VisaSHOGUN FAQ — Can I Open a Bank Account in Japan Before I Have a Job?
Can I Open a Bank Account in Japan Before I Have a Job?
This guide is for people in Japan who don't currently have a job — new arrivals on a Spouse or Dependent visa whose job hasn't started yet, people between jobs, or students — and want to know whether they can open a Japanese bank account anyway.
Yes — Japanese banks generally do not require proof of employment to open a basic account. What they do require, regardless of job status, is: a valid Residence Card, a registered Japanese address (proof via Juminhyo), and a Japanese phone number. Your employment status mainly affects which bank is easiest for you and what additional documents (if any) might be requested — not whether you can open an account at all.
- Employment is not a hard requirement for basic Japanese bank accounts
- The real requirements are: Residence Card + registered address + Japanese phone number
- For "purpose of account," "living expenses" (生活費) is a perfectly normal answer if you're not employed yet
- Japan Post Bank tends to be the most flexible for those without an employer, since it has no residency-length minimum
- Some banks (e.g., SBI Shinsei) care more about your visa's remaining validity period than your current employment status
What Banks Actually Check
No law requires proof of employment to open a basic Japanese bank account. Banks set their own internal Know-Your-Customer (KYC) criteria within the bounds of banking regulations — employment is not a regulatory requirement.
Without an employment certificate, state your purpose as "living expenses" (生活費) if you don't yet have a job lined up, or mention your upcoming employer if you do. Japan Post Bank (ゆうちょ銀行) is generally the most accommodating starting point for those without current employment, as covered in our full bank account guide.
Why People Assume You Need a Job First
The confusion often comes from two places: (1) some bank application forms ask for employer information, which people assume is mandatory rather than optional/conditional, and (2) certain banks do have visa-related requirements (like SBI Shinsei's preference for 6+ months remaining on your visa) that get conflated with "needing a job." Visa remaining period and employment status are different things — and the visa-period requirement applies to employed and unemployed applicants alike.
The Real Gatekeeper: Registered Address
The requirement that trips up new arrivals most isn't employment — it's the registered address. You must register your address at your local city hall (市区町村役所) within 14 days of moving in, which produces your Juminhyo (住民票). Banks need this to confirm where you live. Do this before attempting to open a bank account, regardless of your job situation.
📋 Common Scenarios
Register your address first, get a Japanese SIM, then apply to a bank with "living expenses" as your stated purpose. Japan Post Bank or Rakuten Bank are reasonable starting points. There's no need to wait until your job starts.
If you already have a Japanese bank account, nothing changes — your account remains open regardless of employment status. If you're newly arrived and between jobs, the same approach as Scenario 1 applies.
If you're also receiving international transfers or need to receive salary from a future employer with a delay, Wise can give you local bank details in Japan and other countries while you sort out your Japanese account — useful as a bridge during transitions.
Same approach: register your address, get a phone number, and open an account stating "living expenses" / receiving money from family as your purpose. Japan Post Bank and Sony Bank are commonly used by students for this reason.
🚫 Common Mistakes
This delays getting set up for no real benefit — open your account as soon as you have your address registered and a phone number.
This is the actual blocker for most new arrivals — not employment. Do the city hall registration first.
Major banks are known to be less consistent with foreign applicants, employed or not. Start with foreigner-friendly options covered in our full guide.
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