This article is written by a Japanese local.
When elite global professionals consider relocating to Japan, the biggest concern is often the career of their spouse. The dilemma of “Do I have to make my talented spouse quit their job just so I can work in Japan?” causes significant anxiety for many power couples.
However, if the primary worker acquires Japan’s Highly Skilled Professional (HSP) visa, this anxiety disappears entirely. The HSP visa comes with a powerful benefit unavailable under standard work visas: the “Spousal Full-Time Work Privilege (Designated Activities No. 33).”
1. The Wall of the Dependent Visa: The Career Invalidation of the “28-Hour Limit”
[Summary] Standard Dependent visas are for those receiving financial support, restricting work to under 28 hours a week as a part-time worker and legally barring full-time employment.
Spouses of foreign nationals holding standard work visas (such as the Engineer/Specialist in Humanities visa) reside in Japan under a “Dependent” status. Because the purpose of this visa is strictly to “receive support,” working in Japan is prohibited as a general rule.
While part-time work becomes possible if they obtain “Permission to Engage in Activity Other Than That Permitted Under the Status of Residence Granted,” an absolute legal upper limit of “under 28 hours per week” is enforced. Working full-time as a regular employee or taking on a managerial role is strictly forbidden by law. For a spouse who has built a specialized professional career in their home country, this restriction constitutes a complete career disruption.
2. The Privilege of “Designated Activities No. 33”: Bypassing the Degree and Experience Barriers
[Summary] Designated Activities No. 33 completely bypasses standard academic and experience requirements, allowing spouses to work full-time in professional white-collar roles.
If you hold the “Highly Skilled Professional” status, your spouse can switch from a Dependent visa to a special status called “Designated Activities (No. 33).” This completely eliminates the 28-hour weekly restriction, enabling them to work as a full-time regular employee at a company in Japan.
Furthermore, a decisive benefit of this system is that it bypasses standard academic and professional experience requirements for the spouse. Normally, for a foreign national to secure a white-collar professional job in Japan, a university degree or 10+ years of practical experience is strictly required. However, under Designated Activities No. 33, even if the spouse does not meet these criteria, they are legally permitted to engage full-time in professional duties such as language instruction, translation, general administration, or IT engineering.
3. The Transition Flow from a Dependent Visa and Mandatory Requirements
[Summary] Co-habitation with the HSP holder is mandatory, and an official job offer (employment contract) from a company in Japan must be secured at the time of application.
For a spouse to obtain Designated Activities No. 33, they must meet all the following criteria and file an “Application for Change of Status of Residence” with the Immigration Services Agency.
- Co-habitation with the HSP Holder: It is an absolute requirement to reside together within Japan with the primary visa holder (the HSP visa holder). Applications under separation are not permitted.
- Secured Employment: At the time of application, the spouse must already have a job offer from a company in Japan and be able to submit an employment contract (or a notice of working conditions). You cannot apply for this visa empty-handed just to “look for a job.”
- Professional Nature of Duties: Although academic backgrounds are bypassed, the duties must not consist of “unskilled labor” (such as factory assembly lines, cleaning, or restaurant floor staff). The role must be a white-collar position in areas like marketing, languages, technology, or administration.
4. Risk Management: Complete Dependence on the Primary Holder’s Status
[Summary] The spouse’s right to work depends entirely on the primary holder; if the primary holder resigns, loses status, or separates, the spouse instantly loses their work authorization.
This powerful privilege carries a clear, structural risk in practice: the spouse’s right to work is completely dependent on your status as the primary applicant.
If you resign from your company, lose your HSP visa, switch to a standard work visa, or if the couple divorces or separates, the spouse instantly loses eligibility for Designated Activities No. 33 and cannot continue working in Japan. When utilizing this system, the employment stability of the primary applicant must be integrated into your career roadmap along with the spouse’s career plans.
5. Conclusion: Maximizing Household Income and Careers via Legal Logics
The Highly Skilled Professional visa is not merely a “passport to fast-track Permanent Residency.” It is a highly practical mechanism to maximize household income through a dual-career setup, establishing a solid foundation in Japan without sacrificing the spouse’s professional growth.
Elite households wishing to avoid the restrictions of a “Dependent” status and realize dual-career advancement in Japan must precisely time the spouse’s job hunt with the immigration change process, moving forward with reliable application steps based on objective evidence.