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For many overseas buyers, Japanese real estate is not only an investment decision. It may be a second home, a family base, a place to return to several times a year, a business-related location, or part of a longer-term Japan plan.

Property ownership and residence status are separate systems. A property purchase alone does not automatically create residence status. But that does not make Japanese property less attractive.

For many buyers, Japan can already be highly practical as a short-stay or second-home destination. For others, the property conversation may sit alongside a separate residence-status consultation, depending on their lifestyle, business activity, family needs, or long-term plans.

Through the RE/MAX INTERFACE office, property planning and visa / residence-status questions can be reviewed in parallel where appropriate, while keeping real estate brokerage and immigration-related matters clearly separate.

A Japan Plan May Involve More Than Property

For many global buyers, the question is not only “Which property should I buy?” It may also be “How will Japan fit into my life, family, business, or long-term plans?”

A Tokyo condominium, income property, second home, hospitality asset, or business-related base may each support a different kind of Japan plan. The right structure depends on how the buyer intends to use Japan — occasionally, seasonally, professionally, commercially, or more permanently.

Property Ownership and Residence Status Are Separate Systems

Japan allows foreign nationals to own real estate. In general, overseas buyers may purchase, own, use, lease, or hold Japanese property.

Residence status, however, is a separate immigration matter. It is reviewed based on the applicant’s purpose, activities in Japan, documentation, eligibility, and the applicable immigration framework.

At a Glance
Two Systems, Reviewed Together Where It Helps
Property Ownership
  • Own, use, lease, or hold Japanese property
Residence Status
  • A separate immigration matter
Reviewed Together
  • Coordinated where appropriate, through qualified professionals

Japan as a Second Home or Short-Stay Base

Not every buyer needs to live in Japan full-time for Japanese property ownership to be meaningful.

For many global buyers, the appeal is practical: a place to return to several times a year, a private base for family visits, a familiar home in Tokyo or another favorite area, and a long-term connection to Japan.

Japan’s short-stay access is also more flexible than many buyers expect. Many major countries and regions have visa-exemption arrangements with Japan, often allowing short-term stays of up to 90 days for tourism, family visits, business meetings, property inspections, or seasonal use, subject to current rules and landing permission.

This makes Japanese property ownership especially attractive for buyers who want a Japan base without immediately pursuing full-time relocation.

Short-Stay Access from Major Buyer Markets

Japan has visa-exemption arrangements with many major countries and regions. For many overseas buyers, this makes second-home use, family visits, property inspections, and seasonal stays more practical than they may expect.

Country / Region Short-Stay Access to Japan Practical Meaning for Property Owners
United States Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. 90 days Practical for regular Japan visits, second-home use, family stays, and property inspections.
Canada Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. 90 days Practical for seasonal use, repeat visits, and ownership oversight.
Australia Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. 90 days Practical for holiday-home use, family stays, and periodic Japan base use.
New Zealand Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. 90 days Practical for regular visits and second-home ownership planning.
United Kingdom Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. Longer stays may be possible only where applicable rules or extension procedures allow. Check current rules Useful for longer seasonal planning where eligible, subject to current rules and proper procedures.
Switzerland Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. Longer stays may be possible only where applicable rules or extension procedures allow. Check current rules Useful for longer seasonal planning where eligible, subject to current rules and proper procedures.
European Union / Schengen Many EU countries are visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. Rules vary by nationality. 90 days Practical for regular Japan visits and second-home use. Rules should be confirmed by nationality.
Taiwan Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days for eligible passport holders. 90 days Practical for regular visits, second-home use, family stays, and property inspections.
Hong Kong Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days for eligible passport holders. 90 days Practical for frequent visits, lifestyle use, and portfolio oversight.
Singapore Visa-exempt, generally up to 90 days. 90 days Practical for frequent Japan visits, second-home use, and asset oversight.
Thailand Visa-exempt for shorter stays under applicable rules for eligible passport holders. Short stay Useful for shorter visits, property viewing trips, and periodic ownership use.
India Not generally visa-exempt. Short-term visa or eVISA routes may be available through the designated process. eVISA route Requires more planning than visa-exempt markets, but structured short-stay access can still be workable.
Mainland China Not generally visa-exempt. Tourism visa or eVISA routes may be available through designated processes where applicable. eVISA route Requires more planning, but structured short-stay visits can be workable with proper preparation.
Rules depend on nationality, passport type, residence country, purpose of visit, travel history, and current government rules. Landing permission is granted individually at the port of entry. Short-stay access is separate from long-term stay and residence status. Buyers should confirm the latest official requirements before travel.

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan — VISA

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan — Exemption of Visa (Short-Term Stay)

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan — JAPAN eVISA system

Visa and Residence Consultation May Be Reviewed Alongside Property Planning

Where a buyer is considering living, working, operating a business, spending extended time in Japan, or eventually seeking longer-term residence, visa and residence-status questions may be reviewed alongside the property conversation.

Through the RE/MAX INTERFACE office, clients may be able to consult on immigration-related matters separately from the real estate brokerage process. Depending on the buyer’s objectives, this may include Business Manager status, work-related status, Long-Term Resident status, Permanent Residence, or other possible residence pathways.

The relevant pathway depends on the buyer’s facts: nationality, family situation, business activity, employment, investment plan, residence history, income, documentation, and long-term objectives.

These matters are reviewed separately by qualified professionals, and no visa or residence outcome is guaranteed. The value is in reviewing them early, so the property and residence decisions do not work against each other.

Different Buyers, Different Japan Plans

Buyer Objective Property Planning Residence / Visa Consideration
Second home / regular visits Tokyo base, resort home, family-use condominium, management setup Short-stay rules, lawful visit rhythm, future optionality
Income-producing property Rental assumptions, management structure, tax and reporting coordination Usually separate from residence status unless connected to broader activity in Japan
Business-related Japan base Office, mixed-use asset, accommodation asset, or business-supporting property Business Manager status or work-related status may require separate professional review
Long-term relocation Home base, family residence, education-related location, long-term ownership costs Appropriate residence status should be reviewed early based on the buyer’s facts and intended activity
Permanent residence objective Long-term living and asset planning Permanent Residence is a separate long-term immigration question requiring professional review
Long-Term Resident possibility Family, life, or special-circumstance related Japan planning Long-Term Resident status may be relevant only in specific circumstances and requires professional review
Hospitality or operating asset Existing hotel, accommodation asset, leased commercial property, operating structure Business, licensing, operation, and immigration questions may need coordinated professional review

Business Manager Status: A Professional Review Question

Business Manager status may be relevant for buyers who intend to conduct real business activity in Japan. However, it should not be treated as a simple extension of property ownership.

A qualifying business activity, office structure, capital, staffing, business plan, compliance obligations, and actual management activity may each need to be reviewed carefully under the applicable rules at the time.

For buyers considering business activity in Japan, the better approach is to review the business plan, immigration pathway, and property needs together from the beginning.

Source: Immigration Services Agency of Japan — Business Manager status

Permanent Residence: A Separate Long-Term Question

Permanent Residence is a separate long-term immigration matter. It is not created by property ownership alone.

For clients who are thinking seriously about Japan over the long term, property ownership may still form part of a broader life and asset plan. The key is to separate what the property can do from what immigration law requires — and then review both sides with the right professionals.

Source: Immigration Services Agency of Japan — Guidelines for Permission for Permanent Residence

Long-Term Resident Status: Case-Specific Review

Long-Term Resident status is a separate immigration category that may be relevant only in specific personal, family, humanitarian, or other circumstances recognized under the applicable rules.

It should not be assumed from property ownership or investment activity alone. Where a buyer believes this category may be relevant, it should be reviewed separately by qualified professionals based on the individual facts.

Ken Aoki's Owner-Side Note
Review the Property Plan, Stay Pattern, and Residence Questions Early

If your objective includes regular stays, business activity, family relocation, work in Japan, or long-term residence, those questions should be discussed before the property search moves too far.

A property decision should not be based on assumptions about visa eligibility. At the same time, property, stay pattern, and residence questions do not need to be treated as completely separate conversations.

Through RE/MAX INTERFACE, the property conversation and immigration-related consultation can be coordinated where appropriate, while keeping brokerage and regulated professional matters clearly separate.

Clarify your Japan property, stay, and residence questions before the property search moves too far.

Request Consultation

If your enquiry involves short-stay use, residence status, business activity, work permission, or long-term stay planning, we can review how the property conversation should be coordinated with qualified professional consultation where applicable.

Reference Sources
Disclaimer

This article is for general orientation only. It does not constitute immigration, legal, tax, accounting, lending, financing, investment, or property management advice.

Buying property in Japan does not automatically grant residence status, visa approval, work permission, Permanent Residence, Long-Term Resident status, Business Manager status, or any immigration outcome.

Short-stay rules depend on nationality, passport type, residence country, purpose of visit, travel history, and current government rules. Landing permission is granted individually at the port of entry.

Immigration-related matters are reviewed separately by qualified professionals where applicable. No visa outcome, residence status, Permanent Residence, Long-Term Resident status, work permission, financing approval, bank account opening, investment return, occupancy, rent level, or resale value is guaranteed.

Brokerage-related matters are handled through RE/MAX INTERFACE where applicable.

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