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Data updated 2026-06-22 · Sources: World Bank, Numbeo, WhereNext, EF EPI

Moving to Japan from the US: Cost, Visa, and Healthcare Guide

Real cost of living data, visa requirements, healthcare, and tax information for Americans relocating to Japan. All figures from public economic data.

Quality of Life Score
0/100
Excellent destination
Visa (US Passport)
Visa-free · 90 days
English Level
Moderate (446)
Tax System
Worldwide

WHAT JAPAN IS ACTUALLY LIKE

J apan is not as expensive as Americans think it is. That assumption gets packed with every suitcase, and it falls apart within the first week of grocery shopping. The yen has been weak for years, and while Tokyo has a reputation built on 1990s pricing mythology, living in Japan today runs roughly 10% cheaper than the US on average. Osaka and Fukuoka, two genuinely great cities that don't require you to sacrifice anything meaningful, come in around $2,000 a month for a single person. What's actually expensive is flying in and out, and the particular American habit of wanting a large apartment. Shrink the square footage expectations and the math gets very comfortable, very fast.

For Americans moving to Japan, the monthly budget reality is more forgiving than the reputation. A single person can live well in Tokyo for around $2,250 a month, and comfortably in Osaka or Fukuoka for closer to $2,000. Healthcare is exceptional, ranked 9 out of 10, and the national health insurance system covers foreign residents once you register at your local ward office, which is a mandatory early step anyway. The bureaucracy is thorough and paper-heavy, but it is organized and predictable, which is a different experience entirely from bureaucracy that is chaotic. Expect forms, stamps, and in-person appointments for almost everything. Banking as a foreigner takes time, sometimes weeks, which catches people off guard. Most Americans set up a Wise account before they leave home for exactly this reason, since it works at Japanese ATMs and handles the gap while you wait for a local account to clear.

The Japan expat experience tends to divide along one fault line: people who find the cultural codes fascinating versus people who find them exhausting. Japan runs on a set of unspoken social contracts, and while locals are extraordinarily polite and helpful, genuine integration is slow and the language barrier is real. English proficiency here is moderate at best, and outside Tokyo's tourist corridors or international business districts, you will need some Japanese for daily life. What Americans consistently report as a surprise on the upside is the infrastructure. Trains run on time, the internet is perfect, streets are genuinely safe at any hour, and the food at every price point is better than they expected. What takes adjustment is the apartments, the working culture if you're employed locally, and a social life that can feel arms-length for years before it opens up.

In the first weeks, register at your ward office as soon as possible since everything else, including healthcare enrollment, a phone plan, and your residence card paperwork, flows from that visit. Get a Suica or IC card at any major train station on arrival, it handles transit and convenience store purchases across the country. Learn twenty words of Japanese before you land, not for fluency, but because the effort lands differently here than almost anywhere else and doors open. If you are scoping out cities beyond Tokyo, take the shinkansen to Osaka or Fukuoka early, since both are serious contenders for Americans moving to Japan who want lower costs and a slightly slower pace without giving up anything urban. The country rewards people who show up with patience and genuine curiosity, and it has a way of keeping them far longer than they planned.

COST OF LIVING SNAPSHOT

Living in Japan is approximately 10% cheaper than the United States. A single person spends around $2700/month on average, excluding rent.

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Why Americans Move to Japan

Based on real, publicly sourced economic and quality-of-life data

Healthcare rated 9/10 with quality care at a fraction of US costs
Ranked 9/10 for safety, well above the global average
Digital Nomad Visa available, giving remote workers a clear legal path to stay long-term
Fast, reliable internet that works well for remote work

Why Japan Might Not Be Right for You

Honest considerations before you commit

! Lower English proficiency may mean a real language barrier in daily life
! Worldwide taxation means you may owe local tax in addition to US filing obligations

Typical Monthly Budget in Japan

Excluding rent · Based on World Bank ICP and Eurostat data via WhereNext

Single Person
$2700
per month
Couple
$4200
per month
Cost Index
74
US = 82

Getting Around Japan

Practical logistics for everyday life

LAND BORDERS
None (island nation)
DRIVING SIDE
Left
TIME ZONE
UTC+09:00
CURRENCY
Japanese yen

Quality of Life in Japan

8 metrics from independent public data sources

Safety 9/10
1.489 GPI score (lower = safer)
Among the safer countries globally
Healthcare 9/10
86 UHC coverage index
Top-tier healthcare infrastructure
Happiness 6/10
6.13 /10 WHR score
Generally positive quality of life
Pollution 7/10
60.8 Numbeo pollution index
Generally good air quality
Internet 10/10
255.27 Mbps avg speed
Among the fastest connections worldwide
Traffic 9/10
2121.6 min/year in traffic
Minimal time lost to congestion
Unemployment 10/10
2.45 % unemployment
Strong, stable job market
Human Development 9/10
0.925 HDI score (UNDP)
Very high human development

Healthcare for Americans in Japan

Japan rates 9/10 for healthcare quality on the UHC Service Coverage Index. US health insurance typically does not cover care abroad. Most expats and digital nomads get international health insurance instead.

Global health coverage from $45/month, no US address required Get a SafetyWing quote →

Visa & Residency in Japan

US passport holders can enter Japan visa-free · 90 days. A digital nomad visa is available for remote workers seeking longer-term residency.

Taxes for Americans in Japan

Japan uses a worldwide tax system. US citizens are required to file US federal taxes regardless of where they live. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) may reduce or eliminate US tax liability on foreign-earned income up to a certain threshold.

Confused about FEIE and double taxation? Get expert help from expat tax specialists. Get tax help →

Day to Day Life

Internet speeds average 255.27 Mbps. Commuters spend around 2,122 minutes per year in traffic. The Numbeo Pollution Index sits at 60.8, among the cleaner readings globally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Japan safe for Americans?
Japan ranks 9/10 for safety on the Global Peace Index, well above the global average. Like anywhere, safety varies by neighborhood, so research specific areas before committing.
Do Americans need a visa for Japan?
US passport holders can typically enter Japan visa-free for up to 90 days. Long-term residency requires a separate visa or residence permit application.
How much tax do Americans pay in Japan?
Japan uses worldwide taxation, meaning local tax may apply to your global income in addition to US filing obligations. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) may reduce US tax liability. Consult a tax professional specializing in expat taxes.
Does Japan have a digital nomad visa?
Yes, Japan offers a digital nomad visa or remote work permit for foreigners earning income from outside the country. Requirements typically include proof of remote income and health insurance.
What is the cost of living in Japan compared to the US?
Living in Japan is approximately 10% cheaper than the United States. A single person can expect to spend around $2700/month on average, excluding rent.
Is English widely spoken in Japan?
Japan has moderate English proficiency (EF EPI score of 446). English is commonly understood in cities and tourist areas, but learning basic local phrases is recommended.

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