Business Manager Visa

An Overview of How Foreign Companies Expand into Japan: Subsidiary vs. Branch vs. Representative Office

For overseas companies considering expansion into Japan, the first hurdle is the choice of “what form to establish a presence in Japan in.” Broadly speaking, there are three methods: setting up a subsidiary (a Japanese corporation), establishing a branch, and opening a representative office. Each has different advantages and disadvantages, and the optimal choice changes depending on the nature and purpose of the business.

This article lays out the differences among these three forms of entry and explains in detail which method suits which kind of company, drawing in the perspectives of setup procedures, tax, and visas.

The Three Forms of Expanding into Japan

Setting Up a Subsidiary (a Japanese Corporation)

A subsidiary is a method of newly setting up an independent corporation within Japan, separate from the overseas parent company. It is the most common form of entry, and in most cases it is set up as a joint-stock company (KK) or a limited liability company (GK).

Legal independence is its greatest characteristic. Because a subsidiary is an independent corporation under Japanese law, it can fully carry out business activities in Japan—entering into contracts, opening bank accounts, hiring employees, obtaining licenses, and so on. In addition, because it is legally separated from the parent company, any debts or legal risks the subsidiary incurs do not, in principle, extend to the parent. This is also an important point from the standpoint of risk management.

Main Advantages
  • Can conduct business independently within Japan
  • Opening bank accounts and entering into contracts goes smoothly
  • Can obtain licenses (in industries that require a license, setting up a subsidiary is often a precondition)
  • Can limit the spillover of risk to the parent company
  • Easier to earn the trust of Japanese business partners and customers
Main Disadvantages
  • The setup procedures take time and cost (registration and license tax, articles of incorporation notarization fees, and so on)
  • Various obligations under Japanese law arise (financial closing, tax filings, social insurance, and so on)
  • Post-setup administrative and operating costs accrue

Flow of the Setup Procedure (for a Joint-Stock Company)

When setting up a joint-stock company as a subsidiary, the procedure proceeds roughly in the following flow.

First, you decide on the company’s basic information (trade name, head-office location, business purpose, capital, the makeup of the officers, and so on) and draw up the articles of incorporation. The articles require notarization by a notary public. Next, you pay in the capital and apply to the Legal Affairs Bureau for registration of incorporation. When registration is complete, the corporation is formally established, after which you make notifications to the tax office, the prefecture, and the municipality, carry out the procedures to enroll in social insurance, and so on.

From setup to the completion of registration usually takes around two to four weeks even when things go smoothly. It can take longer when the representative resides overseas or when gathering the required documents takes time.

Companies and Cases This Suits
  • You plan to develop a full-fledged business in Japan
  • You want to hire employees within Japan
  • Industries that require a license (food service, construction, real estate, staffing, and so on)
  • You anticipate ongoing transactions with Japanese business partners

Establishing a Branch

A branch is a form in which the overseas head office (the foreign company) establishes a business base within Japan as itself. Rather than setting up an independent corporation in Japan, you register with the Japanese Legal Affairs Bureau as part of the foreign company.

Unlike a subsidiary, a branch is legally one and the same as the head office. Transactions the branch enters into and debts it incurs ultimately belong to the head office. For that reason, you need to be careful that the branch’s activities tie directly into the head office’s risk.

Main Advantages
  • Can use the head office’s creditworthiness and brand as they are
  • Moving funds with the head office is relatively easy
  • There are cases where articles of incorporation notarization is not required, compared with setting up a subsidiary
Main Disadvantages
  • The head office directly bears the branch’s debts and legal liability
  • In obtaining licenses in Japan, there are some industries with constraints compared with a subsidiary
  • The tax treatment differs from a subsidiary and can become complex
  • Registration requires the translation and authentication of foreign-language documents such as the head office’s articles of incorporation and certificate of registration

Flow of the Setup Procedure

For branch registration, you prepare the foreign company’s certificate of registration, articles of incorporation, documents concerning its officers, and so on, attach Japanese translations, and apply to the Legal Affairs Bureau. Because there are many foreign-language documents and notarization and authentication procedures in each country are required, it is not uncommon for gathering documents to take time. You must also designate a representative in Japan (the “representative in Japan”), and that person is required to have an address within Japan.

Companies and Cases This Suits
  • You want to approach the Japanese market under the head-office brand
  • You want to keep the cost of setting up an independent corporation down to some extent
  • You anticipate business activities in an industry that does not require a license

Opening a Representative Office

A representative office is a base that does not conduct business activities in Japan. It is an office for the purposes of market research, information gathering, and liaison and coordination with the head office, and it cannot directly conduct transactions that generate sales in Japan.

Registration with the Legal Affairs Bureau is not required, making it the form with the lowest barrier to establishment. However, the constraint of being prohibited from business activities is strict, and once you reach the stage of actually running a business, transitioning to a subsidiary or a branch becomes necessary.

Main Advantages
  • Establishment costs and procedural costs are the lowest
  • No registration required (a tax notification may be needed in some cases)
  • Suited to researching and test-marketing the Japanese market
Main Disadvantages
  • Cannot conduct business activities within Japan (entering into contracts, collecting payments, and so on)
  • There is a risk of problems if it conducts business acts in substance
  • From the standpoint of status of residence, there are cases where obtaining a visa for the resident representative is harder than with a subsidiary or branch
Companies and Cases This Suits
  • You want to start with researching and gathering information on the Japanese market first
  • You will not start a full-fledged business right away
  • You want to use it as a local base for head-office decision-making

Summary Comparison of the Three Forms

Item Subsidiary (Japanese Corporation) Branch Representative Office
Legal independence Yes (an independent corporation) No (one with the head office) No
Business activities Possible Possible Not possible
Obtaining licenses Possible Depends on conditions Not possible
Setup cost Higher Moderate Low
Spillover of risk to the head office Limited Spills over directly Limited
Registration Required Required Not required

Let’s Also Get a Handle on the Tax Differences

The tax treatment also differs depending on the form of entry.

A subsidiary, being independent as a Japanese corporation, is subject to Japanese corporate tax on income arising within Japan. For dividend remittances to the parent company, the withholding tax rate can change depending on the terms of the tax treaty.

For a branch, income earned within Japan is taxed, the same as a subsidiary, but its characteristic is that transfer pricing issues regarding transactions with the head office (internal transactions) and the treatment of cost allocation between head office and branch tend to become complex. In addition, a tax burden may arise on remittances of profit from the branch to the head office (remittance interest).

A representative office, in principle, does not generate revenue, so usually no taxation relationship arises in Japan. However, if it is deemed to be conducting business activities in substance, there is a possibility of being taxed as a permanent establishment (PE).

Because tax treatment also differs depending on the nature of the business and the parent company’s country of location, we recommend advancing consultation with a Japanese tax accountant in parallel. Because the choice of form of entry can in some cases be hard to change later, it is important to check the tax issues at the pre-setup stage.

The Choice of Form of Entry Is Also Closely Tied to the Visa Application

Though it tends to be overlooked, the form of expansion into Japan is also deeply connected with the status of residence (visa) application for the representative and resident staff.

For example, if a subsidiary or a branch has been set up, the preconditions are in place for the representative to apply for the “Business Manager” status of residence (the so-called Business Manager visa). Obtaining a Business Manager visa, in principle, requires the existence of a corporation (or branch) established in Japan, and the recognition of business substance is a key point in the review.

On the other hand, in the case of a representative office, because its activities are judged not to fall under business acts, obtaining a Business Manager visa becomes difficult. There are cases of using the “Intra-company Transferee” status of residence, but the requirements and the perspectives of the review differ.

In this way, the form of corporate setup and obtaining the visa need to be thought of as a set. Because cases of stumbling at the visa application after advancing the setup procedures are not uncommon in practice, it is important to organize both issues from the very first stage.

Common Mistakes and Points to Note

Finally, here are a few failure patterns often seen in the practice of expanding into Japan.

Assuming that “as long as you set up the company, you’ll be fine”

Setting up the company is nothing more than the start. In industries that require a license, business becomes possible only after going through a license application following setup. Also, because the representative’s arrival in Japan requires obtaining a visa, the arrangement of advancing setup and the visa application in parallel is indispensable. Because decisions made at the time of setup—such as the amount of capital and the substance of the office—can affect the visa review as well, judgment that looks at the whole picture from the very first stage is called for.

 

Putting off document preparation

In the case of establishing a branch, the translation and authentication of foreign-language documents can take more time than expected. Also, in a Business Manager visa application, preparing the business plan and documents showing business substance is important. Trying to scramble to put these together later can delay the schedule significantly, so it is important to identify the required documents early.

 

Consultations with specialists becoming siloed

While you consult separately with different specialists—a judicial scrivener for registration, a tax accountant for tax, an administrative scrivener for the visa—there are cases where overall consistency is lost. For example, even though you entrusted registration of incorporation to a judicial scrivener, the preparation of the business substance needed for the visa application falls behind, and as a result the visa review drags on. Because multiple procedures are interlinked in expanding into Japan, having a point of contact that can organize the whole thing collectively is the shortest path to a smooth entry.

Summary

The methods by which an overseas company expands into Japan can be broadly divided into three: a subsidiary, a branch, and a representative office. Correctly understanding the characteristics of each, and then organizing the issues of business content, schedule, cost, and visa together, is the first step to a smooth expansion into Japan.

If you “don’t know which form suits your company” or “want to organize what is needed besides setting up the company,” we recommend starting with a consultation with a specialist. At Touch Immigration Law Firm, we offer a free initial consultation and provide guidance after organizing the practical work required for expanding into Japan from a holistic perspective.

Supervisor of This Article

TOUCH Law Firm
Representative immigration lawyer:

Kazuki Yuda

Areas of Expertise
Visas for Foreign Nationals (Residence Status), Naturalization
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・Application for residence status and naturalization for foreign nationals
・Support for documentation related to foreign investment
 (e.g., Business Manager Visas, Consulting for Foreign Investment in Japan)
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Since our founding, we have focused exclusively on international procedures, successfully processing more than 1,000 visa and naturalization applications annually.

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