English-only jobs in Japan are real but concentrated — software engineering dominates, followed by English teaching, recruiting, and a thin layer of roles at global companies. Everything else on the market quietly assumes Japanese.
Key facts
- Biggest sector
- Software engineering
- Classic entry job
- English teaching (ALT/eikaiwa)
- Other niches
- Recruiting, finance, hospitality
- Location
- Overwhelmingly Tokyo
- Long-term ceiling
- Real without Japanese
The honest inventory
Strip away job-board noise and English-only Japan is four islands:
| Sector | Size | Typical pay |
|---|---|---|
| Software engineering | Large & growing | ¥5–12M+ |
| English teaching | Large, high turnover | ¥2.8–4M |
| Recruiting/sales (bilingual firms) | Medium | ¥4–7M + commission |
| Global-firm specialist roles | Small | Varies widely |
Almost all of it sits in Tokyo. Outside these islands, “some Japanese” is a hard filter, not a preference — see jobs by N4 level for how much even basic Japanese widens the map.
The trade-off worth naming
Working in English is a fast entry and a slow ceiling. Promotions into management, client-facing work and internal mobility eventually route through Japanese even at international companies. The people who thrive long-term treat English-only employment as a funded language-learning runway.
If you are choosing a first move
Engineers: interview prep beats language study for your first job — the pay difference funds everything else. Non-engineers: teaching or hospitality gets you here, but set a JLPT milestone per year and review the job-hunting channels as your level rises.
Common mistakes & warnings
- English teaching pays enough to live but rarely to save — treat it as a landing pad with an exit plan, not a career default.
- "No Japanese required" in a listing often means "not required on day one". Ask what meetings and documentation actually look like.
- Factory jobs advertised abroad as language-free usually route through dispatch companies — check the contract type and see our employment contract guide.
Frequently asked questions
Which engineering roles are most open to English speakers?
Backend, SRE/infrastructure, mobile and ML roles at global companies and funded startups. See the software engineer salary page for what the two-market split pays.
Is teaching English a dead end?
Not if you use it deliberately — many people teach for 1–2 years while reaching JLPT N2 and then move into recruiting, sales or a Japanese-track corporate job. It becomes a dead end at year five with no Japanese.
Can I run an online business or freelance for overseas clients?
The visa question matters more than the language one — freelancing needs a status that permits it (spouse/PR are open; work visas are employer-tied). See the visa overview.
Official sources
- MHLW — foreign worker employment statistics (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.