Money in Japan for Foreigners — Banking, Sending Money, Pension Refund & Taxes 2026 | VisaSHOGUN

🏛️ Admin Scrivener Supervised 📅 Last updated: June 2026 ✅ Practical, foreigner-focused guides

Money in Japan
The Foreigner's Complete Guide

Banking, sending money home, pension refunds, taxes, and the financial moves that save or cost you thousands of yen. Built for foreign residents — not for Japanese nationals.

  • How to open a bank account as a new arrival
  • The cheapest way to send money home from Japan
  • How to claim your pension refund when you leave Japan
  • Taxes for foreigners — who must file, and how
  • How unpaid taxes and pension gaps affect your visa and PR
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Your money and your visa are connected. Unpaid taxes (住民税) and pension gaps are now the #1 and #2 causes of visa renewal rejections and PR refusals in 2026. ISA cross-checks these records for every application. See how it affects renewals →
Practical financial guides for foreign residents in Japan. Not affiliated with any financial institution — we recommend what genuinely works for foreigners. Supervised by a licensed Administrative Scrivener (行政書士).
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Why This Matters

Money in Japan Is Different — Here's What No One Tells You

Japan has a cash-heavy culture, strict banking requirements for new arrivals, mandatory public pension enrollment, and a tax system that many foreigners unknowingly underpay. Understanding the basics isn't just useful — it directly affects your visa renewal and PR eligibility.

💡 Quick wins for foreign residents
Things you can do this week that save money or protect your visa status.
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Switch to Wise for international transfers
Japanese banks charge ¥2,000–3,500 per transfer plus poor exchange rates. Wise typically costs 70–80% less on most currency routes.
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Check your pension payment record
Any gaps in pension payments will appear in your next visa or PR review. Check at nenkin.go.jp now — before your renewal deadline.
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Verify your 住民税 is current
Residence tax arrears are ISA's #1 cross-check item. If you changed jobs mid-year, there's a risk your 住民税 wasn't transferred to the new employer's payroll.
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Use Furusato Nozei (ふるさと納税)
Foreign residents can use Japan's hometown tax donation system — pay ¥2,000, get back tens of thousands in gifts and tax deductions. Most foreigners don't know this.
All Money Topics

What Do You Need Help With?

Each card covers a core financial topic for foreign residents. Click to explore guides, comparisons, and step-by-step instructions.

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Most Popular
Sending Money Home from Japan
Japanese bank international transfers are expensive and slow. Modern transfer services like Wise, Revolut, and Remitly offer better rates with lower fees. This guide covers the cheapest, fastest, and most reliable options by destination country.
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New Arrivals
Opening a Bank Account in Japan
Opening a Japanese bank account as a foreigner has strict requirements — you often need 6 months of residency before traditional banks will accept you. Online banks (Sony Bank, Prestia, Rakuten) tend to be more foreigner-friendly. Here's what actually works.
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Leaving Japan
Pension Lump-Sum Refund (脱退一時金)
If you've paid into Japan's pension system for 6+ months and you're leaving Japan, you can claim a lump-sum refund after departure. The deadline is 2 years after leaving — and most people either miss it or don't know it exists. The amounts are substantial: ¥50,000–¥600,000+ depending on your contribution history.
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Compliance Critical
Taxes for Foreigners in Japan
Income tax, residence tax (住民税), and filing rules for foreign residents. ISA now cross-checks tax records at every visa and PR application — arrears are the #1 cause of PR rejections in 2026. This guide covers who must file, how to use e-Tax, and what overseas income is taxable.
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Tax Savings
Furusato Nozei (ふるさと納税)
Japan's hometown tax donation system lets you redirect part of your 住民税 to a municipality in exchange for gifts — Wagyu beef, rice, sake, travel vouchers, and more. Pay just ¥2,000 out of pocket and receive gifts worth 10–30x that amount. Foreign residents qualify — most don't know it.
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Visa Protection
Social Insurance & Visa Compliance
Health insurance and pension aren't just financial obligations — gaps in payment directly affect your visa renewal and PR application. ISA cross-checks both since 2024. This section explains how to check your records, correct gaps, and what documentation to prepare for renewals.
Service Comparison

Sending Money Home — Which Service to Use

Japanese bank international wire transfers are expensive. These services are consistently better for foreign residents sending money abroad. Full comparison guides link from each card.

Transparency note: Some links on this page may be affiliate links. If you sign up through them, VisaSHOGUN may receive a commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend services that genuinely benefit foreign residents in Japan — our editorial recommendations are never influenced by commercial relationships.
Expanding Soon

More Money Guides Coming

These topics are in production — set a reminder to be notified when they go live.

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Credit Cards for Foreigners
Which Japanese credit cards accept foreign residents, what documents you need, and how to build credit history in Japan.
Coming soon
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SIM Cards & Mobile Plans
Best MVNOs for foreign residents, what documents you need with your residence card, and which plans work without a Japanese bank account.
Coming soon
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Investing in Japan
NISA accounts for foreigners, brokerage options that accept non-Japanese nationals, and tax treatment of investment income.
Coming soon
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Mortgages for Foreign Residents
Can foreigners get a mortgage in Japan? PR status, income requirements, and which banks offer loans to non-Japanese nationals.
Coming soon
Frequently Asked

Money Questions — Answered

Based on the most common questions from foreign residents in Japan.

Traditional banks (Mizuho, MUFG, SMBC) typically require 6 months of residency. Japan Post Bank (ゆうちょ) accepts new arrivals with a residence card but has limited international functionality. Online banks like Sony Bank and Rakuten Bank often accept foreign residents earlier. Wise is the best bridge solution for new arrivals — it functions as a multi-currency account while your Japan bank application is pending.
If you are a tax resident of Japan (resident for more than 1 year, or living here long-term), you are generally taxed on your worldwide income — including overseas freelance earnings, rental income, and investment returns. Japan has tax treaties with many countries to prevent double taxation. If you have overseas income, you should file a tax return in Japan (確定申告) declaring it. Failing to declare overseas income is a compliance risk, particularly if ISA cross-checks tax records at your next visa or PR application.
The deadline for the pension lump-sum refund (脱退一時金) is 2 years from the day after you leave Japan. If you left 18 months ago, you still have approximately 6 months to file. Act now — the Japan Pension Service (日本年金機構) accepts applications by mail from abroad. You'll need your pension booklet (年金手帳) or similar documentation. See our pension refund guide for the full process.
This is common when you change jobs or have a gap in employment. Residence tax (住民税) is based on the previous year's income and should be collected by your employer via payroll (特別徴収). If you changed employers mid-year and the new employer didn't pick it up, you may need to pay it directly via 普通徴収 (direct payment to your municipality). Check with your local tax office or look for a 納税通知書 in the mail. This must be resolved before your next visa renewal — ISA flags unpaid 住民税.
No — you can fund a Wise transfer directly from a Japanese bank account or credit/debit card, or receive funds into a Wise JPY balance. Many foreign residents in Japan use Wise as their primary financial tool before opening a full Japanese bank account. You can hold JPY, send internationally, and receive salary payments into a Wise account number in some cases.
Don't let money issues affect your visa

Tax and pension compliance starts today

Set a free visa reminder so you're never caught off-guard before a renewal — and check that your tax and pension records are clean before your next application.

All guides updated June 2026 · Supervised by a licensed Administrative Scrivener (行政書士) · No spam, no sales calls

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