Salaries

Factory Worker Salary in Japan — Direct Hire vs Dispatch, Shifts and Real Take-Home

Last reviewed: 2026-07-16

Factory work pays ¥200,000–280,000 a month for most foreign workers, with night-shift rotations adding real money on top. The variable that matters most is not the industry — it is whether you are directly hired or working through a dispatch company.

Key facts

Monthly (typical)
¥200–280k
Night rotation adds
¥30–60k/month
Key variable
Direct hire vs dispatch
Main visas
SSW / nikkei residents
Job locations
Aichi, Shizuoka, Gunma, Kansai

The split that decides everything

Two workers on the same line can live in different economies. The direct hire gets biannual bonuses, seniority raises and stability; the dispatch worker gets a higher advertised hourly rate that quietly loses to dormitory fees, agency margins and zero bonuses. Japanese labor law knows this — hence conversion rights — but the burden of knowing is yours: the contract states which economy you are in.

Shifts are the real salary lever

Base factory pay hugs the middle of the blue-collar range, but 2-kōtai/3-kōtai rotations (two/three-shift systems) carry premiums that add ¥30,000–60,000 monthly. Workers optimizing for savings deliberately choose rotation-heavy plants for a few years — sustainable for some, corrosive for others. Know yourself before signing up.

Geography does the saving for you

Factory Japan is not Tokyo. The hiring belts — Nagoya’s automotive ring, Shizuoka, Gunma, northern Kansai — pair near-metropolitan wages with provincial rents, and dormitoried plants push living costs lower still. For pure savings rate, a rotation job in Aichi beats most city work available at the same Japanese level.

Common mistakes & warnings

  • Figures are indicative from public sources. "High hourly rate" dispatch ads often net less than direct-hire ads after dormitory and agency deductions — always compare take-home.
  • Dispatch workers are cut first in downturns; automotive production adjustments regularly prove this. Direct hire, or conversion to it, is the stability play.
  • Repetitive-strain and safety-gear rules exist for you — a workplace casual about them is telling you about everything else too.

Frequently asked questions

Which manufacturing sectors pay most?

Automotive and machining top the entry-level table; food manufacturing pays less but hires most readily and suits lower Japanese levels. Electronics sits between.

What does the dispatch-to-direct conversion look like?

Many plants convert reliable dispatch workers after 6–24 months — ask about the conversion track in the interview. Direct hire brings bonuses, raises and the 5-year conversion rights dispatch rarely delivers.

Where do factory workers actually save money?

Manufacturing belts — around Nagoya, Shizuoka, northern Kansai — where wages are near-Tokyo but rents are half. Company dormitories tilt the math further.

Official sources

This page provides general information only and is not legal advice. Immigration rules change; always confirm details with the official sources listed above before making decisions.

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