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A JPY 100 million condominium is rarely only a JPY 100 million budgeting exercise.

The listing price is the starting point. Before buying, overseas buyers should understand the ordinary acquisition costs, settlement items, insurance, and initial ownership reserve that may sit around the purchase. For a JPY 100 million resale condominium in Minato Ward, Tokyo, a practical planning range is approximately JPY 106M–107M.

This does not mean Japan is unusually expensive. Transaction taxes, professional fees, and settlement adjustments exist in many countries. The important point is to make the Japanese cost structure visible before the buyer commits.

Cost Stack Illustration June 2026 · Minato Ward resale condominium · Individual cash buyer
Listing price
JPY
100.0M
Brokerage commission (incl. consumption tax) approx. JPY 3.37M
Stamp duty JPY 0.03M
Registration and license tax approx. JPY 0.75M
Acquisition tax after residential relief approx. JPY 0.1M–0.4M
Other closing and settlement items approx. JPY 0.5M–1.5M
Initial owner reserve approx. JPY 1.0M
Additional planning amount approx. JPY 5.7M–7.0M
Practical owner-side budget
approx.
JPY 106M–107M
roughly 6%–7%
above listing price
Scenario Assumptions
Property type
Minato Ward resale condominium
Purchase price
JPY 100,000,000
Buyer
Individual buyer
Use
Self-use / Japan base
Building age
Approx. 20 years old
Size
Approx. 55–65 sqm · 1LDK–2LDK
Structure
RC / SRC condominium
Financing
Cash purchase, no mortgage
Ownership
Personal, not corporate
Timing
June 2026 illustration
Administrative tax-value proxy
JPY 50.0M  ·  Land JPY 35.0M  /  Building JPY 15.0M  ·  Approx. 70/30 split
Note: Administrative Tax-Value Proxy Is Not Market Value

For illustration only, this article uses an administrative tax-value proxy of JPY 50 million, split approximately JPY 35 million land and JPY 15 million building. This is not market value, appraisal value, resale value, or the actual fixed-asset tax assessed value of any specific property. It is only a simplified proxy for explaining how certain acquisition costs may be estimated.

Note: Listing Prices Are Usually Tax-Inclusive Where Consumption Tax Applies

In Japanese real estate, land is generally not subject to consumption tax. If consumption tax applies to the building portion, consumer-facing listing prices are usually shown on a tax-inclusive basis.

This means buyers should not normally read a JPY 100 million listing price as JPY 100 million plus another 10% consumption tax. The actual treatment depends on the seller, property type, land/building allocation, and transaction structure.

Sources: National Tax Agency — Non-taxable transactions for consumption tax  ·  Total amount display obligation

Quick Illustration: JPY 100 Million Minato Ward Condominium

The table below shows the full owner-side cost picture for this specific scenario. Explanations of each line item follow in the next section.

Cost Stack Illustration JPY 100M · Minato Ward resale condominium · Individual cash buyer · June 2026 illustration
Layer Illustration
Scenario Baseline
Purchase price JPY 100.0M
Administrative tax-value proxy (illustration only) JPY 50.0M
— Land proxy JPY 35.0M
— Building proxy JPY 15.0M
Common Acquisition and Initial Ownership Costs
Brokerage commission incl. 10% consumption tax approx. JPY 3.37M
Stamp duty JPY 0.03M
Registration and license tax approx. JPY 0.75M
Real estate acquisition tax after residential relief approx. JPY 0.1M–0.4M
Other closing and settlement items approx. JPY 0.5M–1.5M
Initial owner reserve approx. JPY 1.0M
Estimated additional planning amount approx. JPY 5.7M–7.0M
Estimated total owner-side budget approx. JPY 105.7M–107.0M
Rounded practical planning range approx. JPY 106M–107M
For this specific June 2026 illustration, the additional planning amount is approximately 6%–7% above the displayed purchase price.

This is not taxes alone, and it is not a hidden surcharge. It includes brokerage commission, registration-related costs, acquisition tax after residential relief, ordinary settlement items, insurance, and an initial owner reserve. The planning range will differ for financed purchases, different property types, different seller types, different buyer types, and different timing.

How the Numbers Are Calculated

1 Brokerage Commission

For many standard sale transactions above JPY 4 million, the commonly used statutory remuneration cap formula is: transaction price × 3% + JPY 60,000, plus consumption tax.

Transaction price × 3% + JPY 60,000 + consumption tax

For JPY 100 million:

CalculationAmount
JPY 100M × 3% + JPY 60,000JPY 3.06M
Including 10% consumption taxJPY 3.366M

For this example, the brokerage commission is approximately JPY 3.37M.

Source: Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism — Brokerage remuneration cap for licensed real estate brokers

2 Stamp Duty

For real estate transfer contracts over JPY 50 million and up to JPY 100 million, the reduced stamp duty is JPY 30,000 under the current reduced schedule applicable through March 31, 2027.

Contract PriceStamp Duty
JPY 100MJPY 0.03M

This is usually a small item, but it should be included in the acquisition budget.

Source: National Tax Agency — Reduced stamp duty for real estate transfer contracts

3 Registration and License Tax

Registration tax is not based on the purchase price. It is generally based on the registered tax base (typically the official fixed-asset tax assessed value), which may differ from the transaction price.

For this article, assume:

ItemProxy Used
Land proxyJPY 35.0M
Building proxyJPY 15.0M

Illustrative calculation for this June 2026 scenario:

ItemRate UsedApprox. Tax
Land transfer registration2.0%JPY 0.700M
Residential building transfer registration0.3%JPY 0.045M
Totalapprox. JPY 0.75M

As of the official source checked for this article, the reduced 0.3% rate for qualifying residential building transfer registration is available through March 31, 2027, where requirements are satisfied and the required certificate is obtained. The previous 1.5% reduced land transfer registration rate should not be used for a June 2026 illustration unless an official extension beyond March 31, 2026 is confirmed. This article therefore uses 2.0% for land transfer registration as the safer June 2026 assumption.

Actual registration tax depends on the actual registered tax base, property details, certificate availability, timing, and eligibility.

Source: National Tax Agency — Registration and license tax table

4 Real Estate Acquisition Tax

Real estate acquisition tax is also generally based on the official tax base, not the transaction price. For this illustration, the assumptions are:

ItemAssumption
Land proxyJPY 35.0M
Building proxyJPY 15.0M
Residential rate3%

Before any residential relief:

ItemApprox. Taxable BaseRateApprox. Tax
Land (half-base)JPY 17.5M3%JPY 0.525M
BuildingJPY 15.0M3%JPY 0.450M
Pre-relief totalapprox. JPY 0.975M

For a qualifying individual buyer acquiring a resale residential condominium for self-use residential purposes, residential relief may significantly reduce the actual acquisition tax. In this example, a 20-year-old, 55–65 sqm condominium may satisfy the general age, floor area, and residential-use assumptions used for this simplified illustration, but actual eligibility must be confirmed for each property and buyer.

Before residential relief: approx. JPY 1.0M. After residential relief: this article uses approximately JPY 0.1M–0.4M as a planning range. Because this tax may be billed after closing, buyers should plan for it in advance.

Source: Tokyo Metropolitan Taxation Bureau — Real estate acquisition tax

5 Other Closing and Settlement Items

Fixed asset tax and city planning tax are assessed to the owner as of January 1, but in sale transactions the seller and buyer commonly adjust them as part of closing settlement. Condominium management fees and repair reserve contributions may also be prorated or settled depending on timing and transaction terms.

ItemApprox. Range
Judicial scrivener feeapprox. JPY 0.15M–0.30M
Registration-related disbursements / certificatesapprox. JPY 0.03M–0.08M
Fire insuranceapprox. JPY 0.05M–0.20M
Prorated fixed asset tax / city planning tax settlementapprox. JPY 0.10M–0.35M
Condominium management fee / repair reserve settlementapprox. JPY 0.05M–0.30M
Small closing bufferapprox. JPY 0.10M–0.30M
Totalapprox. JPY 0.5M–1.5M

Source: Tokyo Metropolitan Taxation Bureau — Fixed asset tax and city planning tax

6 Initial Owner Reserve

This is not a statutory tax. It is a practical owner-side reserve for post-closing administration, minor repairs, setup items, management onboarding, and unexpected early ownership costs.

Approx. JPY 1.0M
The appropriate reserve depends on the buyer's circumstances, intended use, and ownership plan. This is a planning suggestion only.

Practical Budgeting Range

For this June 2026 Minato Ward resale condominium scenario, a buyer should think beyond the displayed listing price and prepare for the acquisition budget as a whole.

Planning Scenario Owner-Side Budget Range
Individual cash buyer (this example)approx. JPY 105.7M–107.0M
Rounded practical planning rangeapprox. JPY 106M–107M
Buyer planning only for JPY 100Mmay not have included all acquisition items
Buyer planning for full acquisition budgetmore complete budgeting approach

In this example, the practical planning range is approximately JPY 106M–107M for a JPY 100M displayed purchase price. This range includes ordinary acquisition costs, settlement items, insurance, and an initial ownership reserve.

The purpose of this exercise is not to make the purchase look more difficult. It is to help buyers understand the full budget before they make an offer.

Transparency Before Purchase

Acquisition costs are normal in real estate transactions. Japan is no exception.

The important point is not to treat these items as hidden costs, but to make them visible before the buyer decides. A clear cost stack helps overseas buyers compare properties, plan funding, and understand the acquisition budget with fewer surprises.

This article is intended as a practical reference, not a substitute for tax, legal, registration, or transaction-specific professional advice.

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Disclaimer

This article is for general orientation only and does not constitute tax, legal, registration, accounting, or investment advice. All figures are simplified planning assumptions for illustration purposes only. The example in this article is based on a hypothetical individual cash buyer acquiring a resale condominium in Minato Ward, Tokyo for approximately JPY 100 million, with an illustrative administrative tax-value proxy of JPY 50 million (split approximately JPY 35 million land and JPY 15 million building), under tax treatment as understood for June 2026. This proxy is not an estimate of market value, appraisal value, resale value, or the actual fixed-asset tax assessed value of any specific property. Actual acquisition costs, registration tax, acquisition tax (including applicable reductions and reliefs), stamp duty, professional fees, settlement items, insurance, reserve requirements, and post-closing obligations vary by property, buyer, municipality, timing, use, applicable relief, and transaction structure. Rate schedules, reduction periods, and eligibility criteria are subject to change. Consumption tax treatment varies depending on the seller, property type, land/building allocation, transaction structure, and whether the transaction is subject to consumption tax. Where consumption tax applies to the building portion, the displayed consumer-facing price may already be tax-inclusive. Buyers should confirm the actual treatment for each transaction with qualified professionals. Tax, legal, registration, accounting, and immigration matters must be confirmed with qualified professionals for each transaction. No investment return, financing approval, visa outcome, occupancy, tax treatment, or resale value is guaranteed.

© 2026 Ken Aoki Property Advisory. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction, redistribution, or republication of this article without prior written permission is prohibited.