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Residence Card Check / Permission for Other Activities

Permission to Engage in Other Activities in Japan | Residence Card and 28-Hour Rule

Permission to Engage in Other Activities is an immigration permission required when a foreign national in Japan engages in paid activities outside the scope of their current status of residence. This is especially important for students, dependents, side jobs, freelance-style activities, and employer-side Residence Card checks.

When this permission may be required

In Japan, each status of residence has a specific permitted scope of activities. If a foreign national intends to engage in income-generating activities or receive remuneration outside the scope of their current status, they should confirm whether Permission to Engage in Other Activities is required before starting.

For example, Student status is primarily for study, and Dependent status is primarily for staying in Japan as a family member. If a student or dependent wishes to work part-time, this permission is usually a key issue.

Important: Working without the required permission may affect future extension applications, change of status applications, permanent residence applications, and future immigration screening. Employers may also face illegal employment facilitation risks.
Reviewing immigration documents for permission to engage in other activities in Japan
Permission to Engage in Other Activities requires careful review of the proposed activity, working hours, and immigration documents.

Typical applicants

Students working part-time

International students generally need permission before working part-time in Japan. Working hour restrictions, long school holiday rules, prohibited business categories, and consistency with study purpose should be checked.

Dependents working part-time

A person with Dependent status usually needs permission before engaging in paid work such as part-time employment. Working hours, financial dependency, and renewal explanations should be considered.

Side jobs or different activities

Even work-status holders may need careful review when engaging in side jobs, outsourcing, freelance-style work, or activities that are different from their main permitted activity.

Check the back of the Residence Card

Permission to Engage in Other Activities may be shown on the back of the Japanese Residence Card. However, a notation on the card does not mean that any type of work is freely permitted.

You should check the type of permission, activity content, working hours, workplace, and relationship with the original status of residence. For students and dependents, the 28-hour rule is often a major issue. Employers should also check the Residence Card, status of residence, expiry date, and permission notation before employment starts.

  • Check both the front and back of the Residence Card.
  • Confirm whether the permission is a 28-hour blanket permission or an individual permission for a specific activity.
  • Confirm whether the job duties, workplace, and working hours match the permission.
  • Before renewal or change of status, review working hours, income, school attendance, and financial dependency.

Blanket permission and individual permission

Permission to Engage in Other Activities is generally discussed as blanket permission or individual permission. Blanket permission is often used for part-time activities within 28 hours per week. Activities outside that scope, freelance-style work, outsourcing, side businesses, or activities that require specific review may require individual permission.

Practical point: Having permission does not automatically mean that every paid activity is allowed. Remuneration, contract type, working hours, job duties, and the relationship with the current status of residence should be checked in each case.

Important points to avoid immigration problems

  • Do not start working before obtaining the required permission.
  • For students, school attendance and academic consistency may also become relevant.
  • For dependents, financial dependency and household circumstances should be reviewed.
  • Side jobs by work-status holders require careful review of the permitted scope of the current status.
  • Employers should check the Residence Card, expiry date, permission notation, and working hour management.
  • If the Residence Card alone is not enough, also check the passport sticker, permission document, and application details.

How we review the case

We first confirm the current status of residence, expiry date, proposed activity, workplace, working conditions, working hours, and remuneration. We then consider whether Permission to Engage in Other Activities is sufficient, whether individual permission is required, or whether Change of Status of Residence should be considered.

Check the current status of residence
We confirm the Residence Card, expiry date, and current permitted activities.
Confirm the proposed activity
We review the workplace, job duties, working hours, remuneration, and employment or contract type.
Determine whether permission is required
We consider whether blanket permission is enough, individual permission is needed, or a change of status may be more appropriate.
Prepare the necessary documents
We check applicant-side documents and materials explaining the activity and working conditions.
Application or legal-status review
Depending on the case, we assist with the permission application, review in connection with renewal or change, or employer-side compliance check.

How Tommy’s Legal Service can support you

Applicant and family support

We help students, dependents, and work-status holders confirm whether the proposed activity is allowed under the current status of residence.

  • Review of whether permission is required
  • Residence Card and permission notation check
  • Explanation of working hour and activity restrictions
  • Review of possible impact on renewal or change of status
Employer-side compliance check

Before hiring a foreign national for part-time work, side work, outsourcing, or freelance-style work, employers should confirm whether the person can legally engage in the proposed activity.

  • Residence Card check points
  • Permission notation review
  • Working hour management
  • Prevention of illegal employment facilitation risk
Impact on renewal or change

If the person has already been working, we review whether working hours, income, school attendance, or financial dependency may become an issue in the next immigration application.

Frequently asked questions

Where is Permission to Engage in Other Activities shown on the Residence Card?

It may be shown on the back of the Residence Card. However, if the card notation is unclear, it may also be necessary to check the passport sticker, permission document, and application details.

Can I work if there is no permission notation on my Residence Card?

If the activity is outside the scope of your current status of residence, you should confirm whether permission is required before starting. Do not start a paid activity that requires permission before the permission is granted.

Does the 28-hour rule apply across multiple part-time jobs?

In practice, working hours should be managed as a total, not only by each workplace. If you have multiple part-time jobs, keep accurate work records.

Do dependents need this permission to work part-time?

A person with Dependent status usually needs Permission to Engage in Other Activities before engaging in paid work such as part-time employment. Financial dependency and household circumstances should also be considered.

What should employers check?

Employers should check the Residence Card, status of residence, expiry date, and the permission notation on the back of the card. They should also confirm whether job duties and working hours match the permission.

Official references

Please also check the latest information from the Immigration Services Agency of Japan.

Unsure whether you can work or hire?

Permission to Engage in Other Activities depends on the current status of residence, proposed activity, working hours, remuneration, contract type, workplace, and timing of renewal or change of status. If you are unsure whether you can work, or whether you can hire a foreign national, please confirm the situation before the activity starts.