deposit, – incorporation costs, – visa fees, – translations, – local taxes, – health insurance, – pension, – employee payroll, – accounting/bookkeeping, – judicial scrivener/administrative scrivener fees if using professionals.
Proof strength tips
- Show a clear source of capital.
- Explain any family gift or shareholder loan.
- Match the banking trail to the incorporation documents.
- Avoid unexplained cash deposits.
12. Fees and total cost
Official fees can change. Always check the latest official fee page.
Government immigration fees in Japan
For residence applications handled in Japan, typical immigration fees often include: – extension of period of stay fee, – change of status of residence fee, payable by revenue stamp when approved.
Embassy visa fees
If applying for a visa overseas after COE issuance, the embassy or consulate may charge a visa fee according to nationality and reciprocal arrangements, and in some cases fees can be waived or differ.
Typical cost structure
| Cost Item | Typical Situation | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| COE application | Usually no government fee for COE filing itself | Check current official rules |
| Visa issuance fee | At embassy/consulate | Varies by nationality/location |
| Change of status fee | If applying inside Japan | Official fee applies if approved |
| Extension fee | On renewal in Japan | Official fee applies if approved |
| Certificate issuance fees | Company registry, tax docs | Small but recurring |
| Translation costs | If documents not in Japanese | Varies widely |
| Notary/apostille | Sometimes needed depending on documents | Case-specific |
| Corporate setup costs | Incorporation, stamps, registration tax | Often significant |
| Office lease costs | Deposit, rent, guarantor fees | Often substantial |
| Professional fees | Optional scrivener/lawyer/accountant | Variable |
| Relocation costs | Flight, housing setup, furnishing | Variable |
Warning: The visa fee is often one of the smaller costs. The real financial burden is usually setting up and maintaining a compliant business.
13. Step-by-step application process
Official route in practice
1. Confirm this is the correct category
Make sure your role is true business management, not ordinary employment or temporary business visits.
2. Prepare the business structure
Usually includes: – deciding company form, – securing office, – preparing incorporation documents, – arranging capital, – setting management role.
3. Gather documents
Collect: – passport/ID, – company records, – office lease, – capital proof, – business plan, – appointment documents, – financial evidence.
4. Apply for Certificate of Eligibility in Japan
Typically filed by: – the company, – a proxy, – or authorized representative in Japan to the regional Immigration Services Bureau.
5. Wait for COE decision
If approved, the COE is issued.
6. Apply for visa at Japanese embassy/consulate
Submit: – passport, – visa application form, – photo, – COE, – other embassy-required documents.
7. Visa issuance
If approved, a visa is placed in the passport.
8. Travel to Japan
Carry key documents in hand luggage: – passport, – COE copy, – company documents, – address details.
9. Immigration inspection on arrival
Landing permission is still at the discretion of border authorities.
10. Receive residence card
At major airports, many mid-to-long-term residents receive the residence card at landing. If not, it may be issued later through municipal procedures.
11. Register address
Within the required time after settling your address, go to the local municipality and register.
12. Enroll in required local systems
Depending on your situation: – health insurance, – pension, – tax procedures, – My Number registration.
13. Start or continue operations
Maintain compliant records from day one.
14. Extension before expiry
Renew by showing: – real business activity, – compliance, – tax records, – finances, – office continuity, – your ongoing managerial role.
Online vs paper
Japan increasingly offers online immigration procedures in some contexts, but availability depends on: – applicant type, – representative type, – application type, – current system rules.
Do not assume every Business Manager filing can be done entirely online without confirming current Immigration Services Agency procedures.
14. Processing time
Official standards
Processing times vary significantly.
COE
The Immigration Services Agency publishes broad processing-time references by category and bureau. Actual timing can vary.
Embassy visa issuance
Many embassies state a general visa-processing baseline after document acceptance, often around several working days when straightforward, but longer if consultation with Tokyo is needed.
What affects timing
- new business vs established business,
- missing documents,
- office proof quality,
- funding source issues,
- nationality and security checks,
- busy seasons,
- embassy workload,
- whether additional documents are requested.
Practical expectation
A realistic end-to-end timeline for a new founder is often several weeks to several months, especially if company setup is still underway.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
At arrival in Japan, most foreign nationals are fingerprinted and photographed unless exempt by law.
At embassy stage, biometric collection procedures vary. Some posts may not require a separate “biometrics appointment” like certain outsourced systems in other countries.
Interview
A formal interview is not always required, but it can happen. Typical topics: – what the business does, – your role, – source of funds, – office location, – expected clients, – why Japan, – how you will support yourself and family.
Medical exam
No universal routine medical requirement is publicly stated for all Business Manager applications.
Police certificate
Not universally required in every standard Business Manager application, but criminal history can matter and specific requests can occur.
Exemptions
Exemptions depend on the specific process stage and applicant status.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Japan does not publicly publish simple official approval-rate percentages for this exact visa in a way applicants can reliably use as a benchmark.
Practical refusal patterns
Based on official standards, refusals often cluster around: – no credible office, – inadequate business scale, – weak business continuity, – poor source-of-funds proof, – applicant not truly acting as manager, – inconsistent documents, – renewal cases with low or no business activity, – tax non-compliance.
17. How to strengthen the application legally
1. Write a serious business plan
Include: – business model, – products/services, – target customers, – why Japan, – revenue model, – staffing plan, – office details, – first-year financial projections, – founder background.
2. Prove the office is real
Provide: – signed lease, – photos, – floor plan if available, – explanation of how the space is used.
3. Explain the capital trail clearly
Use a short memo that links: – your personal funds, – transfer date, – receiving account, – company capitalization.
4. Show why you must be in Japan
Especially for founders: – customer relations, – supplier management, – hiring, – local licensing, – strategic oversight.
5. Make your role unmistakably managerial
Your documents should show: – decision-making authority, – director title, – control over operations, – no mismatch suggesting ordinary employee duties.
6. Keep financials tidy
For renewals, have: – bookkeeping, – tax returns, – payroll records, – contracts, – invoices.
7. Translate properly
Poor translations create avoidable doubts. Use clear, complete translations.
8. Submit an index
A well-organized document index helps immigration review complex founder files faster.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Use a chronology page
Include a one-page timeline: – company formed, – office leased, – capital transferred, – director appointed, – business launch date.
This helps the case officer follow the story.
Separate “setup documents” from “operating evidence”
If the business is new: – section 1: setup evidence, – section 2: early commercial evidence, – section 3: finances.
Explain any large deposit immediately
If the capital came from: – sale of property, – salary savings, – parent company funding, – family gift, attach proof and a short explanation.
Don’t overstuff with irrelevant papers
Quality beats volume. Ten strong documents are better than fifty random ones.
For renewals, lead with tax compliance
In Japan, tax and business compliance are powerful credibility markers.
Keep director title and actual role aligned
If you are called “CEO” but documents show you mainly do design freelancing alone from a shared desk, the mismatch can hurt.
Use the exact company name consistently
Across: – lease, – registry, – bank account, – invoices, – website, – application form.
Contact the embassy only for true post-specific issues
Do not email generic questions already answered on official pages. Do contact them for: – jurisdiction, – appointment, – local document format, – passport return timing.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is not always formally mandatory, but for Business Manager it is often very useful.
When it helps most
- first-time founder case,
- unusual funding source,
- branch office setup,
- role split with co-founder,
- applying from abroad with many moving parts,
- prior refusal or complex history.
Suggested structure
- Applicant identity
- Company name and business activity
- Exact role in the business
- Why Japan
- Office and setup status
- Capital and source of funds
- Revenue plan
- Staffing plan
- Family/accommodation plan if relevant
- Closing statement referencing attached evidence
What not to say
- vague claims like “Japan has many opportunities”
- exaggerated projections with no support
- statements suggesting you just want residence rather than a business
- inconsistent descriptions of your duties
Tone
Professional, factual, calm, concise.
Sample outline
- Intro: I am applying for Business Manager status to establish/manage X Co., Ltd. in Tokyo.
- Business: X will provide Y services to Z clients.
- Office: We have secured office premises at [address], lease attached.
- Funding: JPY 5 million capital was transferred from my personal savings accumulated through [source], supported by bank statements and remittance records.
- Role: I will serve as representative director and oversee sales strategy, hiring, finance, and compliance.
- Operations: Initial contracts/discussions are attached.
- Conclusion: I respectfully request approval.
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor or support
Depending on structure: – your own Japanese company, – an existing Japanese company, – a branch office, – a parent company, – an authorized representative in Japan.
Typical sponsor documents
- company registry
- financial statements
- tax documents
- office lease
- company letter explaining need for applicant
- appointment resolution
- organizational chart
Sponsor mistakes
- generic support letters with no specifics,
- mismatch between sponsor business and applicant role,
- no proof of ability to support operations,
- using an undeveloped shell company.
Employer sponsorship vs founder case
In a founder case, the company may be very new, so the supporting evidence must focus more heavily on: – setup completion, – office, – capital, – plan, – founder credentials.
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, typically spouse and children may apply for Dependent status if the Business Manager holder has valid status and can support them.
Who qualifies
Usually: – legally married spouse, – biological or adopted minor children.
Unmarried partners
Japan’s immigration treatment of unmarried partners is limited and fact-specific. It is not a straightforward equivalent of spouse status in most cases.
Same-sex spouses
Recognition can be complex and may depend on the legal validity of the marriage and current Japanese immigration practice. This is an area where applicants should verify current official treatment or seek case-specific guidance.
Proof required
- marriage certificate,
- birth certificates,
- passport copies,
- translations,
- proof of support capacity,
- proof principal applicant holds or will hold valid status.
Work rights of dependents
Dependents do not automatically get unrestricted work rights. They may need separate permission for part-time work under the relevant rules.
Combined or separate applications
Families often submit related files together, but each person usually needs their own visa application.
Family timeline strategy
Common practical approach: – principal applicant secures status first, – dependents follow once housing, income flow, and registration are more settled. But this is not mandatory in every case.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
Yes, work is allowed within the scope of business management/administration.
Self-employment rules
This is one of the few statuses that can support founder-led business activity, but only where the business structure and operations meet the legal standard.
Remote work
If your Japan-based company activity includes online work, that can be fine. But Business Manager is not designed for a person simply living in Japan while remotely doing unrelated foreign work without a Japanese business basis.
Internships
Not the intended use.
Volunteering
Incidental volunteering may be possible if lawful and truly secondary, but it should not interfere with the status purpose.
Side income
Side activities outside your authorized scope can be risky. If in doubt, get official clarification before engaging in unrelated income-generating work.
Passive income
Passive investment income generally does not conflict by itself, but it does not replace the need to comply with the Business Manager purpose.
Study rights
You can usually take incidental classes or short courses, but this is not a student residence status.
Receiving payment in Japan
Yes, if it is within the lawful scope of your business management role and company operations.
Taxable activity
Business income and salary can trigger Japanese tax obligations. Immigration permission does not equal tax exemption.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Entry clearance is not final admission
Even with a visa, final landing permission is decided at the border.
Documents to carry
Bring: – passport, – visa, – COE copy, – company details, – office address, – accommodation details, – contact number of company/representative.
Immigration questions at arrival
Be ready to answer: – where you will stay, – what business you will manage, – company name, – office location.
Return/onward ticket
For a residence-status entry, a return ticket is usually not the key issue, but airline or border officers may still ask about your travel plans.
Re-entry after travel
Residents leaving Japan temporarily should check: – special re-entry permission rules, – residence card validity, – passport validity.
New passport issues
If your passport expires while your residence card remains valid, carry both the old and new passport as needed and check re-entry/document update rules.
Dual nationals
Use consistent identity documents. Conflicting identity use can complicate records.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Yes, if you continue to meet the requirements.
What is reviewed on renewal?
- whether the business is active,
- profitability or credible continuity,
- office maintenance,
- tax compliance,
- salary/remuneration,
- role consistency,
- legal compliance.
Inside-country renewal
Normally handled in Japan through an Extension of Period of Stay application.
Switching to another visa/status
Possible in some cases through Change of Status of Residence, depending on eligibility for the new category.
Converting from visitor to Business Manager
Possible in limited situations may exist, but applicants should not assume a Temporary Visitor can freely switch in Japan. This can be restricted and fact-dependent.
Changing company or business structure
A major change in business activity, company closure, or role can affect your status and may require immigration action.
Missing the deadline
Filing late creates serious risk. Apply before current status expiry.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does it count toward PR?
Yes, time lawfully spent in Japan under Business Manager can count toward permanent residence, subject to meeting Japan’s PR requirements.
Typical PR issues
PR is not automatic. Authorities may consider: – length of residence, – stability of income/business, – tax payment, – pension/insurance compliance, – conduct, – public interest factors.
Faster PR possibility
Some applicants may qualify faster through Highly Skilled Professional rules if they meet point thresholds, but that is a separate framework.
Naturalization
Business Manager can contribute to the residence history needed for naturalization, but naturalization has its own requirements, including conduct, livelihood, and other legal criteria.
When it does not help much
If the business is unstable, repeatedly renewed only for short periods, or tax compliance is weak, long-term residence goals become harder.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence risk
Living and operating in Japan can create Japanese tax obligations for: – salary, – business income, – corporate tax issues, – consumption tax issues, depending on structure.
Social security
Depending on remuneration and company setup, there may be obligations relating to: – health insurance, – pension, – employment insurance for staff.
Registration obligations
As a mid-to-long-term resident, you usually must: – register your address, – carry residence card, – report certain changes.
Company compliance
Your company may need: – tax filings, – social insurance registration, – labor law compliance, – accounting books, – annual corporate filings.
Overstays and violations
Violation of immigration conditions can lead to cancellation, non-renewal, or removal procedures.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Visa waiver does not replace this route
Some nationals can enter Japan visa-free as visitors, but that does not replace the need for proper Business Manager status for residence and business management.
Embassy-specific variation
Nationality can affect: – visa fee, – processing time, – local required supporting documents, – whether extra consultation is needed.
Treaty or special-lane exceptions
No general public treaty-based exemption replaces the core Business Manager eligibility standards.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Rare for this route unless there are exceptional circumstances and legal capacity issues are resolved.
Divorced/separated parents
Dependent child applications may require custody documents and the non-traveling parent’s consent.
Adopted children
Adoption documents and legal recognition may need extra proof.
Same-sex spouses/partners
This remains a sensitive and evolving area. Verify current official treatment before applying.
Stateless persons or refugees
Possible in theory, but documentation burdens may be higher and case handling can be complex.
Prior refusals
Disclose honestly and address the reason directly with better evidence.
Overstays
Prior overstay in Japan or elsewhere can affect credibility and admissibility.
Criminal record
Not always an automatic bar, but serious offenses can lead to refusal.
Urgent travel
Urgency does not guarantee faster immigration decisions.
Expired passport with valid residence status
Renew the passport and maintain proof linking old and new documents.
Applying from a third country
Many embassies only accept applicants resident in their jurisdiction. Check local consular rules.
Change of name
Provide documentary chain showing old and new names.
Gender marker mismatch
Use consistent records and attach official proof where documents differ.
Military service records
Usually not a standard core requirement, but some applicants may be asked for extra identity/security clarification.
Previous deportation/removal
This is a major issue and may trigger inadmissibility concerns.
29. Common myths and mistakes
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “If I invest money, Japan must give me the visa.” | False. The business must be real, of required scale, and you must genuinely manage it. |
| “A virtual office is always enough.” | False. Immigration generally expects a real business office. |
| “I can do any work because I own the company.” | False. Your activities must match the Business Manager scope. |
| “The JPY 5 million can be borrowed informally with no paper trail.” | Extremely risky. Source and legitimacy of funds matter. |
| “COE approval means the embassy must issue the visa.” | Usually helpful, but the embassy still conducts visa issuance and can refuse in some cases. |
| “Once approved, renewal is easy.” | Not necessarily. Renewals depend heavily on actual business operations and compliance. |
| “I can ignore taxes until the business grows.” | Bad idea. Tax compliance is crucial for future renewals and PR. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After a refusal
The authority usually gives a refusal outcome, but detailed reasoning may be limited depending on stage: – COE refusal, – change/extension refusal, – visa refusal at embassy stage.
Appeal or review
Japan does not always provide a simple broad appeal process in the same way some other countries do for every visa refusal. Options can be limited and case-specific.
Reapplication
Often the practical route is to reapply with stronger evidence after fixing the core problem.
No refund
Government fees already paid may not be refundable. Check current official rules.
Best reapplication strategy
- identify exact weakness,
- rebuild the document set,
- add explanation letter,
- correct inconsistencies,
- do not simply resubmit the same weak file.
When to get professional help
Consider professional help if refusal involved: – office adequacy, – source of funds, – renewal after poor business performance, – immigration history issues, – status mismatch.
31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?
At the airport
You present: – passport, – visa, – landing card if required, and undergo immigration inspection.
Residence card
At certain major airports, qualifying mid-to-long-term residents are often issued a residence card on arrival.
First 14 days after settling address
You generally need to register your address at the local municipal office within the required period after deciding where you live.
My Number
You will typically be assigned a My Number for tax and administrative purposes after resident registration.
Health insurance and pension
Depending on your setup, you may need to join: – National Health Insurance or employee social insurance, – National Pension or employee pension system.
Banking, SIM, housing
These are practical steps, not immigration steps, but your residence card and address registration are often essential.
For company operations
Promptly set up: – tax office notifications, – corporate banking where possible, – accounting system, – payroll/social insurance if hiring.
32. Real-world timeline examples
Solo entrepreneur
- Weeks 1–4: Business planning, office search, company formation prep
- Weeks 5–8: Capital transfer, lease, incorporation documents
- Weeks 8–14: COE filing and processing
- Weeks 15–17: Embassy visa issuance
- Week 18: Travel to Japan, residence registration
- Months 1–3 in Japan: launch operations
Existing-company manager
- Weeks 1–2: Gather appointment and company docs
- Weeks 3–8: COE processing
- Weeks 9–10: visa issuance
- Week 11: arrival and registration
Spouse/dependent joining later
- Principal enters first
- Months 1–2: housing and income setup
- Months 2–4: dependent COE/visa processing
- Month 4+: family arrival
Student trying to become founder
- Month 1: confirm eligibility and whether change of status is possible
- Months 1–2: company setup and office preparation
- Months 2–4: change of status application
- Pending period: remain lawfully while application is under review if timely filed
Investor-founder with complex funds
- Extra 2–6 weeks often needed to document source of funds clearly
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended file order
- Index
- Application form
- Passport/ID
- COE or immigration forms
- Cover letter
- Business plan
- Company registration documents
- Office documents
- Capital/source-of-funds evidence
- Appointment/role proof
- Contracts and commercial evidence
- Financial projections or statements
- Tax/compliance records
- Family documents if any
- Translations attached immediately after each foreign-language document
Naming convention
Use clear filenames such as: – 01_Passport.pdf – 02_Cover_Letter.pdf – 03_Business_Plan.pdf – 04_Company_Registry.pdf
Scan quality tips
- color scans,
- all edges visible,
- readable stamps/seals,
- no shadows,
- one PDF per category unless instructed otherwise.
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- Confirm Business Manager is the correct category
- Secure a genuine business office
- Prepare company formation/registry documents
- Confirm capital/investment or employee threshold
- Draft detailed business plan
- Gather proof of source of funds
- Prepare translations
- Check embassy-specific rules
Submission-day checklist
- Correct form version
- Signature present
- Photos compliant
- Passport valid
- COE included if applicable
- Supporting documents indexed
- Copies made where needed
- Fee/payment method confirmed
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- Passport
- Appointment confirmation
- Original documents
- Copy of application
- Business summary you can explain clearly
Arrival checklist
- Carry key documents in hand luggage
- Confirm accommodation address
- Keep company contact details ready
- Register address after settling
- Join insurance/pension as required
Extension/renewal checklist
- Current passport and residence card
- Company tax documents
- Financial statements
- Office lease renewal
- Payroll/employment records
- Proof of actual operations
- Explanation of any losses or changes
Refusal recovery checklist
- Identify refusal reason
- Obtain updated documents
- Fix office/capital/role mismatch
- Add explanatory letter
- Re-check translations and consistency
35. FAQs
1. Is Japan’s Business Manager a visa or a residence status?
Both concepts are involved. The main legal category is a status of residence. Many overseas applicants first get a COE, then a visa for entry.
2. Do I need to invest exactly JPY 5 million?
Not always exactly in every structure, but the public standard commonly refers to capital/investment of at least JPY 5 million or two or more qualifying full-time employees, or equivalent scale.
3. Can I use borrowed money for the JPY 5 million?
Potentially, if lawful and fully documented. Unexplained or sham funds are highly risky.
4. Can I open the company without living in Japan first?
In some cases yes, through representatives and proper setup planning, but the mechanics vary.
5. Is a shared office acceptable?
Possibly, but it must function as a genuine business office. Mere mailboxes or paper-only arrangements are risky.
6. Can I work as a freelancer on the side?
Not safely unless the activity is within your permitted scope. Unrelated side work can violate status rules.
7. Can I bring my spouse immediately?
Often yes, if dependent requirements are met, though some applicants bring family later for practical reasons.
8. Can my spouse work?
Dependents do not get unrestricted full work rights automatically. Separate permission may be needed for limited work.
9. Can I study Japanese while on Business Manager?
Yes, incidental study is generally possible.
10. Do I need Japanese language ability?
There is no universal formal Japanese-language requirement for the visa itself.
11. Is there a quota or lottery?
No public quota or lottery is generally used for this status.
12. How long is the first approval usually?
It varies. New businesses often receive shorter periods initially.
13. What if my business is not profitable yet?
Lack of profit is not automatically fatal, especially early on, but you must show continuity, seriousness, and viability.
14. Can I renew if I had a loss?
Yes, sometimes, if the business is still credible and compliant. Expect closer scrutiny.
15. Do I need a Certificate of Eligibility?
It is the common route for overseas applicants, though exact process depends on circumstances.
16. Can I apply directly at the embassy without COE?
In some cases embassies may accept applications without COE, but COE is the standard and usually more practical route. Check your post.
17. Can I change from Student to Business Manager in Japan?
Possibly, if you qualify and current rules permit change of status in your situation.
18. Can I change from Temporary Visitor to Business Manager in Japan?
Do not assume so. This is restricted and fact-specific.
19. Does buying property in Japan help?
Owning property does not by itself qualify you for Business Manager.
20. Is there an age limit?
No general public age cap is stated.
21. Can I be the only employee?
Potentially yes, if you meet the capital/investment route and other requirements. But the business must still be real and of sufficient scale.
22. What if my company has no office yet?
That is a major problem for standard Business Manager. Office preparation is central.
23. Can I manage a restaurant/shop/salon under this visa?
Yes, potentially, if the business is legally established, properly licensed where needed, and you genuinely manage it.
24. Does this visa lead to permanent residence?
Indirectly yes, as part of lawful residence history, if all PR conditions are met.
25. Can I leave Japan for long periods?
Extended absence can create practical and legal issues. Check re-entry rules and maintain actual residence/business continuity.
26. What if my passport expires after I get the residence card?
Renew the passport and maintain both old and new documents as needed.
27. Will immigration inspect my office?
They can scrutinize office evidence closely and may verify details.
28. Is a business plan mandatory?
It may not always be listed as a single universal mandatory form, but in practice it is often essential.
29. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?
Many embassies require lawful residence in their jurisdiction. Check the local consulate’s rules.
30. Can one company sponsor multiple foreign managers?
Potentially yes, but each role must be credible and justified.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are primary official sources relevant to Japan’s Business Manager route and related residence procedures.
-
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Status of Residence “Business Manager”
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/status/businessmanager.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 Change of Status of Residence
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-2.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: Residence Card
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/guide/nyuukokukanri07_00099.html -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: Visa
https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: VISA/Residing in Japan
https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/index.html#section2 -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan: List of Japanese Embassies, Consulates and Permanent Missions
https://www.mofa.go.jp/about/emb_cons/mofaserv.html -
e-Gov Japan: Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act
https://elaws.e-gov.go.jp/document?lawid=326CO0000000319 -
Immigration Services Agency of Japan: Standard Processing Periods
https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/resources/nyuukokukanri07_00140.html
37. Final verdict
Japan’s Business Manager route is best for: – genuine founders, – investor-operators, – directors, – branch managers, – senior business administrators who need to live in Japan to run a real business.
Biggest benefits
- lawful residence in Japan,
- ability to actively manage a business,
- renewability,
- dependent family option,
- possible long-term path to PR.
Biggest risks
- weak office setup,
- unclear funding,
- shell-company concerns,
- poor business plan,
- tax/compliance failures on renewal,
- using the wrong category for what is really normal employment.
Top preparation advice
- Secure a genuine business office.
- Document the JPY 5 million or employee threshold properly.
- Present a serious, realistic business plan.
- Make your managerial role unmistakable.
- Keep tax and accounting compliance clean from the start.
When to consider another visa
Consider another route if you are: – only attending meetings, – just exploring the market, – primarily doing ordinary employee work, – studying full-time, – remotely working for a foreign employer with no real Japan business operation.
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Whether your local Japanese embassy or consulate requires extra documents beyond the COE, passport, form, and photo.
- Current embassy visa fees for your nationality and place of application.
- Whether your consulate accepts applications from non-residents or only local residents.
- Current processing times for COE, visa issuance, change of status, and extension.
- Whether your exact office arrangement will be accepted as a qualifying business office.
- Whether your funding structure, shareholder loan, or family gift is acceptable and how it should be documented.
- Whether your management case requires proof of at least 3 years’ management/administration experience.
- Whether dependents can apply together or should apply after the principal applicant arrives.
- Current treatment of same-sex spouses or unmarried partners in your specific circumstances.
- Whether online immigration filing is available for your application type.
- Whether any recent policy updates affect startup-linked cases, local government entrepreneur support, or residence periods.
- The latest rules on re-entry, address registration deadlines, and local insurance/pension obligations after arrival.