Japan quintuples visa fees in first price hike since 1978
Japan has quintupled its visa fees for all foreigners, with the first price increase since 1978 taking effect on July 1st. Single-entry visas now cost 15,000 yen, up from 3,000 yen, and multi-entry visas are 30,000 yen, an increase from 6,000 yen.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedJapan has quintupled its visa fees for all foreigners, with the first price increase since 1978 taking effect on July 1st. Single-entry visas now cost 15,000 yen, up from 3,000 yen, and multi-entry visas are 30,000 yen, an increase from 6,000 yen. Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi stated the revisions are to "reflect inflation and exchange rate fluctuations" and do not expect an "immediate impact on inbound tourism." This change occurs as the Japanese yen weakens and inbound tourism surges, with Japan welcoming a record 42.7 million international tourists last year. Other fees relevant to foreigners, such as permanent residency applications and changes to residency status, have also seen significant increases.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe statutory upper limit for permanent residency applications will go up to 300,000 yen.
The Japanese yen is hovering near historic 40-year lows.
The fee revisions are to 'reflect inflation and exchange rate fluctuations'.
Single-entry visa fees increased from 3,000 yen to 15,000 yen; multi-entry visas from 6,000 yen to 30,000 yen.
Japan has quintupled visa fees for foreigners, the first increase since 1978.