VisaSHOGUN FAQ โ Does Divorce Affect My Permanent Residence (PR) in Japan?
Does Divorce Affect My Permanent Residence (PR) in Japan?
This guide is for foreign residents in Japan who are going through, or have recently gone through, a divorce โ whether you already hold permanent residence or are currently on a Spouse visa (ๆฅๆฌไบบใฎ้ ๅถ่ ็ญ).
It depends entirely on whether you already hold PR or are currently on a Spouse visa. If you already have PR (ๆฐธไฝ่ ), divorce does not affect your PR status โ PR is an independent status, not tied to your marital situation. However, if you're on a Spouse visa (ๆฅๆฌไบบใฎ้ ๅถ่ ็ญ) and divorce, your spouse visa loses its basis going forward, and you'll need to either change to a different status (often based on work history) or, if eligible, proceed with a PR application through a different route.
- PR holders: divorce has no direct effect on your PR status โ it's not tied to marriage
- Spouse visa holders: divorce means your visa's basis no longer exists; you generally need to change status, typically to a work visa if you're employed and qualify
- You're required to notify ISA of changes in marital status within 14 days, similar to the job-change notification requirement
- If you were planning to apply for PR based on years of marriage + Spouse visa, divorce before applying generally removes that specific route โ but other routes (e.g., 10-year residence with stable work history) may still be available
- ISA generally allows some time to sort out a status change after divorce, but this is not unlimited โ act promptly
Why PR and Spouse Visa Are Often Confused on This Point
One of the eligibility routes to PR involves being married to a Japanese national or PR holder for a certain number of years while holding a Spouse visa. Because of this, people sometimes think PR itself is "based on" the marriage โ and that divorce would unravel it. But once PR is granted, it becomes its own independent status. The marriage was relevant to how you qualified, but it is not an ongoing condition of keeping PR.
| Your situation | Effect of divorce |
|---|---|
| You already hold PR (ๆฐธไฝ่ ) | No direct effect on PR status. PR is independent of marital status. |
| You're on a Spouse visa, haven't applied for PR yet | Spouse visa basis ends. Must change status โ often to a work visa if employed and qualified, or another applicable category. |
| You're mid-way through a PR application based on Spouse visa + years of marriage | This specific basis for PR likely no longer applies. Other PR routes (e.g., long-term residence + stable employment) may be possible depending on your overall history. |
The 14-Day Notification Requirement Applies Here Too
Just as with job changes, foreign residents are required to notify ISA of certain changes in personal circumstances โ including divorce โ within 14 days.
A Spouse visa's basis ends with the marriage. The 14-day notification of your change in marital status is a separate, mandatory obligation under the Immigration Control Act, independent of any status change application.
Don't wait for your current visa to expire before acting. File the 14-day notification promptly, and begin the status change process as soon as your situation stabilizes โ starting early preserves more options and gives you more time to gather documents.
If You're on a Spouse Visa and Getting Divorced โ What Are Your Options?
- Change to a work visa โ if you're employed in a role matching an eligible category (e.g., Engineer/Specialist in Humanities), this is often the most straightforward path. The process is similar in spirit to the category-matching considerations described in our job change guide.
- Apply for PR through a different route โ if you've been in Japan long enough and have a strong overall record (work history, tax/pension compliance), PR via long-term residence may be possible independent of your marital history. This is a complex, case-by-case assessment.
- Other status categories โ depending on your situation (e.g., you have Japanese national children you're caring for), other status categories may apply. This is highly individual and worth discussing with a specialist.
๐ Common Scenarios
Your PR status itself is not affected. You should still file the 14-day notification of your change in marital status with ISA, as this is a general reporting obligation for all foreign residents, but it does not put your PR status at risk.
Begin the process of changing your status to a work visa category that matches your current job as soon as possible. File the 14-day notification. Consult a licensed scrivener about timing โ you'll generally want to resolve this well before your current visa's expiry, and ideally sooner given the change in your underlying situation.
That specific eligibility route is no longer applicable. However, depending on your total years of residence, work history, and overall compliance record, you may still be eligible for PR through the general long-term residence route (commonly cited as 10 years of residence with a substantial period on a work-eligible status, though exact criteria depend on your full situation). Consult a scrivener to assess your specific timeline.
๐ซ Common Mistakes
A Spouse visa's basis ends with the marriage. Continuing to live in Japan on an increasingly outdated status without addressing the change can create compliance issues at your next renewal โ or sooner.
This is a separate, mandatory obligation regardless of what status change you ultimately pursue.
Divorce removes one specific route to PR (marriage-based), but doesn't necessarily close off PR altogether if you have a strong independent residence and work history. Don't assume the door is closed without checking.
Related Questions
Free initial question, response within 24 hours.
- Immigration Services Agency โ Status: Spouse or Child of Japanese National (ๆฅๆฌไบบใฎ้ ๅถ่ ็ญ)
- Immigration Services Agency โ Guidelines for Permission for Change of Status / Extension of Period of Stay
- Immigration Services Agency โ Status of Residence Reference Index
- Immigration Services Agency of Japan โ Top Page
VisaSHOGUN publishes practical immigration guides for foreign residents in Japan, based on official immigration guidance, policy updates, and real-world user questions.
Not sure about your specific situation?
Every case is different. A licensed expert will review your situation โ free, in English, within 24 hours.