How Your Visa Affects Your Rental Application
Your visa status is one of the first things a landlord and guarantor company will check. It determines how long you can legally stay in Japan, how stable your income is considered to be, and whether you present a perceived "risk" of leaving mid-lease. Understanding exactly how your visa type is viewed — and what you can do to compensate for any weaknesses — is essential before you start apartment hunting.
Work Visa — Engineer / Specialist in Humanities / International Services
Work visa holders are generally the most straightforward category for landlords and guarantor companies. A stable employer, predictable income, and a visa that is renewed as long as employment continues make this group low-risk by Japanese rental standards.
What works in your favor:
- Certificate of employment from your company (zaikin shomeisho)
- Company size and reputation — large Japanese companies are viewed very favorably
- Length of time with current employer
- Salary clearly above the 3× rent benchmark
Common obstacles:
- Short remaining visa validity — apply for renewal before apartment hunting if possible
- Trial period employment — some landlords are cautious about employees still in probation
Recommended approach: Use any guarantor company. Present your employment certificate prominently. Most standard private apartments are accessible to work visa holders with stable income.
Student Visa
Student visa holders face more challenges than full-time employees because income is typically lower (or absent), and the visa is tied to school enrollment rather than employment.
What works in your favor:
- Enrollment certificate from your school (zaigaku shomeisho)
- Proof of parental or external financial support
- Scholarship documentation if applicable
- Part-time income (arubaito) with payslips
Recommended approach: Prioritize share houses, which typically have lower income requirements and more flexibility for students. If targeting a private apartment, GTN is the most student-friendly guarantor company. School dormitories (ryou) are also worth exploring — many Japanese universities and language schools offer or arrange accommodation for international students.
Student visa holders are limited to 28 hours of part-time work per week. Guarantee that any income you declare to a guarantor company is within legal limits.
Spouse or Child of Japanese National
Spouse visas (Spouse of Japanese National) are among the strongest visa types for renting in Japan. They are open-ended in duration (as long as the marriage continues) and carry no restrictions on employment type or hours, making income verification straightforward.
What works in your favor:
- The visa itself signals long-term residence intention — viewed very favorably
- Your Japanese spouse can often serve as a personal guarantor, eliminating the guarantor company requirement
- Joint income can be presented if both parties are working
Recommended approach: Most standard private apartments are accessible. If your spouse acts as guarantor, confirm with the agency that personal guarantors are accepted (some landlords require guarantor companies regardless). If using a guarantor company, nearly all will accept spouse visa holders.
Permanent Resident (PR / Eijusha)
Permanent residents have the fewest barriers of any foreign visa category in Japan's rental market. PR status has no expiry date attached to residency rights, signals long-term commitment to Japan, and carries no employment restrictions.
What works in your favor:
- PR status is viewed almost identically to Japanese nationality by most landlords and guarantor companies
- All guarantor companies accept PR holders
- Access to the full range of private apartments with no visa-related restrictions
Recommended approach: Standard process — any agency, any guarantor company. Focus on income and the standard application criteria rather than visa-related factors.
Working Holiday Visa
Working holiday visa holders face the most significant rental challenges of any visa category. The visa is limited to 1 year (with some country extensions to 2–3 years), work is restricted to casual employment, and income is typically variable and lower than full-time employment.
Key challenges:
- Most private apartments have 2-year lease terms that exceed the visa duration
- Many guarantor companies will not accept working holiday applicants
- Income volatility makes the 3× rent benchmark harder to meet
Recommended approach:
- Share houses are the primary recommendation — no guarantor required, monthly contracts available, and share house operators typically understand working holiday situations
- Monthly mansions for very short stays
- GTN is the best guarantor company option if you need a private apartment — they have more experience with working holiday applicants than mainstream companies
- Some countries (Australia, Canada, UK) have access to second-year working holiday extensions — factor this into your planning
Business Manager Visa
Business manager visas are held by entrepreneurs and company directors running businesses in Japan. Income verification is more complex than for employees — there are no payslips in the traditional sense, and income may be irregular.
What works in your favor:
- The visa itself signals strong economic ties to Japan
- A well-established business with visible financials is viewed positively
Recommended approach: Prepare 1–2 years of business financial statements and personal tax returns. Some guarantor companies are unfamiliar with self-employed income — GTN and CASA have more experience here. Working with a foreigner-specialist agency that has placed business manager visa holders before is strongly recommended.
Tourist / Short-Stay Visa
Tourist visa holders (90-day stamp, visa waiver countries) cannot legally establish a residential address in Japan under a tourist entry. Standard private apartment rentals require a residence card, which tourists do not have.
Options that exist:
- Monthly mansion / serviced apartment rentals (do not require a residence card)
- Airbnb and similar short-term rentals
- Guesthouses that accommodate long-stay visitors
If you are planning to remain in Japan long-term, switching to an appropriate visa category (work, student, etc.) before or shortly after arrival will give you access to the full rental market.
Tips That Apply to All Visa Types
- Renew your visa early. Applying for an apartment with 6+ months remaining on your visa is always better than applying with 2 months remaining, regardless of type.
- Use a foreigner-specialist agency. These agencies know which guarantor companies work best for each visa type and can guide you to the right combination.
- Register your address promptly. Once you have a residence card, register at your local city hall within 14 days of moving in — this is required by law and is needed for many other services.
- Be transparent. Provide accurate information on your application. Misrepresentation on visa status or income is a serious issue that can result in lease termination.