VisaSHOGUN FAQ โ€” How Long Does It Take to Get Permanent Residence (PR) in Japan?

โ“ FAQ ๐Ÿ† Permanent Residence โฑ๏ธ Timeline
Quick Answer

How Long Does It Take to Get Permanent Residence (PR) in Japan?

Who is this guide for?

This guide is for foreign residents in Japan trying to understand the timeline to PR โ€” both how long you need to live in Japan before you're eligible to apply, and how long the application itself typically takes once submitted.

Short Answer

There are two separate clocks. First, eligibility: the general guideline is 10 years of continuous residence in Japan, including at least 5 years on a work-eligible status โ€” though spouses of Japanese nationals/PR holders and Highly Skilled Professionals have significantly shorter routes (in some HSP cases, as little as 1 year). Second, processing time after you apply: ISA does not publish a guaranteed timeframe, and it varies by case complexity and region โ€” commonly cited as several months to around a year, sometimes longer for complex cases. Don't make irreversible life decisions (like resigning from a job) based on an assumed approval date.

โšก Key Takeaways
  • General guideline: 10 years of continuous residence, including 5+ years on a work-eligible status
  • Spouse of Japanese national/PR holder: a shorter route exists based on years of marriage and residence (case-by-case, generally much less than 10 years)
  • Highly Skilled Professional (80+ points): can apply after just 1 year of continuous residence at that point level โ€” see our HSP fast-track FAQ
  • Processing time after application is separate from eligibility and is not guaranteed โ€” plan with buffer
  • Your pension, tax, and health insurance history (see our pension FAQ) is reviewed regardless of which route applies to you

Eligibility Timeline โ€” The "10-Year Rule" and Its Exceptions

Your situation General eligibility timeline
Standard work visa (Engineer/Humanities, etc.) 10 years of continuous residence, including at least 5 years on a work-eligible status
Spouse of Japanese national or PR holder Significantly shorter, based on years of marriage and residence โ€” assessed case-by-case
Highly Skilled Professional, 80+ points, maintained 1+ year As little as 1 year of continuous residence at that point level
Long-term resident categories (e.g., certain Designated Activities, Long-Term Resident) Varies โ€” assessed case-by-case against the general guidelines

Processing Time After You Apply

What Affects How Long Your Application Takes?

  • Completeness of documents on first submission โ€” missing items mean follow-up requests, which extend the timeline
  • Pension/tax/insurance history โ€” gaps that require explanation or follow-up (see our pension FAQ) can extend review
  • Complexity of your residence history โ€” multiple employers, status changes, periods abroad, etc.
  • Regional office workload โ€” varies by which immigration bureau handles your case

๐Ÿ“‹ Common Scenarios

Scenario 1 โ€” I'm on a standard work visa and have been in Japan 9 years, all on work-eligible status

You're approaching the general 10-year guideline. Use this final year to do a pension/tax self-check (see our pension FAQ) so you're ready to apply as soon as you're eligible, without delays from fixable issues.

Scenario 2 โ€” I'm a Highly Skilled Professional with 80+ points and just hit 1 year

You may already be eligible to apply under the fast-track route โ€” see our dedicated HSP fast-track FAQ for the specific conditions and a key caveat about spouses/children.

Scenario 3 โ€” I submitted my PR application 8 months ago and haven't heard back

This falls within commonly reported ranges, though it can feel long. Continue normal life on your current status โ€” it remains valid throughout. If you haven't heard anything after a year or more, a scrivener can advise on whether following up with the bureau is appropriate for your case.

๐Ÿšซ Common Mistakes

Assuming "10 years in Japan" alone makes you eligible

The guideline also requires at least 5 years on a work-eligible status โ€” time spent on, say, a student visa generally doesn't count toward that portion in the same way.

Making irreversible plans around an assumed approval date

Processing time isn't guaranteed. Keep working, keep your current status valid (don't let your residence card expire โ€” see our grace period FAQ), and treat PR approval as a "when it happens" event, not a fixed date on a calendar.

Not checking pension/tax history well before applying

This is one of the most common causes of delays. Check early โ€” see our pension FAQ for how.

Related Questions

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Free initial question, response within 24 hours.
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About VisaSHOGUN

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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