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How to Buy Bitcoin in Japan: A Beginner's Guide for Residents

Bottom line: use an FSA-registered exchange, start small

If you live in Japan, the safest way to buy Bitcoin is through a crypto exchange registered with Japan's Financial Services Agency (FSA). The flow is: open an account, complete identity verification (KYC), deposit Japanese yen, and buy — often from just a few hundred yen. This guide is education, not advice, and does not recommend any specific exchange.

Key takeaways

- Use an FSA-registered crypto exchange — this is the single most important check.

- KYC requires a valid ID (residence card / My Number card) and usually a selfie (eKYC).

- You can start with a small amount — Bitcoin is divisible to 1/100,000,000 (a "satoshi").

- After buying, learn safe storage; profits are generally taxed as miscellaneous income in Japan.

Step 1: Choose an FSA-registered exchange

Japan regulates crypto exchanges. Confirm the operator is on the FSA's register of crypto-asset exchange service providers before depositing any money. Registered exchanges must follow rules such as segregating customer assets and performing identity checks. Beyond registration, compare:

  • Security: two-factor authentication, cold storage, asset segregation
  • Fees: trading fees, deposit/withdrawal fees, and the spread
  • Usability: app quality, English support (varies by exchange), small-amount buying

Step 2: Complete KYC (identity verification)

You'll register an email, then verify your identity. As a resident, you typically need a residence card (在留カード) or My Number card, plus a selfie or video check (eKYC). This is required under anti-money-laundering law and cannot be skipped.

Residency and documents matter

Requirements differ by exchange and by your residency status. Some exchanges require a Japanese bank account and a local address. Short-term visitors may not qualify. Always check the specific exchange's eligibility rules.

Step 3: Deposit Japanese yen

Fund your account by bank transfer or quick deposit. Only use money you can afford to lose — never living expenses or borrowed funds.

Step 4: Buy Bitcoin (brokerage vs. exchange)

MethodTraitsBest for
Brokerage (販売所)Simple, buy from the operator; wider spreadQuick, small first purchase
Exchange / order book (取引所)Trade with other users; usually lower costKeeping costs down

Many beginners buy a small amount regularly (dollar-cost averaging) rather than timing the market.

Step 5: Store it safely

Leaving coins on an exchange means you rely on that exchange's security and solvency (recall the Mt. Gox collapse). As your holdings grow, consider self-custody with a hardware wallet and back up your seed phrase offline.

Step 6: Understand Japanese tax

In Japan, Bitcoin profits are generally treated as miscellaneous income (zatsu-shotoku) and taxed together with your other income (progressive rates). A salaried worker may not need to file income tax if other income is 200,000 yen or less per year — but residents tax has no such threshold. Rules can change (a 2026 tax-reform outline proposed moving toward separate ~20% taxation, likely from around 2028, but this is not yet enacted). Confirm current rules with the National Tax Agency.

FAQ

Q. Can foreigners buy Bitcoin in Japan? A. Residents with a valid ID (residence card / My Number card) generally can. Requirements vary by exchange; short-term visitors may not qualify.

Q. How much do I need to start? A. Often just a few hundred yen — Bitcoin is divisible into satoshis.

Q. Should I use an overseas exchange? A. Using unregistered operators aimed at Japanese residents carries higher risk. Start with an FSA-registered exchange.

Q. How are profits taxed? A. Generally as miscellaneous income, combined with your other income. Confirm details with the National Tax Agency.

Sources

  • FSA — Financial Services Agency: https://www.fsa.go.jp/en/
  • FSA register of crypto-asset exchange providers: https://www.fsa.go.jp/menkyo/menkyoj/kasoutuka.pdf
  • National Tax Agency (Japan): https://www.nta.go.jp/english/

Not investment advice

This article is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. Bitcoin is volatile and carries risks including loss and theft. Do your own research and only use money you can afford to lose. Tax and regulation can change — always confirm with the official primary source.

Sources

  1. FSA (English)
  2. FSA register of crypto-asset exchange providers
  3. National Tax Agency (Japan)

FAQ

Can foreigners buy Bitcoin in Japan?
Residents with a valid ID (residence card / My Number card) generally can. Requirements vary by exchange; short-term visitors may not qualify.
How much do I need to start?
Often just a few hundred yen — Bitcoin is divisible into satoshis.
Should I use an overseas exchange?
Using unregistered operators aimed at Japanese residents carries higher risk. Start with an FSA-registered exchange.
佐藤 健一
  • 暗号資産アナリスト
  • ビットコイン取材歴9年
  • 元金融メディア記者

2016年からビットコインを取材・解説。半減期、マイニング、各国規制、自己管理(セルフカストディ)に明るく、初心者にわかる説明を重視。

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