VisaSHOGUN FAQ — Can I Renew My Visa After Changing Jobs in Japan?
Can I Renew My Visa After Changing Jobs in Japan?
This guide is for foreign residents in Japan on a work visa (such as Engineer/Specialist in Humanities or Highly Skilled Professional) who have changed employers — or are planning to — and want to know how this affects their next visa renewal.
Yes — in most cases. Changing employers does not automatically affect your ability to renew your visa, as long as: (1) your new job's duties still fall within the activity category permitted by your current status of residence, and (2) you've filed the required 14-day notification to the Immigration Services Agency for both leaving your old employer and joining the new one. Your renewal application will simply include your new employer's documents instead of your old one's.
- A job change itself does not invalidate your current visa or block renewal
- What matters is whether your new job's duties match your visa category (e.g., Engineer/Specialist in Humanities)
- The 14-day notification to ISA (leaving old employer + joining new employer) is mandatory and separate from renewal
- At your next renewal, you'll submit documents from your new employer — and a brand-new employer means slightly more scrutiny
- If your new role is in a completely different field, you may need a Change of Status rather than a simple renewal
Why Job Changes and Renewals Are Often Confused
People sometimes assume that switching employers means their visa is "tied" to the old company and therefore becomes invalid. That's not how Japan's work visa system functions for most status categories (Engineer/Specialist in Humanities, Highly Skilled Professional, etc.). Your visa is tied to a category of permitted activity, not to a specific employer. As long as your new job fits that category, your status remains valid, and renewal proceeds with your new employer's documents.
What Actually Happens at Renewal After a Job Change
| At renewal time | Same job category | Different job category |
|---|---|---|
| Application type | Standard renewal (更新) | Change of Status (変更) — often needed before starting the new role, not just at renewal |
| Documents required | New employer's company info, employment contract, salary certificate | Same, plus justification that the new role fits a valid status category |
| Scrutiny level | Slightly higher — new employer is unfamiliar to ISA | Significantly higher — category match is the central question |
| Timing | Apply within the normal renewal window (up to 3 months before expiry) | Ideally resolved before starting the new role, not at renewal |
The 14-Day Notification — Separate From Renewal, But Just as Important
Regardless of whether your category changes, Japanese law requires you to notify ISA within 14 days of leaving an employer and again within 14 days of joining a new one. This is independent of your renewal timeline.
The 14-day notification is a separate statutory obligation under the Immigration Control Act — it exists regardless of how far away your renewal is, and missing it is a compliance issue in its own right.
File it as soon as possible after the change — even if your renewal is months away. Having it on record from the start avoids questions or delays when you eventually do apply for renewal with your new employer's documents.
We have a complete walkthrough of the 14-day notification process, scenario-by-scenario breakdowns (same category, different category, freelance, etc.), and a post-job-change compliance checklist in our guide: Changing Jobs in Japan: Do You Need to Update or Renew Your Visa?
📋 Common Scenarios
This is the most common and simplest case. File the 14-day notifications, make sure your new employment contract clearly describes your duties in terms that match your status category, and renew as normal when your expiry approaches — using your new employer's documents.
Both roles likely fall under "Specialist in Humanities," so renewal should proceed normally. Make sure your job title and description in the new contract clearly reflect duties that fit the humanities category — vague titles can prompt extra questions at renewal.
This is the key challenge: finding a new employer whose job duties clearly fit your existing status category, ideally one experienced in sponsoring and supporting foreign employees.
🚫 Common Mistakes
These are separate obligations. A missing notification is a compliance gap that surfaces at renewal regardless of how much time has passed.
ISA looks at specific duties, not general job level. A move from, say, IT engineering to restaurant management is a category change even though both might be considered "professional" roles.
If your new role doesn't match your current category, you generally need to resolve the Change of Status before starting — not at your next renewal.
Related Questions
Free, takes 30 seconds.
- Immigration Services Agency — Application for Extension of Period of Stay (在留期間更新許可申請)
- Immigration Services Agency — Guidelines for Permission for Change of Status / Extension of Period of Stay
- Immigration Services Agency — Status of Residence Reference Index
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan — Top Page
VisaSHOGUN publishes practical immigration guides for foreign residents in Japan, based on official immigration guidance, policy updates, and real-world user questions.
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