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Property Management for Overseas Owners in Japan
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Property Management for Overseas Owners in Japan

Complete guide to managing Japanese property from abroad. Learn about management companies, fees, tax obligations, overseas remittances, and tools for non-resident owners.

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Property Management for Overseas Owners in Japan: The Complete Guide

Owning property in Japan while living abroad is an increasingly popular investment strategy — and for good reason. Japan offers stable rental demand, relatively affordable entry prices in many cities, and a legal framework that explicitly allows foreign ownership. But managing that property from thousands of miles away is a different challenge altogether.

From finding a management company willing to work with non-residents, to understanding tax obligations, navigating overseas remittances, and keeping up with regulatory changes, overseas owners face a unique set of hurdles. This guide covers everything you need to know to successfully manage Japanese property from abroad — including legal requirements, management costs, recommended companies, and the technology tools that make remote ownership practical.

Whether you own a Tokyo condominium, an Osaka apartment, or a rural akiya (vacant house), the information here will help you protect your investment and maximize returns.


Who Can Own and Manage Property in Japan as a Non-Resident?

Japan has no restrictions on foreign nationals owning real estate. Whether you are a tourist, a permanent resident abroad, or hold no connection to Japan whatsoever, you can legally purchase and own property. This is one of the most foreigner-friendly ownership frameworks in Asia.

However, non-resident ownership comes with specific legal obligations:

  • You must appoint a Japanese tax agent (zeirishi or zeimu dairinin): This is legally required for any non-resident property owner. Your tax agent receives notices from the National Tax Agency, files your annual income tax return, and handles any tax payments on your behalf. Without one, tax notices go undelivered and you risk penalties or enforcement actions.
  • Since April 2024 — Domestic Contact Registration: An amendment to Japan's Real Estate Registration Law now requires foreign owners without a Japanese address to register a domestic emergency contact person in the property registry. This contact acts as a liaison for local authorities in cases of emergencies, legal matters, or natural disasters.
  • Real estate registration: The property must be registered in your name (or a corporate entity's name) with the local Legal Affairs Bureau. You will need a valid ID and, for foreign nationals, a Certificate of Residence or equivalent document depending on your country.

If you are exploring the initial purchase process, our guide on legal procedures and documentation for Japan property purchase covers the step-by-step requirements.


Finding a Property Management Company That Accepts Overseas Owners

This is where many overseas investors hit their first major obstacle: not all property management companies in Japan will work with non-resident foreign owners.

Standard Japanese management firms are designed for domestic clients. Overseas ownership introduces complications they are not equipped to handle:

  • International bank transfers require additional compliance documentation
  • Communication in English (or other languages) is outside their scope
  • Tax arrangements for non-residents are unfamiliar to standard firms

Specialist Companies for Overseas Owners

The following firms explicitly cater to overseas and non-resident property owners in Japan:

CompanyLanguagesCoverageSpecialty
Wagaya Japan PM&LEnglish, Chinese, VietnameseNationwideResidential rentals, 17,000+ units
Axios ManagementEnglishTokyo, OsakaCondominiums, master lease arrangements
PLAZA HOMESEnglishGreater TokyoExpat residential management
RISE Corp.EnglishTokyo85%+ of clients are overseas-based
Nihon ZaitakuEnglish, Chinese, KoreanMajor cities30+ years of rental management
AKIYA2.0EnglishAll 47 prefecturesRural/akiya specialist, from ¥15,000/month
MonoHausEnglishNationwideRural property and akiya management

Key tip: Always ask prospective managers explicitly whether they handle overseas remittances, how they communicate with foreign clients, and whether they can provide English-language monthly statements.

For a broader look at the property landscape, see our Japan real estate market overview and trends.


Understanding Property Management Fees and Costs

Property management in Japan is not cheap — and overseas owners often face higher costs than domestic clients due to the added complexity of international arrangements.

Standard Fee Structure

Fee TypeTypical RangeNotes
Monthly management fee5–10% of gross rentOften 5% for standard; specialist firms charge more
Flat monthly fee¥20,000–¥80,000/monthAlternative to percentage-based
Tenant placement~1 month's rentOne-time charge per new tenant
Lease renewal¥30,000–¥100,000Charged at each 2-year renewal
Setup/onboarding fee¥50,000–¥200,000One-time charge when starting service
Annual tax preparation¥100,000–¥300,000If manager also handles tax filing
Emergency repairsCost + 10–20% markupVaries by company
Overseas remittance fee¥2,000–¥5,000 per transferOr percentage of transfer amount

Total Cost Example

For a Tokyo condominium renting at ¥150,000/month:

  • Management fee (7%): ¥10,500/month
  • Annual tenant placement (assuming 2-year tenure): ~¥12,500/month amortized
  • Tax preparation: ~¥8,300/month amortized
  • Estimated total annual overhead: ¥375,000–¥500,000

This means your effective net yield on a ¥30 million property at ¥150,000/month rent (~6% gross) may come down to 4.5–5% net after management costs — still competitive by international standards.

Our article on property taxes and annual costs of owning property in Japan provides a full breakdown of ongoing ownership expenses.


Tax Obligations for Non-Resident Property Owners

Tax compliance is one of the most important — and most overlooked — aspects of owning Japanese property from abroad.

Income Tax on Rental Income

Rental income earned from Japanese property is subject to Japanese income tax, regardless of where you live. Non-residents are taxed only on Japan-sourced income.

Progressive tax rates apply:

  • Up to ¥1.95 million: 5%
  • ¥1.95M–¥3.3M: 10%
  • ¥3.3M–¥6.95M: 20%
  • ¥6.95M–¥9M: 23%
  • Above ¥18M: 40%

Deductible expenses include: management fees, property taxes, insurance, depreciation, repairs, and loan interest (if applicable).

Withholding Tax on Corporate Tenants

If your tenant is a corporation (rather than an individual), the tenant is required to withhold 20.42% of your rent and remit it to the tax authority. This is a common surprise for overseas landlords.

One solution offered by specialist managers is a master lease arrangement: the management company becomes the formal tenant, then subleases to the actual occupant. Since the management company pays you (an individual non-resident), no corporate withholding applies.

Consumption Tax

Generally, residential rentals are exempt from Japan's 10% consumption tax. However, if you operate a short-term rental (Airbnb, etc.) or commercial property, consumption tax may apply once your annual taxable sales exceed ¥10 million.

For detailed guidance, consult our legal procedures and documentation for Japan property purchase overview and speak with a qualified Japanese tax agent.


Handling Overseas Remittances: The Biggest Practical Challenge

Of all the logistics involved in overseas property ownership, getting your rental income transferred to your foreign bank account is consistently cited as the greatest friction point.

Japan's financial institutions have significantly tightened anti-money laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements in recent years. This means:

  • Management companies must verify the identity of all overseas recipients
  • Some Japanese banks now require extensive documentation for regular international transfers
  • Certain management companies have stopped accepting overseas clients entirely because of this burden

Practical Solutions

1. Open a Japanese bank account: If you have or obtain a Japanese resident registration (jūminhyō) — even temporarily — you can open a Japanese bank account. This simplifies transfers and reduces compliance friction.

2. Use specialist transfer services: Services like Wise and Revolut offer lower fees and faster international transfers than traditional bank wires. Confirm with your management company whether they can remit to these accounts.

3. Master lease arrangements: As noted above, this changes the payment flow and may simplify remittance documentation.

4. Retain a portion in Japan: Some overseas owners retain a Japanese account or Japanese-based trust to hold rental income, then transfer larger sums less frequently — reducing per-transfer compliance burdens.


Technology Tools for Managing Property Remotely

Modern technology makes remote property ownership far more practical than it was even five years ago.

Document and Communication Management

  • DocuSign / HelloSign: Electronic signing for lease agreements, contracts, and renewal documents
  • Google Drive / Dropbox / Notion: Cloud storage for all property documents, receipts, inspection reports
  • WhatsApp / Slack / Zoom: Real-time communication with your property manager, including photo/video sharing

Financial Management

  • Wise / Revolut: Cost-effective international transfers with real exchange rates
  • Freee / MoneyForward: Cloud-based accounting software with English-language support (or English-speaking accountants who use them)

Property Monitoring

  • Ring / Arlo smart cameras: For properties you own directly (vacation homes, akiya), remote visual monitoring
  • IoT water leak sensors: Detect leaks early before they become expensive damage claims
  • Smart locks (August, MIWA): Remote access management for short-term rentals

Rental Platforms

  • Suumo / Homes.co.jp / LIFULL: Long-term rental listing platforms (your manager will handle these)
  • Airbnb / Booking.com: Short-term rental platforms if you hold a minpaku license

For rural property owners, the Old Houses Japan blog has an excellent breakdown of tools specifically suited to managing akiya and countryside properties from abroad.


Short-Term vs. Long-Term Rentals: What's Right for Overseas Owners?

The choice between short-term (vacation/minpaku) and long-term (standard lease) rental significantly affects your management approach.

FactorLong-Term RentalShort-Term (Minpaku)
StabilityHigh — 2-year contracts standardLow — seasonal and market-dependent
Gross yield (Tokyo)3.4%–5.4%6%–10% (before expenses)
Management complexityModerateHigh — turnover, cleaning, guest support
Minpaku license requiredNoYes — 180-day cap in most areas
Suitable for overseas managementYesRequires dedicated local operator
Regulatory riskLowHigher — rules change frequently

For most overseas owners, long-term residential rentals are the more practical choice. The stable income, lower management intensity, and reduced regulatory risk outweigh the higher potential yield of short-term rentals — especially when you cannot be physically present.

If you are considering purchasing property specifically as an investment rental, our complete guide to buying property in Japan as a foreigner covers the acquisition side in detail.


Special Considerations: Akiya and Rural Property Management

Overseas ownership of rural Japanese properties — including akiya (vacant houses) purchased through municipal programs — requires a completely different management approach.

Standard property managers are unfamiliar with:

  • Older wooden structures requiring traditional carpentry repairs
  • Septic tank (jōkasō) maintenance
  • Snow load and roof management in high-snowfall areas (Hokkaido, Niigata, etc.)
  • Irrigation or agricultural land obligations attached to rural parcels
  • Minpaku licensing requirements specific to rural municipalities

Recommended specialist services:

  • AKIYA2.0: Covers all 47 prefectures, starting at approximately ¥15,000/month for liaison services. Focuses on connecting overseas owners with vetted local tradespeople and managers.
  • MonoHaus: Specializes in older Japanese homes and provides comprehensive property caretaking for overseas owners.

For more on rural property ownership, see our dedicated guide on rural and countryside properties in Japan for foreigners.


Practical Checklist for Overseas Property Owners

Before your purchase is complete and management begins, ensure you have:

  • [ ] Appointed a Japanese tax agent (legally required)
  • [ ] Registered a domestic contact person in the property registry (required since April 2024 if no Japanese address)
  • [ ] Signed a management agreement with a firm that explicitly handles overseas clients
  • [ ] Confirmed how and when rental income will be remitted internationally
  • [ ] Established a filing system for all property documents (cloud storage recommended)
  • [ ] Set up a Japanese bank account if possible
  • [ ] Confirmed insurance coverage (fire, liability, earthquake)
  • [ ] Understood the tax implications for your specific situation and country of residence

Further Resources

For expats and overseas investors navigating life and property in Japan, the following resources provide valuable context and guidance:


Conclusion

Managing property in Japan from overseas is entirely feasible — but it requires careful preparation, the right professional partners, and an understanding of Japan's specific legal and financial requirements.

The key steps are: appoint a tax agent, find a management company that truly specializes in overseas clients, understand your cost structure, set up reliable remittance arrangements, and leverage technology to stay informed and in control.

Japan's rental market remains one of the most stable in Asia. With the right management infrastructure in place, your Japanese property can deliver consistent returns for years to come — even from the other side of the world.

For your next steps, explore our related guides on mortgages and home loans for foreigners in Japan and hidden costs and fees when buying property in Japan.

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