Studies
JP

Studying in Japan as an American: Complete Guide 2026

Student visa, MEXT scholarship, tuition, university ranking – everything Americans need to study in Japan.

Capital
Tokyo
Language
Japanese
Currency
Â¥ JPY
Timezone / Local time
UTC+9
Electricity
100V / Type A-B
Visa
Student Visa (COE)
Student Visa
COE required
Tuition/year
$6,000–12,000 (public)
MEXT Scholarship
Full tuition + ¥117K/mo
US Students in Japan
~6,000/year
Safety
9/10
Internet
195 Mbps
Prepare my trip0/12

Before departure

During stay

  • Register at ward office within 14 days
  • Enroll in National Health Insurance
  • Apply for part-time work permission
  • Get student commuter transit pass

Studying in Japan as an American student

Japan hosts approximately 6,000 American students annually, making it a top study abroad destination in Asia. From prestigious universities like University of Tokyo (UTokyo) and Kyoto University to language schools and specialized programs, Japan offers world-class education with a unique cultural immersion.

The MEXT Scholarship (Japanese government scholarship) is one of the most generous in the world: full tuition coverage plus a ¥117,000/month stipend for undergraduates (¥242,000 for research students), plus round-trip airfare.

Public university tuition averages ¥535,800/year (~$3,600) – a fraction of US college costs. Even private universities (¥1–1.8M/year) are competitive compared to American tuition.

This guide covers student visa requirements, scholarships, realistic budgets, and practical tips for American students.

Student visa for Americans

Type
Student Visa (College Student)
Duration
Duration of program (1–4 years)
Cost
Â¥3,000 (~$20) + COE processing
Processing
3–4 months
Required documents
  • Admission letter from approved Japanese institution
  • Certificate of Eligibility (COE) from school
  • Proof of financial support (Â¥2M+ in savings or sponsor)
  • Academic transcripts and diploma
  • Valid US passport
  • Passport-size photo (4x3cm)

Student visa for Americans studying in Japan

American students need a Student Visa (ryuugaku visa) for studies exceeding 90 days. The process:

  1. Get accepted at a Japanese university, language school, or program.
  2. Your school applies for a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) through Japanese immigration (takes 1-3 months).
  3. Once COE arrives, apply for the student visa at a Japanese consulate in the US.
  4. Visa is typically issued within 1 week of application.

Work permission: Students can apply for permission to work up to 28 hours/week during term (40 hours during breaks). Many students work part-time at konbini, restaurants, or English tutoring.

Financial requirement: You must demonstrate access to approximately ¥2,000,000 (~$13,500) in savings or a sponsor's financial guarantee.

Student budget in Japan

Budget (Public Uni)
$1,200–1,800/ per month
  • Dormitory ($200–400)
  • Cooking + cafeteria ($300–400)
  • Transport ($50–100)
  • Tuition ~$300/mo (public uni)
  • Books & supplies ($50)
Comfortable
$2,000–2,800/ per month
  • Private apartment ($600–900)
  • Mixed dining ($400–600)
  • Transport + phone ($150)
  • Tuition ~$500/mo (private uni)
  • Social & activities ($200)
Premium (Private Uni)
$3,000+/ per month
  • Nice apartment ($1,000+)
  • Dining out ($700+)
  • Private uni tuition ($800+/mo)
  • Travel & lifestyle ($500+)

The studies budget in Japan depends on your lifestyle and chosen city.

Internet & connectivity

Staying connected as a student in Japan

Campus WiFi is standard at all universities. For mobile, student-friendly options include LINEMO (¥990/month for 3GB), Povo (pay-as-you-go), or Rakuten Mobile (¥1,078/month for 3GB). Most cafés and konbini offer free WiFi.

Download LINE – it's the primary messaging app in Japan (like WhatsApp/iMessage combined). Everyone uses it, including professors and landlords.

Average speed: 200 Mbps

Financial tips for American students

Tax & financial tips for American students

US taxes: Even as a student abroad, US citizens must file with the IRS. However, most students earn below the filing threshold. If you work part-time in Japan, the income may be exempt under the US-Japan tax treaty student article.

Japanese taxes: Part-time income under ¥1,030,000/year is generally tax-free. Above this, a flat 10% resident tax applies.

FAFSA: You can use federal financial aid at some approved Japanese institutions. Check the Federal School Code list.

Banking: Open a Japan Post Bank or Shinsei Bank account (both accept foreigners easily). Wise or Revolut offer cheap transfers from US accounts.

Steps to study in Japan as an American

Application Phase

  • Research programs: JASSO, university websites, JET for teaching
  • Apply 6-12 months before start date
  • Apply for MEXT Scholarship through Japanese Embassy (April deadline)
  • Obtain official transcripts and diploma translations
  • Take JLPT if applying for Japanese-taught programs

Pre-Departure

  • Receive COE from your school
  • Apply for Student Visa at Japanese consulate
  • Apply for campus housing or search for apartments
  • Get health insurance (NHI enrollment on arrival)
  • Order eSIM or rent pocket WiFi
  • Register with STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment)

Arrival

  • Register at ward office within 14 days
  • Enroll in National Health Insurance (30% copay)
  • Open bank account (bring passport + residence card)
  • Apply for part-time work permission at immigration
  • Get student commuter pass for discounted transit
  • Attend orientation and register for classes

Pros & challenges of studying in Japan

Advantages

  • MEXT scholarship: full tuition + monthly stipend + airfare
  • Public university tuition fraction of US costs (~$3,600/year)
  • World-class research institutions (UTokyo, Kyoto, Tohoku)
  • Unique cultural immersion experience
  • Can work 28 hours/week part-time
  • Japan is the safest country for students
  • English-taught programs growing rapidly
  • Gateway to careers in Asia's largest economies

Challenges

  • Language barrier for daily life (campus may be in English)
  • Student visa processing takes 3-4 months
  • Limited MEXT scholarship spots (highly competitive)
  • Different academic culture (hierarchy, group work emphasis)
  • Housing can be expensive in Tokyo
  • Part-time work restricted to 28 hours/week
  • Cultural adjustment to indirect communication style
  • Far from family (13+ hour flight to US mainland)

Resources for American students

Public university tuition in Japan is ~¥535,800/year (~$3,600) vs $10,000–40,000+ in the US. Private universities cost ¥1–1.8M/year (~$6,700–12,000). With MEXT scholarship, tuition is free plus you get a stipend.

Yes, with a part-time work permit (applied for on arrival). Students can work up to 28 hours/week during term and 40 hours/week during breaks. Common jobs: konbini staff, English tutoring, restaurant work.

Not necessarily. Many universities offer English-taught degree programs (Global 30/SGU initiative). However, for daily life and deeper cultural integration, basic Japanese (JLPT N4-N3) is strongly recommended.

The Japanese Government (MEXT) Scholarship covers full tuition, a monthly stipend (¥117,000 for undergrads, ¥242,000 for researchers), and round-trip airfare. Applications go through Japanese embassies, typically due in April.

Yes. Japan offers a post-graduation job-hunting visa (Designated Activities) for up to 1 year. If you find employment, you can switch to a work visa. The HSP visa is also available for qualified graduates.