Japan's cabinet approves bill to introduce JESTA pre-travel authorization system

Japan's government approved a bill to revise the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Law at a cabinet meeting on March 11 and submitted it to the House of Representatives. The bill focuses on introducing the JESTA electronic travel authorization system to check visitors' eligibility to enter Japan online before travel, with implementation targeted for fiscal 2028.

The government plans to implement JESTA, requiring visa-exempt short-stay foreigners to register details such as travel purposes and accommodation. Modeled on the U.S. ESTA, the system aims to strengthen immigration controls, with airlines and carriers required to deny boarding to those not authorized.

JESTA will charge a fee, similar to ESTA's approximately ¥6,000 per application. With rising numbers of foreign travelers, the initiative seeks to streamline entry procedures while generating new revenue.

The bill also increases visa renewal and change fees for the first time in 44 years. The upper limit for such fees rises from ¥10,000 to ¥100,000, and for permanent residency visas from ¥10,000 to ¥300,000. Fees will vary by stay duration and be set by cabinet order by the end of fiscal 2026.

This revision targets tighter border management and operational efficiency, with the government planning rollout in fiscal 2028.

Verwandte Artikel

Japan has enacted a bill that drastically raises the upper limit on fees for changing residency status or extending stays from 10,000 yen to 100,000 yen.

Von KI berichtet

The Japanese government will raise visa fees for foreign nationals from July 1. This marks the first revision in 48 years, with single-entry visas increasing from 3,000 yen to 15,000 yen and multiple-entry visas from 6,000 yen to 30,000 yen.

Japan's Cabinet has approved a revision to the retrial system. The move addresses long-standing criticism that prosecutors' right to appeal prolongs court procedures for those seeking retrials, sometimes for decades.

Von KI berichtet

The EU Commission plans restrictive measures for issuing visas to Russian citizens. Eleven member states had previously applied pressure.

Mittwoch, 01. Juli 2026, 11:55 Uhr

Japan triples departure tax to combat overtourism

Donnerstag, 25. Juni 2026, 02:47 Uhr

Japan clears 18 officials to handle economic security info

Dienstag, 23. Juni 2026, 13:30 Uhr

Japan to fully digitalize airport customs declarations by 2030

Montag, 22. Juni 2026, 11:24 Uhr

Japan to raise visa fees fivefold starting July 1

Freitag, 12. Juni 2026, 19:22 Uhr

Lower House panel approves retrial system reform bill

Montag, 08. Juni 2026, 23:34 Uhr

US court strikes down Trump H-1B visa fee plan

Sonntag, 24. Mai 2026, 19:27 Uhr

Japan plans cyber patrols to target visa overstayers

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen