This article is written by a Japanese local.
In the screening process for the “Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services (Gijinkoku)” work visa in Japan, the number one reason for denial cited by the Immigration Services Agency is a “mismatch between educational background (major) and actual job duties.”
Many applicants and hiring companies submit applications with broad assumptions, such as “They graduated with an Economics degree, so they can do sales administration,” or “They have a Literature degree, let’s just assign them to translation or overseas sales.” This leads to fatal visa denials.
Immigration examiners are not looking for such macro-level interpretations. They require “millimeter-level proof of suitability” based on objective evidence. This article thoroughly explains the legal and logical construction necessary to completely seal off any doubts during the screening process.
1. Examiners Check Every Line of Your Transcripts, Not Just the “Degree Name”
The Immigration Control Act requires applicants for the Gijinkoku visa to engage in duties that directly necessitate the “highly specialized and academic knowledge” acquired at a university or vocational school. Therefore, examiners will absolutely never make a judgment based solely on the degree name printed on a diploma. They meticulously verify every single course listed on the submitted “Academic Transcripts” and “Syllabus.”
The ironclad rule of proof is to perfectly and logically connect—like fitting puzzle pieces together—the “specific daily tasks” listed in the company’s employment contract or job description with “which specific knowledge from which specific course” on the transcript will be applied to execute those duties.
2. Forced Justifications Are Self-Destructive. Redefinition (Optimization) Based on Facts
If the actual assigned duties include “programming development,” yet there are absolutely no IT or computer science-related courses on the transcript, no matter how passionately the Statement of Employment Reason is written, it will be deemed a logical failure and denied. Trying to fill missing elements with forced interpretations is a self-destructive act that invites suspicion of a fraudulent application.
In such cases, rather than making programming (coding) the main duty, you must focus on other completed courses you have, such as “Statistics,” “Econometrics,” or “Marketing.” You must then legally redefine (optimize) the job description as “Upstream Requirements Definition” or “IT Consulting”—where you define system specifications based on data analysis. This is objective logical construction based on facts.
3. [Crucial] The Decisive Screening Difference Between University and Vocational School Graduates
When proving suitability, the strictness of Immigration’s screening criteria differs greatly depending on whether the highest level of education is a “University (Bachelor’s)” or a “Vocational School (Specialist/Senmonshi).”
- University Graduates (Bachelor’s): Because university education is considered an institution for acquiring a broad liberal arts education, the connection between the major and job duties tends to be interpreted “relatively broadly.”
- Vocational School Graduates (Specialist): Because vocational schools are institutions for acquiring specific occupational skills, a “perfect, strict match” between what was majored in at school and the job duties at the company is strictly demanded. Hiring a graduate of a “Business Vocational School” for IT engineering or frontline hotel duties will be immediately denied for lack of relevance.
4. Absolute Standards for “Duration” and “Quality” When Proving with Work Experience
If you are proving suitability solely through past “Work Experience” instead of educational background, the absolute legal rule required is a “duration of 10 years (3 years for international services).”
Here too, a mere certificate of employment stating “Enrolled in an IT company for 10 years” does not satisfy the requirement. From those 10 years, periods of clerical assistance or simple manual labor on the frontlines must be completely excluded; you must extract only the periods where you were exclusively engaged in “duties requiring specialized skills.” This must be demonstrated with objective evidence, such as “detailed certificates of job duties from all past employers.”
5. Practical Q&A on Proving Suitability
- Q: I am self-taught in programming and have an excellent portfolio. Can I get a Gijinkoku visa as an IT engineer even with a liberal arts degree?
A: In principle, it is impossible. The screening criterion for the Gijinkoku visa is not your “current practical skills,” but strictly the connection between “systematic academic acquisition at a university, etc. (educational background)” and the duties. However, if you have passed an “IT Notification Qualification” designated by the Ministry of Justice, such as Japan’s Fundamental Information Technology Engineer Examination, the educational requirement is exceptionally waived entirely, and approval is possible even for liberal arts graduates. - Q: What should I do if the course names on my transcript are abstract and it’s hard to convey their relevance to the duties?
A: Attach the “Syllabus (detailed course outline/curriculum)” issued by the university. In the Statement of Employment Reason, use a table to visually and logically explain exactly which parts of the lectures (from week 1 to 15) directly connect to which specific processes of the actual job duties.
The application for a Gijinkoku visa is not a place to express how passionately a company wants to hire a foreigner. It is a place to objectively prove the legal suitability between the “foreigner’s past facts (completed courses/work experience)” and the “future facts (specific job duties after employment)” using objective evidence. If you neglect this precise logical construction, you will not obtain the status of a work visa.