How to Set Up a Company in Japan as a Foreigner (2026)
Japan's Kabushiki Kaisha (KK) is the most credible structure for the Japanese market. Formation takes 2–4 weeks and requires a Japanese address, a legal seal (hanko), and all documents in Japanese....

Japan's company structures
KK (Kabushiki Kaisha): Japan's most recognised company structure — the equivalent of a corporation or joint-stock company. Required by many Japanese enterprises for contracting, and expected by institutional customers. More complex governance; board of directors or audit structure.
GK (Godo Kaisha): Japan's LLC equivalent. Simpler structure, fewer governance requirements, faster and cheaper to form. Used by foreign companies as an entry-level vehicle (Amazon Japan is famously a GK). Growing acceptance but still less prestigious than a KK for enterprise sales.
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The language barrier
Japan's company formation process is conducted entirely in Japanese. All documents filed with the Legal Affairs Bureau (法務局 — Homukyoku) must be in Japanese. Bank account opening at Japanese banks requires Japanese-language communication.
Practical implication: Non-Japanese-speaking founders need a Japanese lawyer, judicial scrivener (司法書士 — shihō shoshi), or administrative scrivener (行政書士 — gyōsei shoshi) to handle the formation process.
Cost of professional handling: JPY 150,000–400,000 in professional fees, depending on the type and complexity.
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Step 1: Obtain a representative who can accept notices in Japan
All companies must have a Representative Director or Representative Member (GK) who can receive official notices in Japan. This person need not be Japanese, but must have a Japanese address.
For non-residents: This is the critical constraint. The Representative Director must have an address in Japan — either: 1. Your own Japanese address (if you have a visa/residence card) 2. An address provided by a Japanese professional (lawyer or scrivener) — this is not universally available; some professionals decline
Some formation agents offer a registered address service for the Representative Director for an additional fee.
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Step 2: Create a company seal (hanko)
Japan's legal system still requires certain documents to be sealed with a registered company seal (会社実印 — kaisha jitsuin). This is ordered from a seal-maker (hanko shop) and then registered with the Legal Affairs Bureau.
Cost: JPY 5,000–20,000 for the seal
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Step 3: Formation
For a GK: 1. Prepare Articles of Incorporation (定款 — teikan) in Japanese 2. Deposit capital into a personal bank account of the representative member (pre-incorporation; bank certificate required) 3. File with the Legal Affairs Bureau via a shihō shoshi or online (J-LIS portal) 4. Legal Affairs Bureau approves and registers: 1–2 weeks
For a KK: 1. Prepare Articles of Incorporation 2. Have Articles of Incorporation notarized by a Japanese notary (公証役場 — kōshō yakuba) — adds cost (~JPY 52,000) and time 3. Deposit capital; obtain bank certificate 4. File with Legal Affairs Bureau 5. Timeline: 2–4 weeks from start to finish
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Step 4: Banking
Japanese banking for foreign-owned companies is notoriously difficult:
- Major Japanese banks (Mitsubishi UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui, Mizuho, Japan Post Bank):
- Require a Japanese-speaking representative at account opening
- Extensive documentation in Japanese
- Long approval processes (2–4 months is common)
- High rejection rates for companies without Japanese employees or established business relationships
Regional banks and credit unions: Occasionally more accessible for established businesses with local ties.
FinTech alternatives: PayPay Bank (formerly Japan Net Bank), GMO Aozora Net Bank, UI Bank. More accessible but limited functionality for international transfers.
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Corporate tax rates
| Tax | Rate |
|---|---|
| Corporate Income Tax (national) | 23.2% |
| Local Corporate Tax (national surcharge) | 4.4% of corporate tax |
| Business Tax (metropolitan/prefectural) | Varies; ~3.6% on taxable income |
| Special Business Tax | Varies |
| **Total effective rate (Tokyo, large company)** | **~33–34%** |
Smaller companies (capital ≤JPY 100M) qualify for reduced rates on first JPY 8M income.
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Real cost (Year 1)
| Item | Cost (JPY) |
|---|---|
| Notary fee (KK only) | JPY 52,000 |
| Legal Affairs Bureau registration fee | JPY 60,000 (KK); JPY 60,000 (GK) |
| Shihō shoshi professional fee | JPY 150,000–400,000 |
| Company seal | JPY 5,000–20,000 |
| Accountant | JPY 200,000–600,000 |
| **Total (KK)** | **JPY 467,000–1,132,000 (~USD 3,100–7,600)** |
| **Total (GK)** | **JPY 415,000–1,080,000 (~USD 2,750–7,200)** |
Related Guide
Read the complete formation guide for this country — structures, costs, taxes, banking, and visas.
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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.