Japan Pays You ¥3 Million ($20K) to Move — Here Is How to Qualify
Japanese towns offer up to ¥3 million cash for families who relocate. We explain which programs are open to foreigners, how to apply, and what property you can buy with the subsidy.
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Akiya Japan Library
Guides, analysis and legal updates
65 articles
Japanese towns offer up to ¥3 million cash for families who relocate. We explain which programs are open to foreigners, how to apply, and what property you can buy with the subsidy.
Pre-1981 vs post-1981 building codes, seismic retrofitting methods and costs, government subsidies, earthquake insurance, and why structural assessment is the first money you should spend.
Kurobe sits at the gateway to Unazuki Onsen and the Kurobe Gorge — two hours from Tokyo by Shinkansen, with property from ¥100,000. Here is what buyers need to know about this onsen town in Toyama Prefecture.
Visa options, internet speeds, coworking alternatives, and a full cost breakdown showing why buying an akiya beats paying Tokyo rent on a remote salary.
Demolition costs, tax traps, building restrictions, and the financial framework for deciding when a vacant lot beats a standing structure in Japan.
Our data reveals most serious akiya buyers want train access, convenience stores, and hospitals nearby — not remote mountain villages. Here's why suburban beats rural.
Municipal akiya banks offer bargain prices and renovation subsidies. Private listings offer transparency and speed. Here's what each path actually costs and how the process works for foreign buyers.
Your guide to jichikai membership, seasonal duties, gift-giving customs, and the unwritten social rules that make or break life in rural Japan.
Yes, houses in Japan sell for under $5,000 — but the price tag is just the beginning. Here is what these properties actually look like, what they really cost, and how to avoid the most expensive mistakes.
How Japan fiscal year, tax calendar, weather patterns, and holiday shutdowns create buying windows — and pitfalls — for foreign property buyers. Month-by-month guide.
Managing Japanese property from overseas: tax representatives, management companies, decay prevention, and the real costs of remote ownership. Practical guide for foreign owners.
The 12-point inspection checklist for buying akiya in Japan. Roof, foundation, termites, plumbing, earthquake codes — what to check before you sign.