🛂 Japan Engineer Visa (Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services)
The most common work visa for tech professionals moving to Japan is officially called the "Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services" (技術・人文知識・国際業務) visa — most people just call it the Engineer Visa. It covers software engineers, IT consultants, data analysts, UI/UX designers, and many other tech roles.
To qualify, you generally need one of the following:
- A university degree in a field related to your job (e.g., computer science for a developer role)
- OR 10 years of professional work experience in the same field
- A confirmed job offer from a Japanese company (this is a hard requirement)
Engineer Visa — Key Requirements & Fees
| Requirement | Details | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Job offer letter | From a Japanese employer, on company letterhead | Mandatory |
| Degree / Experience | Relevant university degree OR 10 yrs experience | Mandatory |
| Visa application fee | ¥3,000 (single entry) / ¥6,000 (multiple entry) | — |
| Certificate of Eligibility (COE) | Employer applies on your behalf; ~1–3 months | Mandatory |
| Initial visa duration | 1 year, 3 years, or 5 years (at immigration's discretion) | — |
| Path to PR | Standard: 10 years · HSP: as fast as 1 year | Available |
| Spouse / dependent visa | Yes — spouse can work part-time (up to 28 hrs/week) | Available |
⭐ Japan's Highly Skilled Professional (HSP) Points System
Japan's Highly Skilled Professional (高度専門職, "Koudo Senmonshoku") visa is a fast-track route designed to attract top global talent. Instead of requiring 10 years to qualify for permanent residency, HSP holders can apply after just 1 year (if you score 80+ points) or 3 years (if you score 70–79 points).
Points are awarded across three categories: academic background, career history, and annual salary. The table below shows how points are calculated for the most common tech profile.
| Category | Sub-criteria | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Academic Background | PhD degree | 30 |
| Master's degree | 20 | |
| Bachelor's degree | 10 | |
| Career History | 10+ years experience | 20 |
| 7–9 years experience | 15 | |
| 5–6 years experience | 10 | |
| 3–4 years experience | 5 | |
| Annual Salary | ¥10M+ (~USD 65K+) | 40 |
| ¥9M–¥10M | 35 | |
| ¥7M–¥9M | 25 | |
| ¥5M–¥7M | 20 | |
| ¥4M–¥5M | 15 | |
| Bonus Points | Japanese N1 proficiency (JLPT) | 15 |
| Graduated from top-ranked Japanese university | 10 | |
| Worked in Japan before (via prior visa) | 5 | |
| Innovation / startup activities | up to 25 |
💴 Cost of Living: Tokyo vs Osaka (2025)
Japan's two largest cities offer very different financial realities. Tokyo is one of Asia's most expensive cities, but it also pays the highest salaries. Osaka is significantly cheaper for everyday expenses, and many expats find the quality of life — food, nightlife, culture — equally good or better.
| Expense | Tokyo (¥/month) | Osaka (¥/month) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bedroom apt, city centre | ¥130,000–¥200,000 | ¥70,000–¥120,000 | Osaka ~40% cheaper |
| 1-bedroom apt, suburbs | ¥80,000–¥130,000 | ¥50,000–¥80,000 | Osaka ~35% cheaper |
| Monthly train pass (commuter) | ¥8,000–¥15,000 | ¥7,000–¥12,000 | Similar |
| Lunch (restaurant, weekday) | ¥800–¥1,200 | ¥600–¥1,000 | Osaka slightly cheaper |
| Dinner (mid-range restaurant) | ¥2,500–¥4,000 | ¥2,000–¥3,500 | Similar |
| Groceries (single person) | ¥30,000–¥45,000 | ¥28,000–¥40,000 | Similar |
| Gym membership | ¥6,000–¥12,000 | ¥5,000–¥10,000 | Similar |
| Mobile plan (SIM only) | ¥3,000–¥5,000 | ¥3,000–¥5,000 | Same |
| Total estimate (single) | ¥200,000–¥300,000 | ¥140,000–¥220,000 | Osaka saves ¥50K–¥80K/month |
Typical Tech Salaries in Japan (2025)
| Role | Annual Salary (JPY) | Approx. USD | HSP Points (salary only) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior Software Engineer | ¥3.5M – ¥4.5M | $23K – $30K | 0–15 |
| Mid-Level Software Engineer | ¥5M – ¥7M | $33K – $46K | 20–25 |
| Senior Software Engineer | ¥7M – ¥10M | $46K – $65K | 25–35 |
| Engineering Manager | ¥10M – ¥15M | $65K – $98K | 40 |
| Foreign tech company (local hire) | ¥12M – ¥25M | $78K – $163K | 40 |
🏥 Healthcare for Expats in Japan
Japan's healthcare system is widely regarded as one of the best in the world — and once you register as a resident, you are legally required to enroll in the national health insurance scheme. This is not optional.
- National Health Insurance (国民健康保険, Kokumin Kenko Hoken): For the self-employed, freelancers, and those between jobs. Premiums are income-based and typically range from ¥3,000–¥25,000 per month.
- Employee Health Insurance (社会保険, Shakai Hoken): If you are employed by a Japanese company, your employer enrolls you automatically and splits the premium 50/50. This is the better option.
- Your co-pay: Under both systems, you pay 30% of all medical costs. The government covers the other 70%. A doctor's visit typically costs you ¥1,000–¥3,000 out of pocket.
- Prescription drugs: Japan's 30% co-pay applies to prescriptions too, making most medications extremely affordable by Western standards.
| Type of Care | Full Cost (JPY) | Your 30% Co-pay | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP visit (clinic) | ¥3,000–¥6,000 | ¥900–¥1,800 | Walk-in often accepted |
| Emergency room visit | ¥15,000–¥40,000 | ¥4,500–¥12,000 | Higher at nights/weekends |
| Specialist consultation | ¥5,000–¥12,000 | ¥1,500–¥3,600 | Referral usually needed |
| Dental cleaning | ¥3,000–¥5,000 | ¥900–¥1,500 | Cosmetic not covered |
| Hospital stay (per day) | ¥10,000–¥30,000 | ¥3,000–¥9,000 | Meals included |
🗣️ Breaking Through the Language Barrier
Japan's language barrier is real — and it is probably the biggest daily challenge most expats face. Japanese is one of the hardest languages for English speakers to learn, and outside of major international companies and tourist areas, written and spoken Japanese dominates almost every aspect of daily life. But the situation is much more manageable than it was even five years ago.
Practical Strategies That Actually Work
- Google Translate Camera Mode: Point your phone camera at any Japanese text — menus, government forms, apartment contracts — and it translates in real time. This single tool removes 80% of the daily reading friction.
- DeepL Translator: More accurate than Google for formal documents and contracts. Use it to translate your apartment lease, tax notices, and HR paperwork before signing anything.
- Hire a "Life Admin" Helper: Several apps including Himawari and Hello Sensei connect you with bilingual Japanese people who can accompany you to city hall, the bank, or the doctor. Rates are typically ¥2,000–¥5,000 per hour.
- Municipal International Centers: Every major Japanese city has a free international resident support center (国際交流センター). They offer free translation of official documents, legal consultations, and Japanese language classes. Find yours by Googling "[your city] international center."
- Learn Hiragana and Katakana First: These two phonetic alphabets (about 46 characters each) can be mastered in 2–3 weeks. Once you can read them, you can sound out menus, signs, and product labels — even if you do not understand the meaning yet. This dramatically reduces daily stress.
- JLPT N4 as a Target: N4 is the level at which you can handle basic daily conversations, navigate a government office, and read simple workplace emails. This is a realistic 12–18 month goal for a motivated learner working full time.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
✅ Is Japan Right for You? Pros vs Cons
| ✅ Pros | ⚠️ Cons |
|---|---|
| Universal healthcare at 30% co-pay | Extremely high initial rental costs (key money, deposits) |
| Extremely safe, low crime | Strong language barrier in daily life |
| World-class public transport | Long working hours culture at Japanese companies |
| Food quality and variety is exceptional | Rigid bureaucracy — physical paperwork still common |
| HSP fast-track to PR (1–3 years) | Must have job offer before applying for work visa |
| High tech salaries at foreign firms | Lower salaries at traditional Japanese companies |
| Rich culture, history, and lifestyle | Natural disaster risk (earthquakes, typhoons) |
| Clean, orderly, reliable daily life | Social integration can be slow — "outsider" feeling |