VisaSHOGUN FAQ — What Happens If Your Visa Expires in Japan?
What Happens If Your Visa Expires in Japan?
This guide is for foreign residents in Japan whose period of stay has already expired without a renewal, extension, or change of status application filed beforehand — including anyone unsure whether the grace period covers their situation.
If your visa expired and you did not apply for a renewal, extension, or change of status before the expiry date, you are legally an overstayer (不法残留) from the day after expiry. This is a violation of the Immigration Control Act with serious consequences — but how serious depends heavily on how long you've overstayed and what you do next. Acting quickly and proactively makes a real difference.
- Overstaying is a criminal offense under Japanese immigration law, not just an administrative issue
- Consequences scale with time: a few days is treated very differently from months or years
- Voluntarily reporting to ISA before being discovered is generally treated far more favorably than being caught
- A re-entry ban (typically 1–10 years, sometimes indefinite) is the most common long-term consequence
- Short, first-time overstayers who turn themselves in may qualify for the special departure procedure (出国命令制度), which carries a shorter ban
- Get professional advice before contacting immigration — how you approach this matters
What Does "Overstay" (不法残留) Actually Mean?
Once your period of stay ends — and you haven't filed a renewal/extension application before that date, and you're not covered by the grace period described in our grace period guide — you no longer have a valid status of residence. From that point, every day you remain in Japan is technically a violation of Article 70 of the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act.
This is true even if the overstay was unintentional — a missed deadline, a misunderstanding about your expiry date, or an administrative delay you weren't aware of. Intent matters for how your case is handled, but it does not change your legal status.
Immediate Practical Consequences
- You cannot legally work — your status of residence is no longer valid, so any work (even for your existing employer) is unauthorized
- Banking and insurance complications — banks and health insurance providers periodically check residence status, and an expired status can trigger account freezes or coverage issues
- Risk of detention — if you have any contact with police or immigration (even unrelated, like a traffic stop or routine ID check), your status will be checked
- Your employer is also affected — knowingly employing someone without valid status can expose employers to penalties too
How Does the Re-Entry Ban Work?
If you're found to be overstaying — whether you're caught or you report yourself — the typical outcome is deportation (退去強制) or, for shorter/first-time cases, the special departure procedure. Both result in you leaving Japan, but with very different consequences for the future:
Used for longer overstays, repeat cases, or when you're discovered by authorities rather than self-reporting. Typically results in a re-entry ban of 5 years, sometimes 10 years for repeat violations, and in severe cases an indefinite ban.
Available to people who: (1) have overstayed but have no other immigration violations, (2) voluntarily report to immigration before being discovered, and (3) depart Japan promptly afterward. This generally results in a shorter re-entry ban of around 1 year. Eligibility conditions are specific — confirm your situation with a licensed scrivener before acting.
What Should You Do Right Now?
The legal position and the practical advice point in slightly different directions here — both matter:
Once you're overstaying, you're in violation of the Immigration Control Act. Resolving this requires either the special departure procedure (for eligible short, first-time cases) or formal deportation proceedings — there's no way to simply "become legal again" without going through one of these processes.
Don't approach ISA on your own first. Consult a licensed administrative scrivener (行政書士) or immigration lawyer before any contact with immigration — how and when you self-report can affect which procedures you're eligible for. Get your specific situation assessed first.
- Don't ignore it and don't panic-leave the country — leaving without going through the proper procedure can result in a longer ban than necessary, since you'd be treated as having departed while in violation without addressing it
- Consult a licensed administrative scrivener (行政書士) or immigration lawyer first — before any contact with ISA, get a professional assessment of your specific situation. How long you've overstayed, why, and your overall record all affect what options are realistically available
- Gather your documents — passport, residence card (even expired), any evidence of why the renewal was missed (illness, employer issues, etc.) — these can matter for how your case is assessed
- Consider the special departure procedure if eligible — your advisor can help confirm whether self-reporting now is the right move for your situation
📋 Common Scenarios
This is the best-case version of this situation. Contact a licensed scrivener immediately — same day if possible. A very short, clearly unintentional overstay with a prompt, voluntary response gives you the most options, including potentially resolving it without leaving Japan at all in some cases (this depends heavily on individual circumstances and is not guaranteed).
Get professional advice as soon as possible — the situation does not improve by waiting, and continuing to overstay adds to the duration that will be considered if/when your case is reviewed. A scrivener can help you understand the special departure procedure's eligibility for your specific timeline and advise on next steps.
You may be subject to a re-entry ban that wasn't formally communicated at the time of departure. If you're planning to return to Japan (for work, family, or any other reason), consult a scrivener or the Japanese embassy/consulate in your country before booking travel or applying for a new visa — attempting to re-enter without understanding your ban status can result in denial of boarding or refusal of entry.
🚫 Common Mistakes
Japan's immigration and residency systems are interconnected (banks, insurance, employers, city hall). The longer an overstay continues, the more it tends to surface — and the worse the eventual outcome tends to be.
Simply boarding a flight home doesn't erase the violation. It can result in being flagged for a re-entry ban you weren't expecting, discovered only when you try to come back.
How and when you approach ISA matters for which procedures you're eligible for. Get advice on your specific case first — this is one of the few areas where a short consultation can meaningfully change your outcome.
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This page is for general informational purposes and reflects publicly available guidance on Japanese immigration law as of 2026. It is not a substitute for individual legal advice. If you're dealing with overstay issues, please consult a licensed administrative scrivener (行政書士) or immigration lawyer about your specific circumstances.
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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