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Short Description: Complete guide to Japan’s EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate Visa: eligibility, documents, process, work rules, family options, renewal, and limits.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-03

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Japan
Visa name EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate Visa
Visa short name EPA Nurse/Care Worker
Category Special bilateral labor mobility route under Economic Partnership Agreements (EPA)
Main purpose To enter Japan as an EPA candidate to work and train toward passing Japan’s national exam as a nurse or certified care worker
Typical applicant Qualified or partly qualified nurse/care worker candidates from EPA partner countries selected through the official EPA framework
Validity Visa validity for entry varies by issuance; residence status in Japan is typically granted for a fixed period and renewed as allowed
Stay duration Usually tied to candidate status and training/exam timeline; exact period depends on landing permission and renewals
Entries allowed Usually determined by the visa issued and later by re-entry rules once resident in Japan
Extension possible? Yes, in practice within the EPA framework if requirements continue to be met; exact renewal limits depend on candidate category and current rules
Work allowed? Yes, but only within the authorized EPA candidate role and sponsoring institution framework
Study allowed? Limited; training and language study connected to the program are central, but this is not a general student visa
Family allowed? Not clearly provided as a standard benefit of the EPA candidate route; family options depend on residence status rules and are often limited in practice
PR path? Possible indirectly, but this route itself is not a direct PR category
Citizenship path? Indirect; only after meeting Japan’s separate long-term residence and naturalization rules

Japan’s EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate route is a special work-and-training immigration pathway created under Japan’s bilateral Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) with certain countries. It allows selected foreign nationals to come to Japan as:

  • Nurse candidates
  • Care worker candidates

These candidates work and train in Japanese hospitals or care facilities while preparing for Japan’s national qualification examinations.

This route exists because Japan has used EPAs as a controlled framework to accept a limited number of foreign care-sector workers from partner countries while requiring Japanese language ability, institutional support, and eventual exam qualification.

It is not a general open work visa. It is a special status-based route linked to bilateral agreements and designated acceptance organizations.

In Japan’s immigration system, what applicants commonly call a “visa” actually involves two layers:

  1. A visa issued by a Japanese embassy or consulate for travel to Japan, and
  2. A status of residence granted by immigration on landing and during stay in Japan.

For this route, the relevant immigration status is generally handled under Japan’s designated EPA framework for nurse/care worker candidates. Public-facing English terminology can vary by ministry and embassy. In practice, official materials often refer to:

  • EPA nurse candidate
  • EPA care worker candidate
  • Nurse candidate under EPA
  • Care worker candidate under EPA

Japanese-language labels commonly refer to EPA-based nurse/care worker candidates under the bilateral program structure. Exact residence-status wording may not always be presented consistently in embassy-facing English materials.

Why it exists

It was created to implement Japan’s EPAs with partner countries including:

  • Indonesia
  • Philippines
  • Vietnam

Availability depends on the current operational framework of each EPA and selection procedures in the sending country and Japan.

Who it is meant for

It is meant for people who:

  • are from an eligible EPA partner country,
  • meet that country-specific qualification and language standards,
  • are selected through the official EPA process,
  • will work in a Japanese medical or care institution,
  • and aim to qualify under Japanese national standards.

Important distinction

Warning: This is not the same as Japan’s broader care-worker immigration routes such as:

  • Specified Skilled Worker (SSW)
  • Technical Intern Training
  • Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services
  • Student visa with part-time work permission
  • Medical Services visa/status for already qualified professionals in some contexts

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-suited applicants

This route is appropriate for:

  • Qualified or trainable nurses from eligible EPA countries entering the official EPA nurse candidate program
  • Qualified or trainable care worker candidates from eligible EPA countries entering the official EPA care worker candidate program
  • Applicants already screened through the official government-to-government or designated institutional channel

Who should not apply

This visa is not appropriate for:

Tourists

Use a Temporary Visitor route instead, if eligible.

Business visitors

Use a Temporary Visitor for business meetings/short business purposes if applicable.

Job seekers

Japan generally does not use this route for independent job hunting. EPA candidates are selected under a structured scheme.

Regular employees

If you have a normal job offer outside the EPA nursing/care framework, a different work status may apply.

Students

If your main purpose is education, use a Student status, not the EPA candidate route.

Spouses/partners

Do not use this route just to join family in Japan. Consider Dependent, Spouse or Child of Japanese National, Spouse or Child of Permanent Resident, or other family-based statuses if eligible.

Children/dependents

This is not a child/dependent entry category.

Researchers

Not the correct route.

Digital nomads

Not the correct route.

Founders/entrepreneurs/investors

Not the correct route. Consider Business Manager if eligible.

Retirees

Japan does not offer this as a retirement visa.

Religious workers

Not applicable. This is unrelated to religious work despite the “special” label in your prompt.

Artists/athletes

Not the correct route.

Transit passengers

Use transit/temporary visitor arrangements if required.

Medical travelers

Use a medical stay route or temporary visitor arrangement where applicable.

Diplomatic/official travelers

Use the relevant diplomatic/official category.

Practical rule

You should apply for this visa only if:

  • you are from an EPA-partner country,
  • you were selected through the official EPA intake mechanism,
  • and a Japanese accepting institution has been arranged under the program.

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

The EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate route is used for:

  • entering Japan under the relevant EPA framework,
  • working in a designated hospital or care facility,
  • receiving practical training and support,
  • improving Japanese language ability,
  • preparing for Japan’s national licensing/qualification exam,
  • staying in Japan for the duration authorized under the candidate program.

Prohibited or not-covered purposes

It is not meant for:

  • tourism as the main purpose
  • general job seeking
  • free labor market access
  • working for any employer of your choice
  • freelance/self-employment
  • unrelated remote work
  • opening a business
  • enrolling in unrelated long-term study as the main purpose
  • unpaid volunteering outside permitted scope if it conflicts with your resident activity
  • journalism
  • paid artistic performance
  • marriage immigration by itself
  • religious activity as a main immigration basis
  • investment/business setup
  • transit-only use

Grey areas

Tourism during stay

Short personal travel inside Japan is normally fine as part of ordinary life, but your main purpose and legal status must remain EPA candidate activity.

Study

Japanese language study and employer/program training are central to the route. But this does not make it a general study visa.

Side work

Any work outside your authorized status can be a violation unless separately permitted under Japanese immigration rules. For this route, outside work should generally be treated as prohibited unless official approval clearly says otherwise.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

Public official sources typically describe this route as an EPA-based acceptance system for nurse and care worker candidates.

Common official labels

  • EPA Nurse Candidate
  • EPA Care Worker Candidate
  • Nurse Candidate under EPA
  • Care Worker Candidate under EPA

Long name

A practical long-form label in English is:

Japan EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate Visa

Internal streams

There are two main streams:

  1. Nurse candidate
  2. Care worker candidate

Old vs current naming

The route continues to be discussed under EPA terminology. However, Japan now has other care-labor pathways, so applicants often confuse EPA candidates with newer routes.

Commonly confused categories

Category How it differs
EPA Nurse Candidate Bilateral EPA route; country-limited; exam-focused; institutional placement
EPA Care Worker Candidate Same EPA framework but for care work
Specified Skilled Worker (i) Care Worker Wider labor route; different eligibility mechanics
Technical Intern Training Different legal purpose and structure
Student Main purpose is education, not candidate employment
Medical Services / other professional routes For different professional activity structures

5. Eligibility criteria

Because this is a bilateral-route visa, eligibility is highly specific and can vary by partner country and intake year.

Core eligibility themes

Nationality

Usually limited to nationals of current EPA partner countries participating in the scheme, such as:

  • Indonesia
  • Philippines
  • Vietnam

Warning: Exact participation rules, intake windows, and qualification standards may differ by country and year.

Passport validity

You need a valid passport. Japan’s embassies/consulates may require sufficient remaining validity for visa issuance and travel.

Age

A universal public age rule is not always clearly stated on embassy pages in English. Country-side program agencies may impose age or working-life criteria.

Education and professional background

This is central.

For nurse candidates, you generally need the educational/professional foundation required by the relevant EPA arrangement and sending-country screening process.

For care worker candidates, you generally need the training/background required under the relevant EPA arrangement.

Language

Japanese language ability is usually a major requirement. The required level may vary by:

  • country,
  • stream (nurse vs care worker),
  • year of intake,
  • current bilateral implementation rules.

Sponsorship/acceptance

You usually need:

  • placement through the official EPA process, and
  • acceptance by a Japanese hospital or care facility under the program.

Job offer / institutional placement

This is not a free-market self-arranged visa in the ordinary sense. Placement is typically organized under the EPA matching system.

Points requirement

Not applicable for this visa.

Relationship proof

Only relevant if separately applying for family members.

Admission letter

Not usually a student-style admission letter, but there will normally be program acceptance and institutional documents.

Maintenance funds

The public-facing rules focus more on program sponsorship/employment support than on a large personal-funds threshold. But applicants still need to show required personal and travel documents.

Accommodation proof

May be arranged by employer/facility or program side. Exact proof requirements can vary.

Onward travel

Not typically the core issue for long-stay resident entries, but visa issuance/arrival logistics still matter.

Health

Candidates working in healthcare/care settings may need medical screening under program or employer requirements.

Character / criminal record

Applicants can be refused for criminal, immigration, or security reasons.

Insurance

After arrival, residents are generally subject to Japan’s health insurance system rules as applicable. Pre-arrival travel insurance requirements are not consistently stated as a universal visa rule.

Biometrics

Japan’s visa process does not universally use a standalone biometrics model like some countries, but procedures vary by post and national systems. Landing procedures and resident registration still apply.

Intent requirements

You must genuinely intend to engage in the EPA candidate activities.

Return intent vs dual intent

This is not a classic visitor-visa “prove you will leave” case. It is a structured long-stay route. However, truthful purpose remains essential.

Residency outside Japan

If applying from abroad, local embassy/consulate jurisdiction rules may apply.

Local registration rules

After arrival, mid- to long-term residents in Japan generally must complete local residence registration.

Quota/cap

EPA intakes are typically controlled by program intake capacity and bilateral arrangements rather than a public lottery system.

Embassy-specific rules

Yes. Document presentation, booking method, and local forms may differ by embassy/consulate.

Eligibility matrix

Factor Likely required? Notes
Eligible nationality Yes Usually limited to EPA partner countries
Valid passport Yes Standard
Official EPA selection Yes Core requirement
Japanese accepting institution Yes Core requirement
Relevant qualification/training Yes Stream-specific
Japanese language ability Usually yes Level may vary
Proof of funds Limited/secondary Less central than in self-funded visas
Medical fitness Often yes Especially practical in healthcare settings
Criminal record issues absent Expected Refusal risk if serious issues exist

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Not eligible if

  • you are not from a participating EPA country,
  • you are not selected through the official EPA program,
  • you do not have a matched Japanese accepting institution,
  • your qualifications do not meet the relevant stream rules,
  • you are trying to use the route for ordinary migration unrelated to the EPA scheme.

Common refusal triggers

  • wrong visa category
  • incomplete institutional documents
  • inability to verify EPA selection status
  • mismatched purpose and paperwork
  • passport problems
  • criminal/security concerns
  • prior overstays or immigration violations
  • false statements or unverifiable records
  • inadequate translation of key documents
  • missing health or qualification proof if required
  • applying through the wrong consular post

Common Mistake: Treating this like a normal self-sponsored Japanese work visa. It is not.

7. Benefits of this visa

Key benefits

  • legal entry to Japan for a structured healthcare/care employment pathway
  • paid work within the authorized candidate role
  • institutional support from participating hospitals/facilities
  • formal route toward Japanese professional qualification exams
  • possibility of extending stay within program limits
  • potential long-term career pathway if later qualification and immigration conditions are met

Social and practical benefits

Depending on your residence status and employment conditions, you may receive:

  • salary
  • labor law protections
  • enrollment in applicable social insurance systems
  • structured training
  • on-the-job experience in Japan

Longer-term benefit

If you pass the relevant Japanese national exam and transition to an appropriate long-term work status, this may help build a long-term residence path.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Main restrictions

  • limited to EPA partner-country applicants
  • restricted to designated candidate activities
  • tied closely to the accepting institution/program framework
  • not a free-choice labor visa
  • not a tourist, student, or entrepreneur route
  • likely limited ability to bring family in the same easy manner as some other work statuses
  • renewal is conditional, not automatic
  • must comply with residence and local registration rules

Reporting and registration

Mid- to long-term residents generally must:

  • receive/maintain a residence card if issued at landing,
  • register address with the local municipality,
  • report certain changes under immigration rules.

Re-entry limitations

Travel outside Japan is usually possible for residents, but re-entry compliance matters. Residents should check whether they can use the special re-entry permit system or need a formal re-entry permit depending on travel duration and circumstances.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity vs residence period

Japan separates:

  • the visa validity for entry, and
  • the period of stay granted as a resident after landing.

The visa lets you travel to Japan within the issued validity window. On arrival, immigration grants a status/period of stay.

Stay duration

For EPA candidates, the period of stay is tied to the candidate framework and renewals. Exact timelines can differ by:

  • nurse vs care worker stream,
  • current bilateral implementation,
  • exam timeline,
  • continued employment/placement status.

Entry type

The entry visa may be issued for the specific initial entry required. Once resident, future travel depends on re-entry rules rather than the original sticker alone.

When the clock starts

Your residence period starts from landing permission in Japan, not from when the visa was printed.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to:

  • loss of status,
  • detention/removal risk,
  • difficulty obtaining future Japanese visas/statuses.

Renewal timing

Extensions should be prepared well before expiry. In Japan, residence-status extension applications are typically made before the current period ends.

10. Complete document checklist

Because the EPA route is program-based, exact document packs vary by country, stream, and embassy. Use the official checklist for your embassy plus the EPA program instructions.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official Japanese visa form Starts consular review Old form version, unsigned form
Passport Valid travel document Identity and travel authorization Damaged passport, too little validity
Photograph Consular photo Identification Wrong size/background/age of photo
EPA program acceptance/selection documents Official proof of candidate status Core eligibility proof Missing original or missing official seal/signature
Acceptance letter from Japanese institution Hospital/facility acceptance Shows host arrangement Name mismatch with passport

B. Identity/travel documents

  • Passport bio page
  • Previous passports if requested
  • Civil status records if name differs
  • National ID if locally required by the embassy

C. Financial documents

Often less central than in a self-funded visa, but may still include:

  • salary/placement information
  • support details from employer/program
  • bank evidence if requested by the consulate

D. Employment/business documents

  • employment or candidate placement contract
  • host institution documents
  • institutional registration/licensing proof if requested
  • explanation of duties

E. Education documents

  • nursing diploma or equivalent
  • care-related training certificate
  • transcripts
  • professional license from home country if applicable
  • board/pass certificates if applicable

F. Relationship/family documents

Only if family applications are involved:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • custody documents
  • consent letters for minors

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • address in Japan
  • housing arrangement letter if provided
  • travel itinerary if requested
  • flight reservation only if instructed by the embassy

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • invitation/guarantee or program support documents if required
  • employer support documents
  • receiving organization materials

I. Health/insurance documents

  • medical check records if required by program/employer
  • health declarations if required
  • insurance enrollment may occur after arrival rather than before visa issuance

J. Country-specific extras

Embassies may ask for:

  • local civil registry extracts
  • authenticated qualification records
  • local government forms
  • proof of legal residence in the application country if applying from a third country

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

Not commonly central to this route, but if relevant:

  • both parents’ consent
  • custody proof
  • school records

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

Documents not in Japanese or English may need translation. Some posts may require certified translations. Apostille/notarization is not universally required for every document, but may be requested in some contexts.

Warning: Do not assume ordinary translations are enough. Follow the embassy’s exact instructions.

M. Photo specifications

Use the current Japanese visa photo requirements from the embassy/consulate. Photo size and recency rules must be followed exactly.

11. Financial requirements

Official-rule reality

There is no widely published universal “minimum bank balance” rule for EPA candidates comparable to student or tourist visas. This is because the route is employment/program-based.

What matters financially

  • your placement/employment support,
  • employer/program arrangements,
  • ability to complete relocation steps,
  • any embassy-specific request for funds evidence.

Who can sponsor

Support usually comes through the:

  • Japanese accepting institution,
  • program framework,
  • and possibly sending-country arrangements.

Acceptable proof

If requested:

  • bank statements
  • salary/candidate contract
  • employer support letter
  • guarantee/support documents

Hidden costs

Even if no large maintenance-funds threshold is published, applicants should budget for:

  • passport issuance/renewal
  • civil documents
  • translations
  • local travel to embassy
  • medical tests
  • relocation expenses
  • first-month living costs if not fully covered
  • municipal setup costs in Japan

12. Fees and total cost

Official fee position

Japan’s visa fees can vary by nationality, reciprocity arrangements, and embassy practices. Some categories or nationalities may have reduced/no visa fees under reciprocal arrangements.

Check the latest official fee page of your Japanese embassy or consulate.

Typical cost components

Cost item Official position
Visa application fee Check local Japanese embassy/consulate fee page
Processing fee Usually included in visa fee structure; varies by post
Biometrics fee Not generally a standard separate Japan visa fee in the same way as some countries
Medical exam fee May apply if required by program/employer
Police certificate cost Only if requested
Translation/notary/apostille Variable and applicant-paid
Courier fee If used locally
Insurance cost Mainly post-arrival system compliance or employer arrangement
Legal/consultant fee Optional, not required
Travel/relocation cost Applicant/program/employer dependent
Renewal fee Residence-status extension in Japan may have its own official fee
Dependent fee Separate if dependents apply under another status

Pro Tip: For Japan, consular visa fees and in-country immigration fees are not always on the same page. Check both the embassy/consulate and Immigration Services Agency pages.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct route

Make sure you are entering under the official EPA nurse or care worker candidate intake for your country.

2. Complete sending-country selection

Follow the official selection channel in your home country.

3. Receive matching/acceptance

Obtain placement with a Japanese hospital or care facility through the EPA process.

4. Gather required documents

Prepare passport, visa form, photo, EPA acceptance records, and any host documents.

5. Obtain Certificate of Eligibility if applicable

For many long-stay Japanese statuses, a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) may be used. Whether the EPA route always uses a COE in your case should be confirmed with the sponsoring institution and embassy.

6. Submit visa application

Apply at the Japanese embassy/consulate with jurisdiction over your residence.

7. Attend interview or provide extra documents if requested

Not every applicant is interviewed, but consular officers can request additional evidence.

8. Receive visa

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

9. Travel to Japan

Enter before the visa validity expires.

10. Receive landing permission

At the port of entry, immigration decides final admission.

11. Residence card issuance

For many mid- to long-term residents, a residence card is issued at major airports or later through local procedures.

12. Register address

Go to your municipal office within the required period after finding/confirming your address.

13. Join insurance/pension systems as required

Your employer and municipality will usually guide this.

14. Start candidate work/training

Begin employment and exam preparation in accordance with the EPA framework.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

Japan’s visa processing times vary by embassy/consulate and case complexity. Some embassies state general business-day estimates for ordinary cases, but long-stay or document-heavy categories can take longer.

For EPA cases, timing may be affected by:

  • COE issuance time if used,
  • ministry/institution coordination,
  • intake season,
  • embassy workload,
  • document verification.

What affects timing

  • missing documents
  • holidays in Japan and the home country
  • need for consultation with Tokyo
  • unclear qualifications
  • wrong application post
  • damaged passport or inconsistent civil records

Priority options

Japan generally does not advertise a broad premium-processing system for ordinary visa applicants.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Japan does not always run a standard pre-visa biometrics appointment model like some countries. However, fingerprinting/photo procedures may occur at the border, and some applicants may have post-specific requirements.

Interview

Possible, but not guaranteed.

Typical questions may include:

  • What is your EPA category?
  • Which institution will host you?
  • What are your qualifications?
  • What is your Japanese language level?
  • What will you do in Japan?

Medical

Medical checks may be required by:

  • the sending-country EPA process,
  • the employer,
  • or related healthcare employment screening.

Police checks

Not always a universal public visa requirement, but may be requested depending on the case or employer/program.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Japan does not generally publish a simple public approval-rate dashboard for this exact visa stream in an applicant-friendly format.

Practical refusal patterns

Where refusals happen, they often relate to:

  • not actually being in the EPA pipeline
  • wrong visa category
  • incomplete host documentation
  • qualification mismatch
  • inability to verify records
  • passport/civil document inconsistencies
  • security or immigration-compliance concerns

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Practical legal steps

  • Use the exact checklist from your Japanese embassy/consulate.
  • Make sure your name is written identically across all documents.
  • Include clear proof of official EPA selection.
  • Include a concise employer or institutional support letter if available.
  • Translate all required documents properly.
  • Add a short document index.
  • If there are old visa refusals or immigration issues, disclose them honestly where required.
  • If your academic/professional history is complex, include a one-page explanation.

Pro Tip: The strongest EPA applications are usually the simplest: official program proof, clear qualification documents, clean translations, and no contradictions.

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

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

  • Apply only after your EPA placement paperwork is complete.
  • Keep one “master pack” and one embassy-ready pack.
  • Scan all documents in color and high resolution.
  • Put translations immediately behind the original-language document.
  • Label files clearly, such as 01_Passport, 02_Visa_Form, 03_EPA_Selection_Letter.
  • If your name format differs across documents, attach a name-explanation sheet.
  • If a bank statement shows a large recent deposit and the embassy asks for funds proof, explain the source clearly.
  • Do not book irreversible travel until the embassy says it is appropriate.
  • Contact the embassy only for case-specific issues not answered on its official page.
  • Ask your Japanese host institution to verify whether a COE is required in your case rather than assuming.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it can help if your case has any complexity.

When useful

  • qualification history is not straightforward
  • your name changed
  • you are applying from a third country
  • you need to explain timelines or missing documents

Suggested structure

  1. Your identity and passport details
  2. EPA category: nurse candidate or care worker candidate
  3. Official selection details
  4. Japanese host institution
  5. Brief qualification summary
  6. List of attached evidence
  7. Polite request for visa consideration

What not to say

  • Do not suggest you plan to work outside your authorized role.
  • Do not imply tourism or general migration is your main purpose.
  • Do not include unsupported claims.

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor/support

In practice, support usually comes from:

  • the Japanese accepting hospital/facility,
  • the EPA administrative framework,
  • and possibly a guarantor/supporting organization if required.

Useful sponsor documents

  • acceptance letter
  • employment/candidate contract
  • institutional outline
  • registration/licensing documents if requested
  • contact person details

Sponsor mistakes

  • wrong applicant name
  • wrong passport number
  • vague job description
  • unsigned letters
  • mismatch between host letter and visa form

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

This is one of the areas where public guidance can be less clear for EPA candidates than for standard work statuses.

In general, family accompaniment depends on:

  • the exact status of residence granted,
  • whether it qualifies as a status that supports Dependent applications,
  • income and housing sufficiency,
  • and immigration practice at the time.

Practical reality

Many EPA candidates come first alone and consider family options later, especially after stabilizing residence, work, and housing.

If family applies

They may need:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • proof of support ability
  • housing proof
  • copies of your residence card/passport
  • tax/income records if already in Japan

Warning: Do not assume family entry is automatic under this route.

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

Work rights

Yes, work is allowed, but only:

  • within the authorized EPA candidate role,
  • for the designated accepting institution or approved framework,
  • under applicable labor and immigration rules.

Self-employment

Not permitted as the basis of this visa.

Remote work

Unrelated remote work for foreign clients is not clearly authorized by this status and may create status/tax issues.

Side income

Do not assume it is allowed. Get official immigration guidance before taking side work.

Study rights

Limited to study/training compatible with your status, especially Japanese language and exam preparation.

Business activity

Not a business setup visa.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

A visa does not guarantee entry. Final admission is made by Japanese immigration at the border.

Carry these on arrival

  • passport with visa
  • host institution contact details
  • copy of COE if applicable
  • acceptance/employment documents
  • Japan address details
  • return or onward details if requested, though long-stay residents usually focus on resident-entry documentation

Re-entry after travel

Once resident in Japan, check whether you qualify for:

  • special re-entry permission, or
  • a regular re-entry permit.

Do not leave Japan casually near your status expiry without checking the consequences.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Yes, usually within the EPA framework if you continue to meet requirements.

In-country renewal

Extensions are typically handled in Japan with the Immigration Services Agency before current stay expiry.

Switching to another visa

Possible in some circumstances, but not automatic. This depends on:

  • whether you pass the relevant national exam,
  • whether you later qualify for another status,
  • and whether immigration approves a change of status.

Changing employer

Likely restricted. Because this route is closely tied to a designated accepting institution, changing employers may require formal procedures and may not be freely permitted.

Restoration/implied status

Japan does not use the same “implied status” terminology as some countries. You must follow Japanese extension/change-of-status procedures carefully and file on time.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does this visa itself lead directly to PR?

No direct automatic route.

Can it help indirectly?

Yes.

If you remain in Japan lawfully, transition to an appropriate longer-term status, work continuously, pay taxes/social insurance, and later meet PR or naturalization requirements, time in Japan may support a long-term path.

PR basics in Japan

Permanent residence generally requires a strong record of:

  • lawful stay,
  • stable livelihood,
  • tax compliance,
  • pension/social insurance compliance,
  • good conduct,
  • and usually a significant continuous residence period unless a shorter-track exception applies.

Citizenship

Naturalization is separate and requires meeting Japan’s nationality law conditions.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

EPA candidates in Japan should expect normal resident compliance duties.

Key obligations

  • keep status of residence valid
  • work only within authorized scope
  • register your address
  • notify relevant changes as required
  • join health insurance/pension systems if applicable
  • pay taxes as required
  • maintain lawful employment records

Tax residence

If you live and work in Japan, you may become taxable in Japan under domestic tax rules.

Social security

If employed, you may be covered by Japanese social insurance systems depending on employment structure.

Pro Tip: Keep copies of salary slips, residence card records, tax certificates, and pension/insurance enrollment papers. They matter later for renewals and long-term residence applications.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

This visa is inherently nationality-specific because it depends on Japan’s EPA arrangements.

Main country limitation

Historically and operationally, the route is associated with:

  • Indonesia
  • Philippines
  • Vietnam

Why this matters

Each partner country may have:

  • different sending agencies,
  • different qualification screening,
  • different language benchmarks,
  • different document channels.

Visa-waiver issue

Normal Japanese visa waivers for tourists do not replace the need for the correct long-stay EPA visa/status process.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Generally not typical for this route; adult professional candidates are the normal applicants.

Divorced/separated parents

Relevant only if a child/dependent application is involved.

Adopted children

Would require formal legal proof if family immigration is attempted.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Japan’s dependent/family recognition can be more restrictive than some countries, especially if relying on categories that require formal legal marriage recognized for immigration purposes. Case handling may vary and should be checked directly with immigration or the embassy.

Stateless persons/refugees

Not impossible in theory, but this route is nationality-linked and may be difficult if nationality/passport requirements cannot be satisfied.

Dual nationals

Use the passport and nationality framework accepted for the EPA process. Check carefully if one nationality is the EPA-qualifying nationality.

Prior refusals

Disclose honestly where required and explain what changed.

Overstays / deportation

Serious red flags. Specialist legal help may be necessary.

Expired passport but valid visa

You generally need a valid passport to travel. Check with the issuing embassy before any transfer/reissue issue.

Applying from a third country

Possible only if the Japanese embassy/consulate there accepts applicants who are legal residents in that jurisdiction.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“Anyone can apply for the EPA care worker visa.” False. It is limited to EPA partner-country candidates in the official scheme.
“It is the same as Specified Skilled Worker.” False. Different legal route and eligibility system.
“I can use it to job hunt in Japan.” False. You need official EPA placement.
“I can freely change employers.” Usually not. The route is institution-linked.
“Family can always join immediately.” Not guaranteed. Depends on status rules and practical eligibility.
“Once I enter, I can do any side job.” False unless separately authorized.
“Passing no exam is fine because the visa is permanent.” False. This is a candidate route, not permanent residence.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

A visa refusal usually means the embassy/consulate did not approve issuance based on the documents and eligibility presented.

Appeal/review

Japan does not always provide a broad formal appeal system for consular visa refusals in the same way some countries do. Reapplication may be the practical route after fixing the issue.

Reapplication

You should reapply only after:

  • identifying the true reason for refusal,
  • correcting missing/inconsistent documents,
  • confirming continued EPA eligibility.

Refunds

Visa fees are generally not refunded after processing begins, but check the local mission’s rules.

When to get legal help

Consider legal advice if the refusal involves:

  • misrepresentation allegations,
  • criminal/security grounds,
  • prior overstay/deportation,
  • complex status-change issues inside Japan.

31. Arrival in Japan: what happens next?

At the airport

You will go through:

  • immigration inspection,
  • landing permission decision,
  • possible residence card issuance at major airports,
  • customs.

First days after arrival

Within the first days

  • move into approved housing
  • confirm employer/facility onboarding
  • keep your passport and residence card safe

Within the municipal deadline

Mid- to long-term residents generally must register their address at the municipal office.

Next steps

  • enroll in health insurance/pension as required
  • open bank account if needed
  • get phone/SIM
  • begin orientation and work/training

First 90 days practical focus

  • complete resident registration
  • settle payroll
  • understand tax/social insurance deductions
  • maintain attendance and workplace compliance
  • begin exam preparation seriously

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: Nurse candidate from an EPA partner country

  • Month 1–3: national screening and language/qualification review
  • Month 4–6: matching with Japanese institution
  • Month 7: documents prepared
  • Month 8: visa application
  • Month 8–9: visa decision
  • Month 9: travel to Japan and register

Scenario 2: Care worker candidate

  • Month 1–2: sending-country selection
  • Month 3–5: host facility placement
  • Month 6: visa filing
  • Month 6–7: approval
  • Month 7: arrival and training start

Scenario 3: Candidate later considering family

  • Year 1: arrive alone and stabilize work/housing
  • Year 1–2: review whether status and income support dependent applications
  • Later: separate family application if legally possible

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended order

  1. Document index
  2. Visa application form
  3. Passport copy
  4. Photo
  5. EPA selection/acceptance proof
  6. Host institution letter
  7. Contract/placement documents
  8. Qualification documents
  9. Translations
  10. Extra explanation letter if needed

File naming convention

  • 01_Visa_Application_Form.pdf
  • 02_Passport_Bio_Page.pdf
  • 03_Photo.jpg
  • 04_EPA_Selection_Letter.pdf
  • 05_Host_Acceptance_Letter.pdf
  • 06_Qualifications.pdf

Scan tips

  • color scans
  • full page visible
  • no cut-off corners
  • legible stamps/seals
  • one PDF per section unless the embassy says otherwise

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm you are in the official EPA program
  • Confirm correct stream: nurse or care worker
  • Check embassy jurisdiction
  • Check current embassy checklist
  • Check passport validity
  • Prepare translations
  • Verify name consistency
  • Confirm host documents are signed and current

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Visa form
  • Photo
  • EPA documents
  • Host/employer documents
  • Supporting qualifications
  • Fee method accepted by the embassy
  • Appointment confirmation if required

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment slip
  • Original supporting documents
  • Clear explanation of your role and host institution

Arrival checklist

  • Passport with visa
  • COE if applicable
  • Host contact details
  • Japan address
  • Employment/acceptance letter
  • Residence card handling plan

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Residence card
  • Passport
  • Current employment/candidate proof
  • Tax and insurance records if required
  • Host institution support documents
  • Updated application form

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Identify refusal reason
  • Correct missing documents
  • Update translations
  • Reconfirm eligibility
  • Get clearer host support letter
  • Reapply only when changed facts are real

35. FAQs

1. Is this a normal Japanese work visa?

No. It is a special EPA-based candidate route.

2. Can any foreign nurse apply?

No. Usually only applicants from participating EPA countries in the official scheme.

3. Which countries are commonly included?

Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam are the best-known EPA partner countries for this route.

4. Can I apply directly to a Japanese hospital myself?

Usually the EPA route uses an official selection and matching process rather than ordinary direct hiring alone.

5. Is this the same as the Specified Skilled Worker care route?

No.

6. Do I need Japanese language ability?

Usually yes, but exact level varies by stream and country arrangements.

7. Do I need to pass the Japanese national exam before entering?

Not necessarily. That is why you enter as a candidate.

8. Can I work immediately after arrival?

You may work within the authorized candidate program and host institution framework.

9. Can I change employers freely?

Usually no.

10. Can I bring my spouse?

Maybe, but not automatically. It depends on your status, finances, housing, and immigration rules in force.

11. Can my spouse work in Japan if they join me?

Only if they receive a suitable status and any required work permission.

12. Can children attend school in Japan?

If they obtain the correct status and reside in Japan lawfully, schooling may be possible.

13. Is there a fixed bank balance requirement?

No widely published universal amount is publicly stated for this route.

14. Do I need a Certificate of Eligibility?

Often long-stay Japanese categories do, but confirm specifically for your EPA case with the host institution and embassy.

15. How long does processing take?

It varies by embassy, host paperwork, and whether consultation with Japan is needed.

16. Is there premium processing?

Generally no public premium option.

17. Can I do side jobs?

Do not assume so. Work is normally limited to the authorized activity.

18. Can I study Japanese in Japan on this visa?

Yes, if it is part of or compatible with your candidate training, but this is not a general study visa.

19. What happens if I fail the national exam?

Your future stay options may become limited. Exact consequences depend on the stream and current rules.

20. Can this visa lead to permanent residence?

Not directly, but it may help indirectly if you later qualify under another stable long-term path.

21. Can I switch to another status in Japan?

Sometimes, if you become eligible and immigration approves.

22. What if my name on my diploma differs from my passport?

Provide legal proof of the name change and consistent translations.

23. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?

Usually no. Most embassies require you to be a resident in their jurisdiction.

24. What if I had a past visa refusal from another country?

Disclose it if required and explain honestly. It does not automatically bar approval.

25. Can I use a tourist visa first and switch later?

Do not plan on this. Use the correct EPA route from the start unless immigration clearly allows another procedure.

26. Will the visa guarantee entry?

No. Final admission is always decided at the border.

27. Do I need medical insurance before arrival?

Check your embassy and employer instructions. Post-arrival enrollment in Japanese systems is often more important.

28. Can unmarried partners be dependents?

That is uncertain and often difficult under Japanese immigration rules unless a recognized category applies.

29. What if my passport expires soon?

Renew it before applying if possible.

30. Is this route still active?

The EPA framework exists, but intake conditions and implementation can change. Verify the latest official program status.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to this visa and the surrounding legal framework. Because this route sits across several ministries and embassy processes, readers should verify both immigration rules and EPA program guidance.

Primary official sources

  • Immigration Services Agency of Japan:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/

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

  • Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan, EPA nurse/care worker information:
    https://www.mhlw.go.jp/

  • Japan International Corporation of Welfare Services (JICWELS), EPA program administration:
    https://jicwels.or.jp/

  • e-Gov Japan law portal:
    https://elaws.e-gov.go.jp/

Additional official pages to check

  • Immigration procedures, status of residence, and residence card information:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/index.html

  • MOFA overseas establishments directory to find your embassy/consulate:
    https://www.mofa.go.jp/about/emb_cons/over/index.html

  • Landing permission / residence management information:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/publications/materials/newimmiact_4_index.html

  • MHLW page cluster for EPA nurse/care worker candidate acceptance policies:
    https://www.mhlw.go.jp/stf/seisakunitsuite/bunya/0000047068.html

  • Immigration Services Agency residence card guidance:
    https://www.moj.go.jp/isa/applications/procedures/nyuukokukanri10_00009.html

Note: Exact fee pages and embassy submission pages are post-specific. Use the embassy/consulate linked through MOFA’s official overseas establishments directory.

37. Final verdict

The Japan EPA Nurse / Care Worker Candidate Visa is best for officially selected nurse and care worker candidates from eligible EPA partner countries who want a structured path into Japan’s healthcare or care sector.

Biggest benefits

  • lawful entry under a recognized bilateral framework
  • paid work and training
  • institutional support
  • pathway toward Japanese professional qualification

Biggest risks

  • limited nationality eligibility
  • strict program linkage
  • not a free-market work visa
  • possible difficulty with family accompaniment
  • long-term future depends heavily on qualification success and status compliance

Top preparation advice

  • confirm you are in the official EPA pipeline,
  • use the exact embassy checklist,
  • keep qualifications and translations clean,
  • verify whether a COE is required,
  • do not confuse this route with SSW or ordinary work visas.

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if you:

  • are not from an EPA country,
  • want general care-sector employment rather than the EPA framework,
  • want to study in Japan,
  • want to start a business,
  • or want broad labor mobility across employers.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Whether your nationality is currently included in the active EPA intake for this stream
  • Current year intake quotas or suspension status
  • Whether your specific nurse/care worker stream requires a Certificate of Eligibility
  • Exact Japanese language threshold for your country and intake year
  • Embassy-specific document list, photo rules, and appointment system
  • Whether your local Japanese embassy accepts applications from non-citizen residents
  • Current visa fees and payment method at your embassy/consulate
  • Whether medical exams or police certificates are required in your case
  • Whether dependents can realistically apply based on your exact status and income
  • Current extension limits and what happens if the national exam is not passed
  • Whether your host institution must submit additional documents directly in Japan
  • Current post-arrival residence card issuance procedure at your arrival airport
  • Any recent MHLW or Immigration Services Agency updates affecting EPA candidates

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