Expat Japan Guide

Teaching English in Japan: ALT, Eikaiwa, and JET Programme Guide (2025)

Japan hires thousands of English teachers every year — and the demand shows no sign of slowing. But not all English teaching jobs are created equal, and signing the wrong contract is a year-long mistake. Here’s what you need to know before applying. Types of English Teaching Jobs Type Employer Students Salary Japanese Required JET Programme Government School-age ¥280,000–360,000/mo No ALT (dispatch) Dispatch companies School-age ¥200,000–280,000/mo No Eikaiwa Language schools All ages ¥220,000–280,000/mo No University Universities Adults ¥300,000–600,000/mo Some Private tutor Self-employed All ages ¥2,000–6,000/hour No Online (Japan-based) Online schools Overseas students Varies No The JET Programme — Best Entry-Level Option The Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Programme is a Japanese government program that places foreign graduates in schools and local government offices across Japan. ...

May 25, 2026 · 4 min · Expat Japan Team
Expat Japan Guide

Teaching English in Japan: Complete Guide for Foreigners (2025)

Teaching English in Japan remains one of the most accessible paths to living and working here legally — but the experience varies enormously depending on where and how you do it. ALT programs, eikaiwa schools, and private tutoring are completely different worlds. Here’s how to choose the right path. Types of English Teaching Jobs in Japan 1. JET Programme (ALT in Public Schools) The Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme is the gold standard. You work as an Assistant Language Teacher (ALT) in a Japanese public school. ...

May 25, 2026 · 3 min · Expat Japan Team
Expat Japan Guide

Working in Japan Without Japanese — Is It Possible? (2025)

You want to work in Japan but your Japanese is minimal — or nonexistent. Maybe you’re just starting, maybe you’ve been studying for a while but you’re nowhere near business level, maybe you’re wondering whether to even bother moving without language skills first. The question everyone asks some version of: is it actually possible? Honest answer: yes, but the path is narrower than the optimistic parts of the internet suggest, and the industries where it works are specific. Here’s an accurate picture. ...

May 25, 2026 · 4 min · Expat Japan Team
Expat Japan Guide

Working Overtime in Japan — What Foreigners Need to Know (2025)

Overtime in Japan has a reputation — some of it deserved, much of it exaggerated. But the culture around hours worked, karoshi, and work-life balance is real and affects foreign employees in specific ways. Here’s what to expect and how to navigate it. The Legal Framework for Overtime in Japan Japan’s Labor Standards Act sets clear rules on overtime: Standard Working Hours The legal standard is 8 hours per day and 40 hours per week. Work beyond this requires either overtime pay or a formal agreement. ...

May 25, 2026 · 4 min · Expat Japan Team
Expat Japan Guide

Japanese Job Interview Guide for Foreign Engineers & Professionals (2026)

What you'll learn in this guide What to wear, how to bow, and what to say when you walk in the door The 5 most common Japanese interview questions — with model answers in English How to explain your “reason for applying” (志望動機) the way Japanese interviewers want to hear it What happens after the interview and how the Japanese hiring process works Special considerations for foreign candidates at Japanese companies Quick Answer Japanese job interview basics: wear a dark suit (black/navy/charcoal), arrive 5–10 minutes early (never late), bow 30 degrees when greeting. The 5 questions every interviewer asks: (1) jiko shōkai — 1–2 minute self-introduction, (2) shibo douki — why specifically this company (not just the industry), (3) strengths and weaknesses with examples, (4) where you see yourself in 3–5 years, (5) describe a challenge you overcame. Multiple rounds (2–4) are standard. Send a thank-you email the same day. Business Japanese (JLPT N2+) is expected at most traditional Japanese companies; tech and international firms often interview in English. ...

May 24, 2026 · 8 min · Expat Japan Team
Expat Japan Guide

Surviving Japanese Work Culture: The Honest Guide for Foreign Employees

Quick Answer Japanese workplace culture runs on implicit rules most foreigners are never told: arrive early, stay late (even if you have nothing to do), build consensus before meetings (nemawashi), never say “no” directly, and attend social events as work obligations. The rules aren’t inherently worse — they’re just different, and breaking them unintentionally creates invisible friction that’s hard to identify and fix. “I work longer hours here than anywhere in my life, and I still feel like I’m underperforming.” That sentence, or a version of it, gets posted constantly by foreigners in Japan’s work culture. The frustration isn’t just about long hours — it’s about a system of unwritten rules that nobody explains, and that most Japanese colleagues assume you already understand. ...

May 23, 2026 · 5 min · Expat Japan Team