Japan Employment Law for Foreign Companies: A Practical Guide to Labor and Social Insurance in Japan
英語コラム開始のお知らせ
今回から、日本の労働・社会保険制度を実務の観点から解説する英語コラムを不定期で掲載していくこととします。
English Column
Starting in 2026, this page will feature short English explanations of Japanese labor and social security systems.
Articles will be updated periodically.
This column is written by a Certified Social Insurance and Labor Consultant (Labor and Social Security Attorney in Japan) and aims to provide clear and practical guidance on how these systems actually function in everyday business settings.
Rather than offering literal explanations of legal provisions, it focuses on helping foreign employees and international companies understand how the rules are applied in real situations.
Introduction
When foreign companies hire employees in Japan or assign staff to work here, one of the first challenges they face is understanding how Japanese employment law operates in practice.
While many explanations focus on statutory provisions, what employers often need is a practical framework:
Which rules apply, under what structure, and why?
This article provides a general overview of how Japanese labor law and social insurance systems typically apply when foreign nationals work in Japan, with a focus on practical structure rather than technical detail.
1. First, separate the Labor Law and Social Insurance
A common source of confusion is treating labor law and social insurance as a single framework.
In Japan, they are legally distinct.
Labor law (including the Labor Standards Act) regulates working conditions, such as:
- Working hours
- Overtime
- Rest days
- Paid leave
- Dismissal standards
Social insurance, by contrast, provides financial protection through:
- Health insurance
- Pension insurance
- Workers’ compensation insurance
- Employment insurance
Each system has its own purpose and criteria.
Understanding this distinction is the first step toward analyzing any employment situation.
2. Labor Law: Where the Work Is Performed Matters
As a general principle, if work is performed in Japan, Japanese labor standards apply.
This is usually the case regardless of:
- The employee’s nationality
- The governing law clause in the employment contract
- The visa category
In other words, the fact that an employee is a foreign national or remains employed by an overseas entity does not automatically exempt the application of Japanese working-hour regulations or dismissal protections.
The place where services are actually provided is a central factor.
3. Social Insurance: Focus on the Employment Structure
Social insurance requires a different type of analysis.
Authorities generally examine:
- Which entity functions as the employer in substance
- Who pays the salary
- Whether the employee is integrated into the Japanese organization
- The expected duration and continuity of work in Japan
For example, even a three-month intra-company transfer may require enrollment in Japanese social insurance if the Japanese entity effectively operates as the employer and payroll is handled domestically.
Conversely, if the employment relationship and salary payment remain entirely with an overseas company, a different conclusion may apply.
The practical structure of the arrangement is more important than internal terminology such as “training” or “temporary assignment.”
4. Why Situations Differ from Company to Company
While general principles exist, the actual conclusion often depends on the specific facts.
Differences in payroll arrangements, supervisory authority, contract structure, and duration of assignment can all influence the outcome.
For this reason, companies should avoid assuming that visa type alone determines their obligations.
Conclusion
Japan’s employment law is structured and principle-based, even if it may initially appear complex.
Although each situation depends on its specific facts, many questions can be clarified by separating labor law from social insurance and by carefully examining the actual working relationship.
In practice, compliance issues often arise not from the complexity of the rules themselves, but from misunderstandings about how those rules are structured.
In the next article, I will examine how salary and social insurance benefits interact when an employee is unable to work, and how employers should address this in practice.

