This article is written by a Japanese local.
There is a need among those aspiring to engage in social contribution activities or cultural exchange in Japan to establish an “NPO Corporation” or “General Incorporated Association” and obtain a Business Manager Visa as its representative. However, the Business Manager Visa under the Immigration Control Act is fundamentally designed premised on “for-profit business.”
This article objectively explains the special proof logic and strict requirements necessary to win a visa for an organization with a “non-profit” philosophy.
1. Dispelling the Misconception That “Non-Profit = No Need for Profit”
In the screening for a Business Manager Visa, the Immigration Services Agency prioritizes “stability and continuity of business.” Even for non-profit organizations, Immigration conducts its screening from the following severe perspectives.
① Revenue-Generating Business is Mandatory
Operations relying solely on donations and grants will be judged by Immigration as “lacking business continuity.” Even if the purpose of the corporation is social contribution, it is necessary to prove with data in the business plan that a “business model generating consideration (revenue-generating business)” is established through those activities, and that necessary expenses and remuneration can be covered by it.
② Securing Appropriate Executive Compensation
“Unpaid service,” which is common in non-profit organizations, is not recognized at all in the Business Manager Visa screening. A profit structure that can stably pay sufficient remuneration (250,000 to 300,000 JPY or more per month) for the manager to live independently in Japan is essential. If remuneration cannot be secured, the activity is regarded not as management but as “volunteer work” and will be immediately denied.
2. The “3 Hurdles” Unique to NPOs and General Incorporated Associations
Because the organizational structure differs from a stock company, extremely meticulous proof is required on the following three points.
① Proof of a Business Scale of 30 Million JPY or More
For NPOs and General Incorporated Associations, where the concept of “capital” of a stock company is weak, the focus is on how to prove a “scale of 30 million JPY or more.” You must clearly show in your financial plan that the total scale of funds (fund in case of General Incorporated Associations), capital investment, personnel expenses, and operating funds are on a scale of 30 million JPY or more.
② Composition of Directors and Substance of Decision-Making Power
NPOs require a minimum of 10 members and 3 directors. Within this, whether “the applicant holds substantial management rights (decision-making authority)” is strictly questioned. If other directors are collaborators in Japan, you must objectively prove through articles of incorporation and a division of duties table that the applicant is not merely a “nominal representative” but is actively controlling the business.
③ Establishment Period and Visa Application Timing
NPO Corporations in particular require several months for certification by the competent authority. Because a visa application cannot be accepted unless the company is legally established (registration complete), the construction of a legal roadmap with a much longer span than normal company establishment is essential.
3. Rational Choice: General Incorporated Association or Stock Company?
If the objective is “social contribution through business,” establishing a “Stock Company (Kabushiki Kaisha)”—which has high compatibility with Immigration screening—and appealing your social contribution activities externally will increase the certainty of visa acquisition. If you intentionally choose a General Incorporated Association or NPO, advanced logical construction explaining the rational reason “why it must be that legal entity type” must be incorporated into the business plan.
4. Practical Denial Cases and Avoidance Processes
Q. I set my executive compensation low and applied, but was denied.
A. If you prioritize the corporation’s profit and set your executive compensation to something like 100,000 JPY per month, it is judged that “you cannot make an independent living in Japan and there is a risk of engaging in illegal labor.” You must set a compensation of at least 250,000 JPY per month and rebuild an income and expenditure plan where the corporation can survive even after paying it.
Q. I am scheduled to become the president of an NPO, but all other directors are Japanese.
A. Immigration will harbor suspicions that “the foreign applicant is merely borrowing names from Japanese members.” You must prove using evidence such as minutes and contracts that you, as the founder, substantially contributed the 30 million JPY funds and solely possess the decision-making authority for business execution.
Conclusion: Substantiate Your Philosophy with “Numbers”
Obtaining a Business Manager Visa for a non-profit organization is a highly advanced procedure that bridges the gap between the Immigration Control Act and organizational law. Unless noble philosophies are accompanied by financial backing to maintain them and the reality of a manager, you cannot pass the Immigration screening. From the establishment preparation stage, proceed with an organizational design and business plan that backward-plans from the visa screening.