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This page about Work Visa / Gijinkoku support is also available in Japanese.

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Tommy’s Legal Service
Gijinkoku, work visa and foreign employment support in Japan
Work Visa / Gijinkoku Support

Work Visa / Gijinkoku Support in Japan
Engineer, Humanities and International Services

Tommy’s Legal Service supports foreign employment and work visa applications in Japan from practical immigration perspectives: job duties, the applicant’s education and work history, employer documents, employment contract, and current Immigration Bureau practice.

We assist with Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services, Certificate of Eligibility, Change of Status, Extension of Period of Stay, renewal after job change, and responses to additional document requests.

One of the most common work-related statuses of residence in Japan is Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services. In practice, this status is often called “Gijinkoku” or simply a “work visa.”

However, a work visa is not approved simply because a Japanese company wants to hire a foreign national. Immigration reviews the applicant’s education, major, work experience, employment contract, proposed job duties, salary, work location, and the consistency of employer-side documents.

Practical immigration support for employers and foreign nationals in Japan

Applicant-side review

We review education, major, work history, current status of residence, job-change history, tax, social insurance, and past application history.

Employer-side review

We check the company’s business, employment contract, job description, salary, work location, company documents, representative, and acceptance structure.

Immigration practice

We organize job duty explanations, statements of reasons, dispatch or outsourcing issues, and additional document responses based on actual immigration practice.

Foreign employment consultation and work visa document review in Japan
In Gijinkoku and work visa cases, the employer’s explanation of job duties, employment conditions, and acceptance structure is just as important as the applicant’s background.

Who this page is for

  • Companies planning to hire foreign employees in Japan
  • Employers hiring international students after graduation
  • Companies inviting foreign nationals from overseas
  • Foreign nationals changing jobs in Japan
  • Applicants who are worried about renewal after a job change
  • Employers who want to confirm whether the proposed duties fit Gijinkoku
  • Hotels, trading companies, IT companies, marketing teams, design firms, and employers using foreign-language skills
  • Category 3 or Category 4 employers, newly established companies, and companies with foreign national representatives
  • Applicants or employers who have received a request for additional documents or are concerned about refusal risk

The key issue is the actual job description

Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services is a status for professional work requiring technical knowledge, humanities knowledge, or work based on foreign culture, thinking, or sensitivity. It is not enough to simply write “office work,” “sales,” or “translation” in the application.

The application should explain what the applicant will actually do, how the duties are connected to the applicant’s education or work history, and how the work relates to the company’s actual business.

Practical point: In recent practice, consistency between the actual work and the explanation in the application documents has become especially important. If the actual work is close to simple labor or simple customer service, the case requires careful review before filing.

Main procedures we support

Procedure Typical case Practical points
Certificate of Eligibility Inviting a foreign national from overseas Company profile, employment contract, job duties, and the applicant’s education or work history must be consistent.
Change of Status Changing from Student, Dependent, Designated Activities, etc. Graduation timing, job offer, job duties, and relevance to education must be reviewed.
Extension of Period of Stay Renewal for a current Gijinkoku holder Current duties, salary, tax and social insurance, and continuity from the previous application should be checked.
Renewal after job change A foreign national changed employers in Japan Notification of contracting organization, new job duties, and transition history may become important.
Additional document response Immigration requests additional documents The request should be analyzed carefully and addressed with appropriate evidence.
Reapplication after refusal The previous application was refused The refusal reason, previous documents, and possible improvement points must be reviewed.

Important updates after April 15, 2026

For applications filed on or after April 15, 2026, additional documents may be required when the sponsoring organization falls under Category 3 or Category 4. These may include a declaration concerning the representative of the affiliated organization.

In addition, where the applicant will mainly engage in customer-facing work using language ability, such as translation, interpretation, hotel front desk work, or similar duties, evidence of CEFR B2-equivalent language ability may become relevant.

Common misunderstanding: This does not mean that every Gijinkoku applicant must pass a Japanese language test. However, where language ability is central to the proposed job, the applicant and employer should be prepared to explain the connection between the language ability and the actual duties more carefully.

Points employers should check

In Gijinkoku applications, the company-side explanation is just as important as the applicant’s background. Employers should check the following points before filing.

  • Whether the company’s business can be explained clearly.
  • Whether the proposed duties are connected to the company’s actual business.
  • Whether the employment contract, working conditions notice, and job description are consistent.
  • Whether the salary, working hours, and work location are clear.
  • Whether tax, social insurance, withholding summary records, and financial documents can be organized.
  • Whether the representative understands the application content and acceptance structure.
  • Whether dispatch, outsourcing, or client-site work relationships can be explained properly.
Reviewing job description and company documents for a Gijinkoku work visa application in Japan
Before filing, the employment contract, job description, company documents, and statement of reasons should be aligned.

Dispatch, outsourcing, and client-site work

If the applicant will work under a dispatch arrangement, at a client site, or in a structure similar to outsourcing or subcontracting, the employment relationship, work location, command structure, contract relationship, and actual job duties must be organized carefully.

Contract relationship

Employment contracts, dispatch contracts, individual service contracts, outsourcing agreements, work location, contract period, and job duties should be consistent.

Actual job duties

The duties described in the application should match the work the applicant will actually perform at the employer, dispatch destination, or client site.

Practical point: In dispatch, outsourcing, and client-site work cases, it should be clear who the employer is, where the applicant will work, who gives instructions, and what professional duties the applicant will perform.

How Tommy’s Legal Service can support you

Review of job duties

We check whether the proposed work fits Gijinkoku and whether it can be distinguished from simple labor or simple customer service.

Document checklist and review

We review applicant-side documents, company-side documents, employment contracts, statements of reasons, and supporting materials.

Statement of reasons

We prepare explanations regarding the job duties, hiring reason, company business, and connection with the applicant’s background.

Additional document responses

If Immigration requests additional documents, we review the request and prepare the necessary explanations and evidence.

English communication

We can communicate with foreign applicants in English and explain key issues to both the applicant and employer.

Post-approval guidance

We explain residence card procedures, future renewals, and required notifications after permission.

Common risk points

  • Retail sales, restaurant hall staff, factory work, or other duties close to simple labor
  • Job descriptions saying “translation” or “international sales,” while the actual work is mainly general customer service
  • Weak connection between the applicant’s university major and the proposed work
  • Vocational school graduates whose major must be directly connected to the job duties
  • Job changes without proper notification
  • Short-term resignation from the previous employer
  • Weak explanation of the company’s business, sales, or hiring structure
  • Companies with foreign national representatives where the representative’s own residence status or management involvement requires explanation
Our view: These issues do not automatically mean refusal. However, they should be reviewed and explained before filing.

Process from consultation to filing

Inquiry

We confirm the current status of residence, planned application, company information, and procedure type.

Initial consultation and document review

We review the residence card, resume, education records, employment contract, and company documents.

Quotation and engagement

We provide a quotation based on the application type, complexity, and required explanations.

Document preparation

We prepare application forms, statement of reasons, job duty explanation, and company-side documents.

Filing support

Depending on the case, we handle filing as an authorized immigration application agent.

Result and follow-up

After permission, we explain residence card procedures, future renewals, and required notifications.

Related Pages

Japan Immigration Services Overview of our support for status of residence applications, foreign employment, SSW, permanent residence, and other immigration procedures.
Certificate of Eligibility (COE) for Japan Explanation of the COE application flow for applicants entering Japan from overseas.
Immigration Service Fees Check the main professional fee categories for Gijinkoku, COE, change of status, renewal, and additional document response.

Official References

This page provides general information only. The appropriate strategy may differ depending on the applicant’s background, job duties, employer category, company documents, and previous residence history.

Need support with a work visa application in Japan?

Gijinkoku applications are reviewed based on the applicant’s background, the company’s actual business, the proposed job duties, employment conditions, and consistency of all submitted documents.

If you are an employer planning to hire a foreign national, a foreign national concerned about renewal after a job change, or someone dealing with additional documents or a previous refusal, please contact us before filing.

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