Credit card rejections in Japan are common for foreigners in the first 1–2 years due to zero Japanese credit history. Cards foreigners reliably get approved for: Rakuten Card (easiest), Japan Post Bank Cash+ Visa Debit (not a credit card but works everywhere), SMBC Prestia Debit, and Wise Card (Mastercard, instant issuance). After 1 year in Japan with stable employment, standard credit cards become accessible. Avoid applying for multiple cards simultaneously — each rejection hurts your score.
Applied for a Suica card. Rejected. Tried a Rakuten card. Rejected. Tried your company’s corporate card recommendation. Rejected again.
If you’ve been in Japan less than a year and keep hitting walls with credit card applications, it’s not you — it’s math. Japan’s credit scoring system has almost no mechanism for importing your credit history from your home country. Zero history in Japan = zero creditworthiness.
Here’s what’s actually happening and what works.
Why Foreigners Get Rejected
1. No Japanese Credit History
Japan’s credit bureaus (CIC, JICC) have no data on you when you arrive. Your 800 FICO score from the US, your perfect UK credit record — irrelevant. Japanese banks see a blank file and treat you as high-risk.
2. Visa Type and Length
Short-term visa holders (tourist visa, working holiday) are often automatically rejected. Cards require a visa that allows work and ideally more than 1 year of remaining validity.
3. Address History
Lenders check address history length. If you just moved to Japan, you have essentially none.
4. Employment Status
Stable employment at a Japanese company significantly increases approval odds. Freelancers, self-employed, and part-time workers face harder scrutiny.
5. Too Many Recent Applications
Every application generates an inquiry in your Japanese credit file. Multiple rejections in a short period compounds the problem. One rejection → wait 3–6 months before trying again.
What Actually Gets Approved (In Order of Ease)
Easiest: Debit Cards That Work Like Credit Cards
These aren’t credit cards — they draw from your bank account — but they’re accepted everywhere Visa/Mastercard are accepted and require no credit check.
Wise Card (Mastercard)
The fastest to get: open a Wise account online, request a card, receive it in 1–2 weeks. Multi-currency, accepted everywhere, no annual fee. Ideal as your primary card when you first arrive.
Send money to Japan at the real exchange rate — no markups, no hidden fees.
Japan Post Bank Visa Debit (ゆうちょVISAデビット)
Once you have a Japan Post Bank account (openable on day 1), you can apply for the debit Visa. Takes 1–2 weeks to arrive. Works at almost every retailer that accepts Visa.
SMBC Prestia Debit
Requires an SMBC Prestia account (foreigner-friendly bank). Debit Mastercard that works globally.
Easiest True Credit Card: Rakuten Card
Rakuten Card is consistently the easiest Japanese credit card for foreigners to obtain. It has lower approval thresholds than major banks and is widely reported as the “first card” for new foreign residents.
Requirements:
- Stable income (even part-time)
- Valid Japanese residence card
- Residence for at least 6 months (not a hard rule, but helps)
- Rakuten ID (free to create)
Apply at: rakuten-card.co.jp
After 1 Year: More Options Open Up
After 12+ months with stable employment and a positive credit record (even just on a debit card), you become eligible for:
- SMBC Visa Card
- Mitsui Sumitomo Mastercard
- Amex Japan (for higher earners)
- JCB cards (widely used domestically, limited internationally)
Strategy: Building Credit From Day One
- Get a Wise or Japan Post Bank debit card immediately — use it for everything
- Open a Rakuten Bank account + apply for Rakuten Card after 6 months
- Pay everything on time — any late payments damage your still-being-built file
- Wait 3–6 months between applications if rejected
The path from “no card” to “approved for standard cards” is typically 12–18 months of consistent, clean financial behavior in Japan.
Cards to Avoid Initially
- Amex Japan — high income threshold, hard to get early on
- Diners Club / JCB Platinum — premium cards, requires established history
- Department store cards (Lumine, Isetan) — often require longer residency
Using Foreign Cards in Japan
Your home-country Visa/Mastercard/Amex works in Japan at:
- Major convenience stores (7-Eleven, Lawson, FamilyMart)
- Department stores and larger retailers
- 7-Bank ATMs (international card friendly 24/7)
- Most restaurants in tourist areas
Foreign cards don’t work well at: small local restaurants, traditional markets, some vending machines.
Until your Japanese card arrives: Wise offers a Mastercard debit card with mid-market exchange rates and no hidden fees — ideal for the gap period.