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🛂 Plan your Japan trip · Visa

Japan visa — do you need one?

Let's be honest — plenty of travellers still aren't sure whether they need a visa for Japan. The short answer: if you hold an e-Passport and visit for no more than 15 days, Thai citizens "don't need one." This page rounds up everything, updated 2026 — from what to prepare at immigration to when you actually need a visa and the upcoming JESTA system.

The short answer first

Thai travellers don't need a visa for Japan — but there are conditions

Ever wonder why some friends fly off to Tokyo as casually as a weekend trip upcountry, while others have to queue up for a visa? Honestly, this is far simpler than it looks — since 2013, Japan has waived visas for Thai citizens on short visits. If you hold an electronic passport (an e-Passport with a chip) and stay no more than 15 days, you can book your flight, book a hotel, and just go, with no visa paperwork at all.

But "no visa needed" doesn't mean "nothing to prepare." At immigration you'll still need to show an onward ticket, your accommodation, and proof you have enough funds — and in 2026, almost everyone now registers Visit Japan Web ahead of time. This page walks you through every case — from the 15-day visa-free entry and how to prepare for immigration, to the situations where you genuinely do need a visa (long stays, work, study) and the new JESTA system Japan plans to roll out around 2028.

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15 days visa-free
Thai citizens can visit Japan free for up to 15 days per entry — no advance visa needed
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Must be an e-Passport
Your passport must have a chip to ICAO standard — an old chipless one needs a visa
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Register Visit Japan Web
Fill in immigration + customs online before you fly, get a QR to clear the gate faster
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Work/study = need a visa
The exemption covers tourism only — any paid work is strictly off-limits
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Rules change — always check before you travel: Visa and entry rules are adjusted from time to time. The information here is based on Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) and the Embassy of Japan in Thailand as of 2026. Before every trip, verify with the Japanese embassy website (th.emb-japan.go.jp) or MOFA to be sure.
Visa-free ≤15 days

The visa-exemption conditions Thai travellers must meet in full

The visa waiver isn't automatic for anyone holding a Thai passport. There are 3 main conditions you must meet, plus one thing Thai travellers are lucky enough to skip. This table sums it up in one place (source: MOFA · updated 2026).

ConditionQualifies for visa-freeDetails
Passport typee-Passport (with chip)Must be an electronic passport to ICAO standard — nearly all newer Thai passports already are. An older chipless one needs a visa
PurposeTourism / visiting / short businessTravel, visiting friends and family, non-paid meetings or observation — any kind of paid work is prohibited
Length of stayNo more than 15 daysCounted from the day you enter, under Temporary Visitor status — staying longer requires a visa before you fly
Register with embassy firstNot requiredThai nationals don't need to register their passport in advance (unlike Indonesia/Qatar, which do)
In plain terms: Thai citizens with a chipped passport, visiting for no more than 15 days, can simply fly — no visa needed, and no need to register with the embassy first. · The most common slip-up is "accidentally overstaying 15 days" — if you know from the start you'll stay longer, apply for a visa before you travel. · Source: MOFA and the Japanese embassy; always check the latest before you fly.
At immigration

Visa-free, but still prepare these 3 things on arrival

Immigration officers may ask to see proof that you really are visiting and really will leave. Most people sail through, but you can be randomly questioned — having these 3 things on your phone or in your bag will keep you relaxed.

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Onward ticket

Return / Onward ticket
  • What it isReturn/exit flight
  • Why you need itProves you'll leave
  • Keep itScreenshot on phone
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Accommodation

Accommodation
  • What it isHotel booking
  • Why you need itAddress for the form
  • Keep itName + address + phone
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Funds

Funds
  • What it isCash/card
  • Why you need itEnough for the trip
  • Keep itIn case you're asked
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Don't forget Visit Japan Web: in 2026, almost everyone uses the official Visit Japan Web site to fill in immigration + customs details ahead of time, getting a QR code to scan on arrival and clear the gate much faster. · You can register up to about 2 weeks before your flight. · Screenshot the QR code in case the airport signal is poor. · Step-by-step instructions are in the next section.
Visit Japan Web

Register Visit Japan Web step by step, before the airport

Visit Japan Web is the Japanese government's official site (services.digital.go.jp) — free, no app to download, works on your phone or computer, and takes about 15–20 minutes. Follow these 4 steps and you'll breeze through the gate.

Create an account + enter personal details
Go to Visit Japan Web, create an account with your email, then enter your details as they appear in your passport (name, passport number, date of birth). You can do this up to about 2 weeks before your flight, and register family members under one account.
Add flight and accommodation details
Enter your arriving flight number, travel dates, and your accommodation address in Japan (hotel name + address + phone). This information is then filled into the immigration form automatically.
Complete both immigration AND customs
The most common mistake is filling in only the immigration section and forgetting customs — you must complete both for the system to issue a usable QR. Since January 2024, immigration and customs use a combined QR.
Screenshot the QR before you board
Once everything is filled in you'll get a QR code — screenshot it or download it to your phone in case the airport signal is weak. On arrival, just show the QR at the gate.
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In 2026, major airports have "Joint Kiosks": Haneda, Narita and Kansai (KIX) have installed Joint Kiosks that scan your passport + QR for both immigration and customs in a single machine — much faster. · Smaller airports such as Chubu, Fukuoka, New Chitose and Naha still use the two-step process. · Visit Japan Web isn't 100% mandatory, but doing it gets you through the gate far quicker.
When you need a visa

Stays over 15 days · work · study — these need a visa

The 15-day visa-free entry covers "short-term tourism" only. If your plans match the left-hand list, you'll need a visa before you travel — the right-hand side is a rough outline of where and how to apply.

When you need a visa
Beyond the visa-free scope
  • Staying over 15 days — long trips crossing into another month need a tourist visa (up to 90 days)
  • Paid work — company jobs, teaching, paid content creation — anything you're compensated for
  • Studying — language courses, university, courses from ~6 months and up
  • Long-term / joining family — marriage, relocation, spouse visa
  • Old chipless passport — even for a short trip, you'll need a visa
How and where to apply
JVAC / Japanese embassy in Thailand
  • For a tourist visa (longer stay), submit documents at the JVAC application centre or the Japanese embassy in Thailand directly
  • For work/study/long-term, you usually need a Certificate of Eligibility (COE) first
  • The COE is a status certificate your employer or school in Japan applies for from Japanese immigration (takes ~1–3 months)
  • Once you have the COE, take it to apply for a visa at JVAC/the embassy, with your passport and supporting documents
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Japanese work visas come in several types depending on the role (such as Engineer/Specialist, Skilled Labor, Instructor), while student visas are issued for the length of the course — the documents and fees differ for each. · Before applying, check the latest document list on the Japanese embassy in Thailand website (th.emb-japan.go.jp), as it is adjusted from time to time.
And other nationalities

How many free days do other nationalities get?

Japan has visa-exemption arrangements with around 74 countries/territories — but the "number of days" each gets varies. Most get 90 days, while Thailand and Indonesia get 15. This table sums up the main groups (source: MOFA · updated 2026).

Country groupFree stayNotes
Thailand · Indonesia 15 days Must hold an e-Passport (with chip) — Indonesia must register with the embassy first, Thailand does not
Brunei · Qatar 30 days Qatar must also register an e-Passport with the Japanese embassy first
Most of Europe · the Americas · UAE · South Korea · Taiwan, etc. 90 days Most countries in the visa-exempt group can stay up to 90 days; a few can extend to 6 months
Countries with no exemption Visa required Such as China, India, Vietnam, the Philippines — must apply for a visa before every trip
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A common misunderstanding: "visa exemption" isn't the same for every nationality — your Western friend might stay in Japan for 90 days easily, but Thai citizens only get 15. If you travel as a mixed-nationality group, check each person separately. · In every case, however many free days you get, paid work is prohibited under Temporary Visitor status. · Source: MOFA; check the latest before you travel.
⚠️ Looking ahead · around 2028

Get to know JESTA
Japan's new travel-authorization system

Japan is preparing to launch JESTA (Japan Electronic System for Travel Authorization) around 2028. It works much like the US ESTA — having travellers from visa-exempt countries (around 71, such as those in Europe, North America and Australia) register online for screening before they board. It isn't in use yet, and the exact fee hasn't been announced — Thai travellers should follow whether Thailand will be included as the date nears.

Keep prepping

Visa sorted — now get everything else ready

With the visa cleared up, let's move on to the rest before you fly — when to go, what to use for internet, how many days to plan, and the etiquette worth knowing.

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The full Japan trip-prep guide

Everything before you fly — visa, money, internet, getting around, plugs and assorted tips, all on one page.

Open the prep guide →
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When to visit Japan

Cherry blossoms, autumn leaves, snow, or dodging the rains — see each season at a glance before locking in dates.

See the seasons →
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eSIM / WiFi in Japan

Internet to navigate and open Visit Japan Web at the airport — compare an eSIM with pocket WiFi for the best value.

Choose a data plan →
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Japan 7-day itinerary

Your first trip easily fits in 15 days — start with a classic 7-day Tokyo–Kyoto–Osaka plan.

See the 7-day plan →
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Japan etiquette

Once you're in, it pays to know the manners — on trains, in the onsen, about tipping, and what not to do.

Read the etiquette →
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Narita Airport guide

Landed at Narita — what's next? How to get into Tokyo, where to scan your QR, and where the counters are.

Open the Narita guide →
Pre-flight checklist

6 passport and document things people get wrong most often

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Check it's an e-Passport
The cover must show the chip symbol (a small rectangle). Newer Thai passports already have it — an old chipless one means you need a visa.
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More than 6 months' validity
Japan only requires it to cover your stay, but many airlines ask for ≥6 months — renewing before you fly is the safest bet.
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Have blank pages for the stamp
Leave at least 1–2 blank pages for entry/exit stamps. If your passport is full, get a new one first.
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Register Visit Japan Web
Complete both immigration and customs, then screenshot the QR to your phone — don't leave it for the airport on slow signal.
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Have your onward ticket + hotel ready
Immigration may ask to see your return flight and hotel address — screenshot them so they're ready to show.
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Check the latest embassy info
Entry rules can change. Before you fly, take a look at th.emb-japan.go.jp or MOFA again to avoid slip-ups.
Frequently asked

Japan visa questions

Do Thai citizens need a visa to visit Japan?
No — not if you hold an electronic passport (e-Passport) that meets the ICAO standard and you're visiting short-term for up to 15 days. Thai nationals enjoy visa exemption to enter Japan with no need to apply for a visa in advance and no need to register the passport with the embassy beforehand (unlike Indonesia and Qatar, which do require registration). · However, if you use an older passport without a chip, you must apply for a visa at the embassy as normal. · Information is based on Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) — rules can change, so always check with the Japanese embassy before you travel.
How is the 15-day visa-free period counted, and how long can I stay?
The visa exemption lets Thai nationals stay up to 15 days per entry, under Temporary Visitor status, counted from the day you enter the country. · It's valid only for tourism, visiting friends or relatives, or non-paid business such as meetings — any kind of paid work is prohibited. · If you want to stay longer than 15 days, you must apply for a visa before you travel.
What is Visit Japan Web, and do I have to register?
Visit Japan Web is the Japanese government's official site for completing immigration and customs information in advance, giving you a QR code to scan at the airport to clear faster. · You can register up to about 2 weeks before your flight; it takes around 15–20 minutes. You must complete both the immigration and the customs sections (people often forget customs), then screenshot the QR code before you board. · In 2026, major airports such as Haneda, Narita and Kansai have Joint Kiosks that scan your passport plus QR for both immigration and customs in a single machine.
What if I want to stay longer than 15 days, work, or study in Japan?
You must apply for a visa before you travel. The visa exemption only covers tourism of up to 15 days. · To work, study, or stay longer than 90 days, you usually need a Certificate of Eligibility (COE), which your employer or school in Japan applies for from the Japanese immigration bureau first (this often takes 1–3 months). You then take the COE to apply for a visa at JVAC or the Japanese embassy in Thailand. · Work and study visas come in several types depending on purpose.
How many months of passport validity do I need to enter Japan?
Japanese authorities only require your passport to be valid for the whole of your stay — there's no hard six-month rule like some countries enforce. · However, international standard practice and many airlines recommend at least six months' validity from your travel date, to avoid problems at check-in and to allow for trip delays. · The safest approach is to renew your passport so it has more than six months left before you fly, and to check you have blank pages for the entry stamp.
What is JESTA, and do Thai citizens need to apply?
JESTA (Japan Electronic System for Travel Authorization) is an online pre-travel authorization system Japan is preparing to launch around 2028. It works much like the US ESTA — screening travellers from visa-exempt countries (around 71, such as those in Europe, North America and Australia) before they board. · It is not yet in use and the exact fee has not been announced. Thai travellers should follow news from MOFA and the Japanese embassy closer to 2028 to see whether Thailand will fall under the requirement.
Visa cleared · let's keep going

Visa sorted —
now plan the whole Japan trip

Now you know Thai citizens visit Japan free for 15 days with no visa, the next step is to open the full trip-prep guide, pick your travel season, and start booking a hotel in the right spot.

🧭 Plan your Japan trip Explore Japan