VisaSHOGUN FAQ — Can Foreigners Get a Credit Card in Japan?

❓ FAQ 💳 Credit Cards 🆕 New Arrivals
Quick Answer

Can Foreigners Get a Credit Card in Japan?

Who is this guide for?

This guide is for foreign residents in Japan considering applying for their first Japanese credit card — especially newer arrivals wondering whether their visa status or lack of Japanese credit history will be a problem.

Short Answer

Yes, foreigners can get Japanese credit cards — but approval can be harder for those with a short visa remaining period, no Japanese credit history, or who applied very soon after arrival. Approval odds improve significantly with: a longer visa remaining period (roughly 1+ year), permanent residence or a status-based category, a stable Japanese employment history, and an existing Japanese bank account. Some cards are known to be more accessible for newer residents than others.

⚡ Key Takeaways
  • There's no legal barrier to foreign nationals holding Japanese credit cards
  • Issuers use internal credit scoring (信用情報) factoring in visa type, remaining period, employment, and residence history
  • No Japanese credit history makes it harder for issuers to assess risk — this is the main reason new arrivals get declined, not nationality itself
  • Having a Japanese bank account first (see our bank account FAQ) generally helps
  • PR, Long-Term Resident, and Spouse of Japanese National categories tend to see smoother approval than time-limited work visas

Why Approval Can Be Harder for New Arrivals

What Helps Your Approval Odds

  • Visa remaining period: A longer remaining period on your residence card signals stability to issuers
  • Status category: PR, Long-Term Resident, and Spouse of Japanese National categories are generally viewed as more stable than time-limited work visas
  • Japanese bank account: Most card applications link to a Japanese bank account for payments — having one set up first is close to a prerequisite
  • Employment history in Japan: Even a few months of steady employment helps, more so than being newly arrived and between jobs
  • Residence history: Simply having lived at a registered address for a while (utility bills, etc.) builds a small track record

Building Credit as a New Arrival

If you've just arrived and get declined for your first application, that's common and not necessarily reflective of anything beyond "no track record yet." A typical approach: open a Japanese bank account immediately, use a debit card or prepaid card for daily spending for a few months, keep your address and phone contract in your own name, and then apply for a card after 6-12 months of residence. Our full credit card guide covers specific cards and comparisons in more detail.

📋 Common Scenarios

Scenario 1 — I arrived 1 month ago on a work visa with 3 years remaining

Open a bank account first if you haven't already. You may still face some difficulty applying immediately due to lack of Japanese credit history specifically — even with a long visa remaining period, "no history" is different from "good history." Consider waiting a few months and building a small track record, or starting with a card known to be more accessible to new residents.

Scenario 2 — I have Permanent Residence and have lived in Japan for years

Your approval process is generally similar to that of a Japanese national — PR removes most of the visa-related uncertainty issuers might otherwise factor in. Focus on the same general factors as anyone else (income, existing debt, etc.).

Scenario 3 — I was declined for one card — should I apply for several others right away?

Avoid rapid-fire applications to multiple issuers after a decline. Frequent applications in a short period can itself be a negative signal in your credit record. Wait, build more of a track record (bank account activity, residence history), and then try again.

🚫 Common Mistakes

Applying before having a Japanese bank account

Most applications expect a linked Japanese bank account for payments — set this up first.

Applying to many cards immediately after a decline

This can compound the problem. Space out applications and build a track record in between.

Assuming a decline is about nationality

Most declines for new arrivals are about lack of credit history, not nationality or visa status per se — though longer remaining visa periods and stable status categories do help.

Related Questions

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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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