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Short description: A complete guide to Japan’s Legal / Accounting Services work status: eligibility, documents, process, dependents, renewals, PR path, and pitfalls.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-03

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Japan
Visa name Legal / Accounting Services
Visa short name Legal/Accounting
Category Work residence status
Main purpose To work in Japan in qualified legal or accounting professions recognized under Japanese law
Typical applicant Foreign lawyer registered in Japan, foreign certified public accountant, or other foreign legal/accounting professional authorized to practice relevant services in Japan
Validity Certificate of Eligibility and visa issuance validity vary; period of stay is granted by immigration
Stay duration Common periods of stay for work statuses in Japan are typically 3 months, 1 year, 3 years, or 5 years, but the exact grant depends on the individual decision
Entries allowed Visa may be single or multiple entry depending on issuance; residence status holders can generally depart and re-enter under re-entry rules if conditions are met
Extension possible? Yes, if you continue to meet the status requirements and apply for extension before expiry
Work allowed? Yes, but only within the activities covered by the Legal / Accounting Services status
Study allowed? Limited; incidental study is generally possible, but this is not a student status
Family allowed? Yes, typically via Dependent status for eligible spouse and children, subject to approval
PR path? Possible; time in this status can count toward permanent residence if broader PR requirements are met
Citizenship path? Indirect; this status can contribute to residence history relevant to naturalization if all naturalization requirements are met

Japan’s Legal / Accounting Services status is a work-related status of residence for foreign nationals who will engage in certain professional legal or accounting work in Japan.

It exists to allow Japan-based entities and clients to use qualified foreign legal and accounting professionals, but only where the person is legally authorized under Japanese law to perform that work.

This route is meant for people such as:

  • Registered foreign lawyers in Japan
  • Certain qualified foreign accountants
  • Other foreign professionals whose legal or accounting activities are specifically recognized under Japanese law

In Japan’s immigration system, this is not just a tourist visa sticker. It is best understood as:

  • a status of residence under the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act, and
  • usually paired with a visa issued by a Japanese embassy/consulate abroad if the person is entering from overseas.

In practice, applicants often go through two layers:

  1. Immigration status approval in Japan, often via a Certificate of Eligibility (COE)
  2. Visa issuance abroad, where required for entry

Official naming

The official English name used by Japanese immigration is:

  • Legal/Accounting Services

Common Japanese label:

  • 法律・会計業務

This status is distinct from broader professional work categories such as:

  • Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services
  • Business Manager
  • Highly Skilled Professional
  • Professor
  • Intra-company Transferee

Why this category is narrower than many applicants expect

This is a specialized and restricted work category. It is not for general corporate legal support, compliance work, bookkeeping, finance management, or tax support unless the role falls within the legally recognized scope for this immigration status.

Warning: Many foreign professionals assume that any legal, tax, audit, accounting, or compliance role qualifies. That is not correct.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Ideal applicants

This status is best for:

  • Foreign lawyers who are properly licensed and can be recognized/registered to practice permitted legal services in Japan
  • Foreign certified public accountants or similarly qualified professionals, where Japanese law recognizes the activity
  • Professionals hired by:
  • law firms
  • foreign law offices in Japan
  • accounting firms
  • qualified professional organizations
  • companies employing a recognized foreign legal/accounting specialist for legally permitted work

Who should not use this visa?

Tourists

Not suitable. Tourists should use the appropriate temporary visitor route, not a work status.

Business visitors

If you are only attending meetings, negotiations, conferences, or short business visits without taking up employment in Japan, this is usually the wrong route.

Job seekers

Japan does not generally offer this status for speculative job searching.

Employees in non-regulated legal/compliance roles

If your role is ordinary corporate legal support, contract review, compliance, internal advisory, tax support, finance, auditing support, or consulting, the correct category may instead be:

  • Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, or
  • another work status depending on the role

Students

Not suitable unless changing from student status after obtaining the required professional position and legal authorization.

Spouses/partners and children

Dependents should not use this status unless they themselves independently qualify for legal/accounting work.

Digital nomads

Not suitable. Remote work for an overseas employer does not automatically fit this category.

Founders/entrepreneurs/investors

If you are setting up and managing a firm or business, the relevant route may be Business Manager, not Legal/Accounting Services.

Retirees

Not suitable.

Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists

Different statuses apply.

Transit passengers and medical travelers

Not suitable.

Diplomats/official travelers

Different diplomatic or official routes apply.

Quick fit guide

Applicant type Good fit for Legal/Accounting? Notes
Registered foreign lawyer Yes Strongest fit
Foreign CPA doing recognized accounting work Possibly Depends on legal recognition and exact role
Corporate in-house counsel without recognized foreign lawyer framework Often no Another work status may be more appropriate
Compliance officer Usually no Often Specialist in Humanities route
Accountant/bookkeeper Usually no This category is narrower than general accounting work
Founder opening a law/accounting office Maybe Could overlap with Business Manager depending on structure
Tourist attending client meeting No Temporary visitor/business visit route may be correct

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

This status is used for professional legal or accounting activities in Japan that are authorized for foreign nationals under Japanese law.

Possible permitted use cases include:

  • working as a registered foreign lawyer
  • providing legal services concerning foreign law if legally authorized
  • performing certain recognized accounting services where qualifications and Japanese legal requirements are met
  • working for a law firm, foreign law office, accounting firm, or similar organization in Japan in a role covered by this status

Prohibited or not-covered purposes

This status is generally not for:

  • tourism
  • ordinary business meetings as a visitor
  • broad non-qualified legal support work
  • generic accounting or bookkeeping
  • unpaid or paid internships outside the permitted professional scope
  • full-time study as the main purpose
  • volunteering unrelated to the approved work status
  • journalism
  • medical treatment
  • transit
  • marriage as the primary immigration purpose
  • religious activity as the primary purpose
  • general long-term residence without work
  • family reunion as the primary route
  • ordinary investment/business setup where the main activity is management rather than legal/accounting practice

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

Remote work

Japan’s immigration law focuses on the activity in Japan. If you are residing in Japan and working remotely, the relevant question is whether your activity matches your status. Remote work outside the approved scope can be problematic.

In-house counsel

Some in-house legal roles may not fit this category if they are not based on recognized legal professional authorization.

Accounting roles

“Accounting” in the title does not mean all finance or accountant jobs qualify. The role must fit the professional category recognized by immigration and relevant Japanese law.

Side gigs

Side legal, tax, compliance, teaching, consulting, or freelance work outside the approved scope may require separate immigration permission or may not be allowed at all.

Common Mistake: Assuming your job title controls the visa category. In Japan, the actual legal nature of the work matters more than the title.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

  • Legal/Accounting Services

Long name

  • Legal / Accounting Services

Japanese name

  • 法律・会計業務

Classification type

This is one of Japan’s statuses of residence for work under the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act.

Related immigration terms applicants should know

  • Status of residence: your legal category for staying in Japan
  • Certificate of Eligibility (COE): a pre-screening document often issued by Immigration Services Agency in Japan before visa issuance abroad
  • Visa: the entry document issued by a Japanese embassy or consulate, where required
  • Residence card: the card issued to medium- to long-term residents after arrival or at landing in eligible airports

Commonly confused categories

Category How it differs
Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services Broader professional category; often used for corporate legal, consulting, finance, or admin work not requiring special legal/accounting licensing
Business Manager For managing or operating a business in Japan
Highly Skilled Professional A points-based route that can cover certain advanced professionals and offers immigration advantages
Intra-company Transferee For transfer from an overseas office to a Japanese office
Temporary Visitor For short business trips, meetings, and tourism, not employment

5. Eligibility criteria

Because this status is tightly regulated, eligibility depends not only on immigration rules but also on whether the person is legally qualified to carry out the underlying profession in Japan.

Core eligibility

You generally need:

  • a valid passport
  • a genuine role in Japan that falls under Legal/Accounting Services
  • evidence of professional qualifications
  • evidence that the work is lawfully permitted under Japanese law
  • a host employer, firm, office, or professional setup in Japan
  • ability to support yourself in Japan, usually shown through salary or compensation
  • no disqualifying immigration, criminal, or security issues

Nationality rules

There is no general published rule that limits this status to only specific nationalities. However:

  • recognition of legal qualifications may depend on the country where the applicant is licensed
  • embassy/consulate procedures can vary by nationality and place of application
  • some applicants may face additional scrutiny based on document verification or residence status in the country of application

Passport validity

A valid passport is required. Specific minimum validity rules can vary by embassy practice, but your passport should remain valid well beyond intended entry and stay.

Age

No special public age threshold is usually listed for this work status, but applicants must be legally capable of working and holding the professional qualification required.

Education and professional qualification

This is one of the most important parts.

Applicants usually need:

  • the relevant professional qualification or license from abroad, and
  • where required, proof of registration or authorization in Japan

For legal services, this often relates to the framework for Registered Foreign Lawyers under Japanese law.

For accounting, recognized licensing and legal admissibility of the work are key.

If your work does not require those professional credentials, immigration may decide this is the wrong status.

Language

No general published Japanese-language requirement is stated as a standard immigration condition for this status. However:

  • the employer may require Japanese
  • professional registration bodies may have their own expectations
  • practical work success may depend on language ability

Work experience

Work experience may be relevant, especially where professional registration or legal authorization requires it.

Sponsorship / host in Japan

In practice, most applicants need a:

  • sponsoring law firm
  • accounting firm
  • employer
  • professional office
  • or authorized receiving organization in Japan

The sponsor often assists with the COE application.

Job offer

Usually yes, or at least a clear professional engagement in Japan.

Points requirement

No standard points test applies to the ordinary Legal/Accounting Services status itself.

Maintenance funds

There is no widely published fixed bank-balance threshold specific to this status. Usually, immigration looks at:

  • salary
  • compensation
  • stability of employment
  • sponsor support if relevant

Accommodation proof

May be requested depending on stage and consular practice, but is not typically the main eligibility criterion if a COE-backed work visa is used.

Onward travel

Usually not the central issue for work-status applicants with long-term residence plans.

Health

Japan may deny landing or status on certain public health or legal grounds, but there is no general public rule requiring a standard immigration medical exam for all applicants in this category.

Character / criminal record

Applicants with criminal history, immigration violations, deportation records, or security concerns may face refusal.

Insurance

Not usually a pre-visa universal requirement, but after arrival most long-term residents must join the appropriate Japanese health insurance system if eligible/applicable.

Biometrics

Some overseas applicants may provide biometric information depending on where and how they apply.

Intent requirements

You must genuinely intend to engage in the approved professional work in Japan.

Residency outside Japan / applying from third country

Many embassies/consulates accept applications only from:

  • nationals of that country, or
  • foreign residents lawfully residing there

This is location-specific.

Local registration rules after arrival

Long-term residents generally must:

  • receive a residence card if applicable
  • register their address with the municipality within the required period
  • keep immigration records updated

Quota/cap/ballot

No public lottery or annual quota is generally published for this visa category.

Embassy-specific rules

These vary. Some posts require:

  • local residence permit
  • extra photos
  • original COE and copy
  • appointment booking
  • extra corporate documents

Warning: Always use the checklist of the embassy or consulate where you will actually apply.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Ineligibility factors

You may be refused if:

  • the job does not truly fall under Legal/Accounting Services
  • you lack the required legal/accounting qualification
  • you are not authorized to perform the profession in Japan
  • the sponsoring entity is weak, unclear, or unverifiable
  • the salary or contract looks unrealistic
  • documents are inconsistent or incomplete
  • you have immigration violations or criminal concerns

Common refusal triggers

Wrong visa class

Very common. Many applicants should really be under another work category.

Mismatch between role and documents

If the offer letter says “legal consultant” but the duties are actually generic admin/compliance, refusal risk rises.

Unclear licensing status

If you cannot show that you are permitted to practice the relevant legal/accounting work in Japan, the application is weak.

Incomplete corporate evidence

If the Japan employer or office does not prove legitimacy, operations, and ability to employ you, immigration may question the case.

Prior overstays or violations

Past overstays in Japan or elsewhere can affect credibility.

Unverifiable documents

Poor translations, incomplete licenses, and unverified certificates are major problems.

Applying through the wrong embassy

Some embassies reject applications from third-country applicants without local residence rights.

Interview or explanation problems

Inconsistent answers about what you will do in Japan can damage the case.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lawful long-term residence in Japan for approved professional work
  • permission to earn income in Japan within the approved activity scope
  • possibility of renewal/extension
  • possibility to bring spouse and children as dependents
  • time in status may count toward permanent residence
  • can support a stable immigration history in Japan
  • possible access to regular resident life in Japan, including:
  • residence card
  • address registration
  • bank account opening in practice
  • housing rental in practice
  • health insurance enrollment obligations/rights
  • tax registration and formal employment

Family benefits

If dependents are approved, family members may live with you in Japan. Dependent spouses may later seek permission for limited part-time work under separate rules.

Career benefits

For genuinely eligible legal and accounting professionals, this route provides a clear status aligned with a regulated profession rather than forcing a poor fit into a more generic work category.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Scope restriction

You may only engage in the activities covered by the approved status.

Not a free work permit

This is not an open work authorization for any job in Japan.

Employer/professional activity dependence

If your role, employer, or professional basis changes significantly, you may need to:

  • notify immigration
  • extend/change status
  • or switch categories

Registration obligations

You must keep your immigration and municipal information current.

Re-entry rules

If you leave Japan, re-entry rules apply. Long-term residents often use special re-entry permission when returning within the permitted period, but conditions must be met.

No guarantee of extension

Extensions are discretionary and depend on ongoing compliance and continuing eligible work.

Family restrictions

Dependents do not automatically get unrestricted work rights.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Period of stay

Japan commonly grants work statuses for periods such as:

  • 3 months
  • 1 year
  • 3 years
  • 5 years

The exact period granted is case-specific.

Visa validity vs stay duration

This is a crucial distinction.

  • The visa is for entry.
  • The status of residence / period of stay controls how long you may remain in Japan.

A visa can expire after entry while your period of stay continues lawfully.

When the clock starts

Your authorized stay begins from the date of landing/admission in Japan.

Entry by date

If issued abroad, the visa will have an entry validity period. You must enter before it expires.

Re-entry

If you are a valid residence-status holder and temporarily leave Japan, you may be able to return using re-entry rules rather than obtaining a brand-new visa, depending on your circumstances and time abroad.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • loss of lawful status
  • removal/deportation risk
  • future visa refusals
  • difficulties with PR or naturalization later

Renewal timing

Extensions should be filed before status expiry. Do not wait until the last days unless necessary.

10. Complete document checklist

Document requirements vary by:

  • whether you are applying for a COE
  • whether you are applying for the visa after COE issuance
  • your embassy/consulate
  • your role and profession

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Application form Official immigration or visa application form Starts the case Old version, missing signatures, inconsistent dates
Certificate of Eligibility (if used) Immigration pre-approval document from Japan Strongly supports visa issuance Name mismatch, expired COE, damaged copy
Employment contract or appointment letter Contract with Japanese employer/firm Shows job, salary, duties Vague duties, no salary, unsigned
Statement of activities Role description in Japan Proves visa category fit Too generic, copied text, mismatch with profession

B. Identity/travel documents

  • Passport
  • Passport copy
  • Prior Japanese visas/status copies if applicable
  • Residence permit for country of application if applying in a third country

Common mistakes: – passport expiring soon – damaged passport – inconsistent names across documents

C. Financial documents

  • salary details in contract
  • employer remuneration statement
  • sometimes applicant bank statements if requested
  • sponsor financial documents where relevant

D. Employment/business documents

  • company registration documents
  • firm profile
  • letter explaining business need for the applicant
  • office details
  • latest financial statements, if required
  • tax documents of employer, if requested

E. Education documents

  • degree certificates
  • transcripts
  • professional training certificates

These may matter less than professional licensing in this category, but can still support the case.

F. Relationship/family documents

If dependents apply:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates for children
  • custody papers if relevant
  • passport copies
  • photos if requested

G. Accommodation/travel documents

Sometimes requested:

  • address in Japan
  • housing arrangement
  • initial itinerary
  • flight reservation, depending on embassy practice

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • guarantee letter if required by the post
  • invitation or support letter
  • sponsor ID/corporate seal documents where required

I. Health/insurance documents

Usually not the main visa-stage requirement for this category, but some posts may ask for additional declarations.

J. Country-specific extras

Embassies may request:

  • local residence permit
  • additional forms
  • police documents
  • CV/resume
  • explanation letter

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • consent letter from non-traveling parent
  • school records
  • adoption papers where relevant

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If documents are not in Japanese or English, translation may be required. Some authorities may accept either Japanese or English depending on the document and stage.

Apostille/notarization rules are not fully standardized across all supporting documents and can vary based on what the receiving authority requests.

Warning: Do not assume apostille is always mandatory or always unnecessary. Follow the exact instructions of the receiving authority.

M. Photo specifications

Use the current official specification on the relevant application form or embassy page. Typical Japanese visa/residence photos must meet strict size, background, and recency standards.

Profession-specific documents likely to matter most

For this category, the most critical documents are often:

  • professional license/certificate
  • registration proof
  • evidence of authorization to perform legal/accounting work in Japan
  • detailed explanation of duties
  • employer/firm legitimacy documents

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

No clear universal public minimum fund amount is typically published specifically for this status.

Instead, the financial assessment usually focuses on:

  • whether the applicant will receive a stable salary/remuneration
  • whether the role is genuine and economically sustainable
  • whether the sponsor/employer can support the employment

Salary threshold

A fixed public salary floor specific to this status is not clearly published in standard summary guidance. However, salary should generally be:

  • credible for the profession
  • sufficient for living in Japan
  • consistent with the employer’s scale and business

Acceptable proof

  • signed contract
  • remuneration statement
  • employer support documents
  • tax and financial records of sponsor if requested
  • bank statements if specifically asked

Dependents

If bringing family, the main applicant should show sufficient income to maintain them.

Hidden costs

Even without a published “proof of funds” minimum, applicants should budget for:

  • relocation
  • housing deposit/key money
  • transportation
  • municipal registration costs in practice
  • health insurance/social insurance contributions
  • first months of living expenses

Pro Tip: If your salary is modest and you are bringing dependents, include a clean explanation of how the family will be maintained.

12. Fees and total cost

Japan’s fees vary by process stage and location.

Main government fees

Certificate of Eligibility

The COE application itself is generally not known for a standard applicant filing fee in the same way as consular visas, but related administrative costs may exist through professional representatives.

Visa issuance fee

Visa fees vary by nationality and reciprocal arrangements, and some embassies list exact fees locally.

Extension of period of stay

A fee is generally payable in Japan for extension applications.

Change of status

A fee is generally payable for changing status in Japan.

Because fee schedules can change, always check the latest official fee page.

Other possible costs

Cost item Typical note
Visa application fee Varies by embassy/nationality
COE support/representative fee Optional if using a lawyer or agent
Translation cost Varies by language and volume
Notarization/apostille Only if required
Courier fee If passport return or document delivery is by courier
Travel to consulate Varies
Residence card photos Small but common cost
Renewal fee in Japan Check latest official fee page
Dependent applications Separate filing costs may apply
Relocation and housing Often the largest practical cost

Warning: Do not rely on old blog posts for Japanese visa fees. Embassy fee tables are updated periodically and can differ by nationality.

13. Step-by-step application process

Standard route from overseas

1. Confirm the correct visa category

Make sure the role truly fits Legal/Accounting Services, not a neighboring work status.

2. Gather professional eligibility evidence

Prepare licenses, registrations, and proof you may lawfully perform the work in Japan.

3. Japanese host prepares COE application

Usually the employer/sponsoring organization in Japan applies for a Certificate of Eligibility with the Immigration Services Agency.

4. COE decision

If approved, the COE is issued.

5. Prepare visa application abroad

Submit: – passport – visa form – photo – COE – any local embassy-required extras

6. Book appointment if required

Many consulates use appointment systems.

7. Submit visa application

At the Japanese embassy/consulate with jurisdiction over your residence.

8. Respond to additional requests

Embassy or immigration may ask for: – more corporate documents – better proof of qualifications – explanation of duties

9. Visa issuance

If approved, the visa is placed in your passport or otherwise issued according to local practice.

10. Travel to Japan

Carry supporting documents, especially if your work category is technical or uncommon.

11. Landing inspection

Immigration officers make the final admission decision.

12. Residence card issuance

At major airports, eligible medium- to long-term residents may receive the residence card at landing. Otherwise, it is issued later after local registration.

13. Address registration

Register your address at the municipal office within the required time after settling.

14. Employment start and compliance

Begin only the approved activities and complete tax/social insurance registrations as required.

In-country route

If you are already in Japan in another valid status, a change of status of residence may be possible in some cases. This depends on your current status and the facts.

14. Processing time

Official timing

Processing times vary by:

  • COE stage in Japan
  • embassy/consulate visa issuance stage
  • document completeness
  • professional complexity
  • background verification

Japan publishes general processing guidance, but exact timelines for this specific category can vary significantly.

Practical expectation

COE stage

Can take weeks to months depending on complexity and workload.

Consular visa stage

Often shorter than the COE stage if all documents are complete, but delays are possible.

What slows cases down

  • unclear licensing/registration basis
  • unusual job descriptions
  • weak sponsor documents
  • third-country application complications
  • inconsistent translations
  • peak season processing

Priority options

No broad public premium processing system is generally advertised for this category.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Depends on post and process. Some applicants may provide biometrics as part of visa processing or other immigration procedures.

Interview

Not all applicants are interviewed, but an interview can happen if:

  • the role is unclear
  • documents conflict
  • professional authorization is uncertain
  • there are prior immigration issues

Typical interview themes

  • What exact work will you do in Japan?
  • Who is your employer/client?
  • Are you licensed?
  • Why is this category appropriate?
  • Have you worked in Japan before?

Medical

No standard universal medical exam requirement is publicly stated for all applicants in this category.

Police certificates

Not routinely listed as a universal requirement for all applicants, but may be requested in some contexts or statuses.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official public approval-rate statistics specifically for Legal/Accounting Services are not always clearly published in a user-friendly visa-by-visa format for ordinary applicants.

So it is safer to say:

  • No simple official approval-rate percentage should be assumed from public-facing sources

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals in this category likely revolve around:

  • wrong status selection
  • insufficient proof of professional legal/accounting authorization
  • role not matching category
  • weak or incomplete sponsor documentation
  • inability to explain why the work is not better classified elsewhere

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Focus on category fit

The strongest applications clearly prove:

  1. what work will be done
  2. why that work fits Legal/Accounting Services
  3. what legal/professional authority allows the applicant to do it in Japan

Practical strengthening steps

  • Use a detailed job description
  • Include a short legal explanation from the employer or representative
  • Attach license and registration evidence clearly
  • Explain any foreign qualification unfamiliar to Japanese reviewers
  • Keep translations professional and complete
  • Ensure all names, dates, and company details match across forms
  • Show realistic salary and firm operations
  • If bringing dependents, show enough income and family documentation

Pro Tip: A one-page role explanation that maps each duty to the immigration category can be extremely helpful, especially for niche legal/accounting roles.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Build the file around “why this status”

Do not just submit the contract and license. Add a concise explanation of why the role belongs in Legal/Accounting Services instead of another category.

2. Ask the Japanese employer to describe duties precisely

Avoid vague terms like: – consultant – advisor – support – management

Use precise professional language tied to the permitted activity.

3. Explain unusual licensing systems

If your home country’s legal/accounting qualification has an unfamiliar structure, include a plain-English explanation and official proof.

4. Use a document index

Reviewers like clean packs. A simple index reduces confusion.

5. Explain large bank deposits honestly

If the embassy asks for financial evidence and there are recent large deposits, explain them with supporting documents.

6. Do not overload with irrelevant documents

Too many unrelated documents can obscure the key issue: legal eligibility and category fit.

7. Apply early

COE and visa timing can be unpredictable.

8. Be careful with third-country applications

Check first whether the embassy where you plan to apply will accept your case.

9. If refused before, address it directly

A short, honest explanation plus evidence of what changed is better than silence.

10. Keep copies of everything

You may need the same documents later for extension, dependent applications, PR, or naturalization.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often very useful in this category.

When it helps most

  • your profession is niche
  • your role is easy to misunderstand
  • your home qualification is foreign or unusual
  • your duties overlap with other visa categories
  • you are applying from a third country
  • there are prior refusals or immigration issues to explain

Good structure

  1. Your identity and current status
  2. Your professional qualification
  3. The Japanese employer/host
  4. Exact job title and duties
  5. Why the role fits Legal/Accounting Services
  6. Confirmation of legal/professional authorization
  7. Salary and employment terms
  8. Intended travel/relocation timeline
  9. List of supporting documents

What not to say

  • vague claims about “any work”
  • contradictory statements about business management if this is not a Business Manager case
  • unsupported claims of licensing
  • informal or emotional language without evidence

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor?

Usually:

  • a law firm
  • foreign law office in Japan
  • accounting firm
  • employer
  • professional corporation
  • other qualified receiving entity in Japan

What the sponsor should provide

  • letter of employment or engagement
  • detailed duty description
  • company registration documents
  • financial/business evidence
  • explanation of why the applicant is needed
  • proof the applicant can lawfully perform the work

Sponsor mistakes

  • generic HR letters with no role detail
  • no explanation of professional qualification
  • salary missing or unrealistically low
  • failing to match immigration forms with contract wording

Common Mistake: Sponsors often describe the role in broad corporate terms. For this status, the role should be framed with precision.

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, generally eligible spouse and children may apply for Dependent status if the main applicant holds an appropriate long-term work status and can support them.

Who qualifies?

Usually:

  • legally married spouse
  • biological or adopted minor children
  • sometimes children still financially dependent, subject to Japanese rules and case facts

Unmarried partners are generally much harder and may not qualify under ordinary dependent rules.

Required proof

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • passports
  • proof of relationship genuineness if requested
  • proof the main applicant can support the family
  • custody/consent documents for children if relevant

Work rights of dependents

Dependents do not automatically receive full work rights. They may need separate permission for limited work.

Study rights of children

Dependent children may live and attend school in Japan subject to local education arrangements.

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

Work rights

Yes, but only in the approved field of legal/accounting services.

Self-employment

Not automatically open-ended. If you are effectively managing a business or operating independently in a way that differs from the approved basis, another status may be needed.

Remote work

Grey area. If you are in Japan under this status, your main activities must remain within the approved category.

Internships

Only if the activity truly fits the status and is professionally authorized. Most ordinary internships do not fit.

Volunteering

Incidental volunteering is usually not the purpose of the status, but ordinary lawful volunteering outside paid employment is a separate question. Avoid any activity that looks like unauthorized work.

Side income

Side paid activity outside the approved professional scope can be a violation.

Passive income

Passive income such as investments is generally different from work activity, but tax consequences may still arise.

Study rights

You can usually take incidental classes, but this is not a student status.

Business meetings

Permitted if incidental to your authorized professional work.

Receiving payment in Japan

Yes, for the authorized work.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Visa is not the final guarantee

Even with a visa, the final admission decision is made at the border.

What to carry

  • passport with visa
  • COE copy/original as instructed
  • employment letter
  • employer contact details
  • residence address in Japan if known
  • proof of qualifications if the category is unusual

Border questions you may face

  • Who will employ you?
  • What work will you do?
  • Where will you live?
  • How long will you stay?

Re-entry after travel

Residence-status holders must follow re-entry rules. If using special re-entry permission, do not exceed the permitted absence period.

New passport issues

If you renew your passport, keep old and new passports as needed and follow current entry/re-entry instructions.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, if you continue to qualify.

Inside-country renewal

Usually yes, via Extension of Period of Stay in Japan before expiry.

Switching to another status

Possible if your activities change and you qualify for another category, such as:

  • Business Manager
  • Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services
  • Highly Skilled Professional
  • Dependent or spouse-related categories, if applicable

Changing employer

Possible, but you must remain within the permitted activity scope and comply with notification rules. A major role change can require a new status decision.

Visitor to worker conversion

Japan is generally strict about status changes from short-term visitor status, and such changes are not routine. It may be possible only in limited exceptional circumstances.

No automatic bridging

Japan does not use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries. If you file an extension/change application in time, you may remain under specific legal continuation rules while it is pending. Verify the exact current rule with immigration.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this status count toward PR?

Yes, time spent lawfully in Japan under this work status can generally contribute toward permanent residence eligibility, provided the applicant meets Japan’s broader PR requirements.

General PR factors

  • length of continuous residence
  • stable livelihood
  • good conduct
  • tax compliance
  • pension/social insurance compliance
  • proper immigration record

Some applicants may qualify faster under special routes such as Highly Skilled Professional, but that is separate from this ordinary status.

Naturalization

This status can also contribute to lawful residence history relevant to naturalization. Naturalization has its own requirements, including:

  • residence duration
  • conduct
  • financial stability
  • legal capacity
  • and other statutory requirements

When this visa does not help much

If you:

  • repeatedly violate status conditions
  • have tax/pension noncompliance
  • have long absences
  • frequently change status without stability

then future PR/naturalization may become harder.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax residence

If you live and work in Japan, you may become subject to Japanese tax residence rules depending on your facts and duration.

Social security

Employees in Japan may be subject to:

  • health insurance
  • pension
  • employment insurance
  • other payroll deductions

depending on the employment setup.

Address registration

Medium- to long-term residents must register their address with the municipality after moving in.

Residence card duties

You must carry and update it as required by law.

Employer and organization notifications

Certain changes may have to be reported to immigration.

Overstay and status violations

Working outside the status scope, failing to notify required changes, or overstaying can lead to serious immigration consequences.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waiver

Visa waiver arrangements for short visits do not replace the need for the correct work status for long-term professional employment.

Nationality-specific fee differences

Visa fees can vary by reciprocal arrangements.

Third-country application rules

These vary widely by embassy/consulate.

Qualification recognition differences

For legal and accounting professions, the country where your original qualification was obtained can matter greatly to whether the work is legally recognized in Japan.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not applicable as main applicants in most cases, given the professional nature of the category.

Divorced/separated parents

For dependent children, custody and parental consent documents may be critical.

Adopted children

Adoption documents may be required for dependent applications.

Same-sex spouses/partners

This is sensitive and fact-specific. Japan’s ordinary dependent rules generally rely on legal marriage recognition, but treatment can vary by status, nationality, and current policy practice. Verify directly with immigration or the relevant embassy.

Stateless persons / refugees

Possible complications apply. Case-specific guidance is essential.

Dual nationals

Use the passport and nationality framework accepted for your application and entry. Dual nationality can complicate visa issuance and border procedures.

Prior refusals

Must be disclosed where asked.

Overstays or prior deportation

These materially raise refusal risk and may trigger statutory bars or enhanced review.

Applying from a third country

Often possible only if you are lawfully resident there.

Change of name / gender marker mismatch

Provide formal proof linking all identities and records.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
Any legal job qualifies No. The role must fit the narrow Legal/Accounting Services category
Any accountant can use this status No. Generic accounting roles often belong elsewhere
A visa equals permission to do any work No. Work is limited to approved activities
If I have a COE, the embassy must issue the visa Not automatically; visa issuance and border admission still involve review
Dependents can work full-time automatically No
I can switch from tourist status anytime in Japan Usually not; changes from visitor status are limited
Salary does not matter if I am highly qualified Wrong. Financial credibility still matters
I do not need to report address or employer changes Wrong. Compliance duties continue after arrival

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

What happens after refusal?

You may receive a refusal at:

  • the COE stage
  • the visa issuance stage
  • the landing stage

These are legally and procedurally different.

Is there an appeal?

Japan does not always provide a straightforward broad appeal process in the same way some countries do for all visa refusals. In practice:

  • you may seek clarification where possible
  • you may reapply with stronger evidence
  • in some in-country immigration matters, administrative procedures may exist depending on the exact decision type

The availability of formal review depends on what was refused and where.

Reapplication

Often the practical route is reapplication after fixing the issue, such as:

  • wrong status chosen
  • missing license proof
  • weak sponsor documents
  • contradictory job description

Refund

Application fees are generally not refundable after processing begins.

When to seek legal help

Strongly consider qualified legal help if the refusal involves:

  • professional qualification disputes
  • prior immigration violations
  • suspected misrepresentation concerns
  • criminal history
  • repeated refusals

31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?

At immigration

You will undergo landing inspection. If admitted as a medium- to long-term resident, you may receive a residence card at certain airports.

Soon after arrival

First 7–14 days after settling

  • move into your residence
  • register address at local municipal office within the legally required period
  • enroll in health insurance/pension if required through employer or municipality
  • start employer onboarding

First 30 days

  • open bank account in practice
  • arrange mobile phone
  • confirm tax/social insurance setup
  • keep copies of registration records

First 90 days

  • stabilize housing and employment records
  • ensure any dependents complete their own registration steps
  • check residence card details for errors

My Number

Long-term residents in Japan generally receive a My Number for tax and social security administration.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: Foreign lawyer hired by Tokyo firm

  • Weeks 1–3: Gather license, CV, translations, contract
  • Weeks 4–10+: COE processing in Japan
  • Week 11: COE issued
  • Week 12: Visa application at embassy
  • Week 13: Visa issued
  • Week 14: Enter Japan and register address

Scenario 2: Foreign accounting professional with dependents

  • Month 1: Main applicant and family documents collected
  • Months 2–3: COE processing for main applicant, possibly dependents together or separately
  • Month 4: Visa applications abroad
  • Month 4–5: Travel and municipal registration

Scenario 3: Change of status from inside Japan

  • Week 1: Confirm category fit
  • Weeks 2–3: File change of status application
  • Weeks 4–10+: Await result
  • After approval: new status granted, continue work lawfully

33. Ideal document pack structure

Suggested file order

  1. Cover letter / index
  2. Application form
  3. Passport copy
  4. COE copy
  5. Employment contract
  6. Detailed job description
  7. Professional license/certificate
  8. Registration/authorization proof
  9. Employer corporate documents
  10. Financial/support documents
  11. Dependent documents, if any
  12. Translations
  13. Explanation notes

Naming convention

Use clear filenames such as:

  • 01_Passport.pdf
  • 02_COE.pdf
  • 03_Employment_Contract.pdf
  • 04_Job_Description.pdf
  • 05_Law_License.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans where possible
  • no cut edges
  • all pages included
  • legible stamps/seals
  • one PDF per logical document unless told otherwise

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm the role truly fits Legal/Accounting Services
  • Confirm professional qualification is recognized/relevant
  • Confirm Japanese host is prepared to support the case
  • Check embassy jurisdiction
  • Check current official forms and photo rules
  • Prepare translations

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Form signed
  • Photo compliant
  • COE included if applicable
  • Fee method confirmed
  • Appointment confirmation printed/saved
  • Copies of all submissions

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • appointment proof
  • originals of key documents
  • sponsor contact details
  • clear explanation of duties

Arrival checklist

  • passport and visa
  • COE/support documents
  • Japan address
  • employer contact
  • register address after move-in
  • check residence card

Extension/renewal checklist

  • current passport and residence card
  • updated contract/employment certificate
  • income/tax documents
  • proof of continued lawful work
  • employer change notifications if any

Refusal recovery checklist

  • identify exact refusal issue
  • obtain updated job description
  • strengthen qualification proof
  • fix translations and inconsistencies
  • recheck visa category

35. FAQs

1. Is this the same as a general lawyer visa?

No. It is a specific work status for qualified legal/accounting services recognized under Japanese law.

2. Can an in-house counsel use this status?

Sometimes, but often not. It depends on whether the work legally fits this category.

3. Can a normal accountant use this status?

Usually not automatically. Generic accounting jobs often fall outside this category.

4. Do I need a Certificate of Eligibility?

Often yes for long-term work entry, though exact procedure can vary.

5. Can I apply without a job offer?

Usually very difficult. A clear professional engagement in Japan is normally expected.

6. Is Japanese language required?

No universal immigration rule says yes, but the employer or profession may effectively require it.

7. How long is the status granted for?

Often 1, 3, or 5 years, but it can also be shorter depending on the case.

8. Can I bring my spouse?

Usually yes, through Dependent status if approved.

9. Can my spouse work?

Not automatically full-time. Separate permission may be needed for limited work.

10. Can my children attend school in Japan?

Yes, if admitted as dependents and properly registered.

11. Can I freelance on the side?

Not unless the side work is within your status or separately authorized.

12. Can I change employers?

Yes, but the new role must still fit the status, and notification rules apply.

13. Can I start my own practice?

Possibly, but depending on the structure you may need Business Manager or another status.

14. Can I apply from a country where I am visiting?

Often no. Many embassies require local lawful residence.

15. Does a COE guarantee visa issuance?

No.

16. Can the border still refuse me after visa issuance?

Yes, final admission is at the port of entry.

17. Is there a fixed minimum salary?

No clear public fixed amount specific to this category is commonly published, but salary must be credible and sufficient.

18. Is bank balance proof always needed?

Not always, especially where salary and sponsor evidence are strong, but it may be requested.

19. Can I switch from tourist to this status inside Japan?

Usually not as a normal strategy; only limited cases may qualify.

20. Can this lead to permanent residence?

Yes, potentially, if wider PR requirements are met.

21. Does time in this status count toward naturalization?

It can contribute to residence history, but naturalization has separate rules.

22. Do I need to register my address after arrival?

Yes, if you are a medium- to long-term resident.

23. What if my passport expires after I get the visa?

Renew the passport and carry old/new passports as needed; follow current embassy/immigration guidance.

24. What if my foreign license is in another language?

Provide a proper translation and, if useful, an explanation of the licensing system.

25. What is the biggest reason these applications fail?

Wrong category selection or weak proof that the work is legally covered by this status.

26. Can I do compliance or contract administration under this visa?

Often those roles belong to another category unless they are part of a recognized legal professional activity.

27. Is there a quota or lottery?

No general public quota or lottery is known for this status.

28. Can unmarried partners come as dependents?

Usually difficult under ordinary dependent rules.

29. What if I had a prior visa refusal?

Disclose it if asked and explain what changed.

30. Do I need a lawyer to apply?

Not always, but complex category-fit cases often benefit from qualified legal assistance.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to this visa and related Japanese immigration procedures.

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Status of Residence and procedures:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan, list/explanations of statuses of residence:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/status/qaq5.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Certificate of Eligibility information:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-1.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Extension of Period of Stay:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-3.html

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan, Change of Status of Residence:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/16-2.html

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, visas:
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, visa fees:
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/j_info/visit/visa/fees.html

  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, overseas diplomatic missions:
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/about/emb_cons/mofaserv.html

  • Ministry of Justice / Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/ENGLISH/information/icrr-01.html

  • Japan’s official guide to residence card / mid-long term residents under Immigration Services Agency or Ministry of Justice materials:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/publications/materials/newimmiact_4_point_index.html

Note: Official Japanese immigration pages sometimes move or update URLs. If a page has moved, start from the parent official site above.

37. Final verdict

Japan’s Legal / Accounting Services status is best for a narrow group of genuinely qualified foreign legal and accounting professionals whose work is legally recognized in Japan.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful long-term professional work in Japan
  • renewal potential
  • family accompaniment possible
  • can support future PR and naturalization pathways

Biggest risks

  • using the wrong visa category
  • failing to prove licensing/authorization
  • vague job descriptions
  • assuming any legal or accounting role qualifies

Top preparation advice

  • confirm category fit before filing
  • document your professional authorization clearly
  • make the employer describe duties precisely
  • use a clean, indexed application pack
  • verify the exact embassy checklist

When to consider another visa

Consider another category if your role is really: – general compliance – internal corporate legal support – finance/accounting operations – business management – startup operation – general consulting

In those cases, Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, Business Manager, or another work status may be more suitable.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Whether your exact legal or accounting qualification is recognized for this status in Japan
  • Whether your role is better classified under another work status
  • Current embassy/consulate document checklist for your place of application
  • Whether your embassy accepts applications from third-country residents or only local nationals/residents
  • Current visa fees for your nationality and embassy
  • Current COE and visa processing times
  • Whether original or copy COE is currently accepted by your embassy
  • Whether translations must be in Japanese, English, or specifically certified
  • Whether dependents can be filed together with the main applicant in your case
  • Current rules on residence card issuance at your arrival airport
  • Any recent changes affecting same-sex spouses/partners, professional recognition, or re-entry rules
  • Any profession-specific registration requirements under Japanese law before or after arrival

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