That's it, the title. I'm an American who goes yearly to Japan on a tourist visa, and I absolutely adore the country. I feel very at home with Japanese customs and lifestyle, and always wish I was still there when I return home. But it seems so insurmountable to immigrate to.
Not OP, but I live in Asia and am sporadically changing countries. Japan either requires you to have a job offer prior to moving, or show sufficient funds to live there indefinitely (around 2k USD/month; though that won't get you far in Tokyo for example). Remote work does not qualify, it's either a domestic job or income from pension or investments.
After 10 years of living there legally you qualify for a residence permit.
You need a degree to get a work visa. You need a job offer willing to sponsor your visa, or proof of independent income. You need to speak and read/write very good Japanese for almost anything other than teaching English.
hard to land a job unless you have a job and chose to work in the japanese branch there or have considerably helped japan financially (aka rich). you also must renounce your citizenship with your previous country (which is a huge dealbreaker in cases)
What’s the biggest hurdle with moving there?
Not OP, but I live in Asia and am sporadically changing countries. Japan either requires you to have a job offer prior to moving, or show sufficient funds to live there indefinitely (around 2k USD/month; though that won't get you far in Tokyo for example). Remote work does not qualify, it's either a domestic job or income from pension or investments.
After 10 years of living there legally you qualify for a residence permit.
The alternative would be through marriage.
You technically qualify for citizenship after six years, but you'll never pass the test.
As far as I'm aware there is no test, they only check your employment history, tax status and criminal record?
They also go to your house to judge whether or not you have sufficiently adapted to the Japanese lifestyle.
Part of it is probably the skin colour test pallet from that meme format.
There are also places that won't rent to foreigners
You need a degree to get a work visa. You need a job offer willing to sponsor your visa, or proof of independent income. You need to speak and read/write very good Japanese for almost anything other than teaching English.
hard to land a job unless you have a job and chose to work in the japanese branch there or have considerably helped japan financially (aka rich). you also must renounce your citizenship with your previous country (which is a huge dealbreaker in cases)
They don't want you, basically, and the laws reflect that.