Seikatsu JapanSeikatsu Japan
Pananalapi at Credit CardsUpdated: 2026-06-11

How to open a bank account in Japan as a foreign resident

How to open a bank account in Japan as a foreign resident. Learn what to check before deciding in Japan.

Author: Seikatsu Japan Editorial TeamPublished: 2026-06-11Updated: 2026-06-11
This article is for general information. Rules and conditions may differ depending on your situation. Please confirm official information or consult a qualified professional before making a decision.
Editorial team: The editorial team creates practical guides for foreign residents in Japan, focusing on contracts, official information, comparison points, and risks to confirm before applying.
Professional review is planned for high-risk topics. Until a named reviewer is shown, use this as general guidance and confirm official information or a qualified professional for your situation.

Next step

Check the latest conditions before you decide

Fees, campaigns, language support, and cancellation rules can change. Confirm the official conditions before applying.

Tingnan ang related category guides

Quick conclusion

General information ang artikulong ito. Puwedeng magbago ang rules, fees, screening, at conditions, kaya i-confirm sa official page, contract, o qualified professional bago magdesisyon.

Bank accounts are often needed for salary, rent, mobile payments, and credit card withdrawals. Prepare residence card, address, phone number, My Number if required, seal or signature rules, and confirm whether online banking is available. Financial services can affect debt, fees, remittance, tax, and credit history. Before applying or sending money, compare final cost, screening, repayment, interest, exchange rates, and cancellation rules.

Decision points

PointWhat to check
Your situationStay length, language ability, documents, and budget.
Contract or ruleWhat is written, what can change, and what happens when you cancel or renew.
Support pathWho can explain the condition in a language you understand before you pay or apply.

Where to go next

  • Compare final cost, not only advertised fee
  • Confirm screening and documents
  • Avoid settings you do not understand
  • Check cancellation or refund rules

This topic should connect to the other guides in the same category. Start with a broad guide when you are still learning the system, move to a checklist when you are close to action, and use comparison articles when you already know your conditions. If your situation involves health, money, work, legal, or residence-status risk, confirm official information or professional advice before acting.

When this may not fit

This guide may not be enough if your contract, symptoms, income, employer, or residence status is unusual. In that case, use it as a question list rather than a final answer. Ask the provider, landlord, clinic, employer, government office, or qualified professional to explain the exact condition that applies to you.

FAQ

Is lowest fee always best?

No. Screening, interest, exchange rate, repayment, refund, and support can matter more.

Final recommendation

The practical choice is the one you can understand, compare, and cancel or correct if conditions change. Keep screenshots or written records of important conditions, check the official source close to the application date, and read the related articles in this category before making a final decision.

Before you apply

  • Compare final cost
  • not only advertised fee
  • Confirm screening and documents
  • Avoid settings you do not understand
  • Check cancellation or refund rules

FAQ

Is lowest fee always best?

No. Screening, interest, exchange rate, repayment, refund, and support can matter more.

References