Designated Activities (tokutei katsudō) is not one visa but a container for dozens of individually defined cases — job-hunting graduates, digital nomads, startup founders, working-holiday extensions and more. If your situation fits no standard category, this is where immigration usually has an answer.
Key facts
- Nature
- Case-by-case designated status
- Job-hunt after graduation
- 6 months × 2
- Digital nomad (2024–)
- 6 months, income ≥ ¥10M
- Startup founders
- Municipal startup programs
- Work rights
- Depend on the designation
Why this status exists
Immigration law can’t enumerate every legitimate reason to stay in Japan, so Designated Activities acts as the flexible slot: the Minister of Justice “designates” an activity for an individual, published categories accumulate, and new policy experiments — like the 2024 digital nomad designation — launch here before (possibly) becoming full statuses.
The three designations most readers meet
- Post-graduation job hunting. The bridge between a student visa and a work visa — up to a year of legal job searching. Use it; going home mid-hunt resets your momentum and your network.
- Startup preparation. Municipal startup-visa programs give founders 6–12 months to meet Business Manager requirements — much more forgiving than incorporating from abroad.
- Digital nomad. Six months of legal remote work for high earners employed overseas. Good for testing life in Japan at full salary; useless as an immigration step — pair it with research into real routes if Japan passes the test.
How to read your own permit
Designated Activities holders carry a designation paper (指定書) stapled into the passport stating exactly what is permitted. When an employer or landlord asks “can you work?”, the answer is on that paper — not in any general article, including this one.
Common mistakes & warnings
- Everything depends on which designation you hold — work rights, renewals and family rules differ completely between categories. Read the designation on your own permit, not generic advice.
- The digital nomad designation does not lead anywhere — it grants 6 months, is not renewable back-to-back, gives no residence card and counts toward nothing.
- Job-hunting status requires evidence of active job hunting at renewal — keep application records.
Frequently asked questions
I graduated in Japan but have no offer yet — what happens?
Your school certifies you, and you change from Student to Designated Activities for job hunting — 6 months, renewable once. That gives up to a year of legal full-time job searching, with part-time work permission available.
What exactly is the digital nomad visa?
A 2024 designation for remote workers employed abroad — 6 months, annual income of ¥10 million or more, private health insurance, nationals of visa-waiver treaty countries. Spouse and children can accompany. It is a long tourism-plus-work stay, not an immigration route.
Can Designated Activities lead to permanent residency?
The status itself rarely does — its value is as a bridge. Job hunters convert to work visas; startup founders convert to Business Manager. Those destination statuses are what build your PR timeline.
Official sources
- Immigration Services Agency — Designated Activities (2026-07-16)
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.