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Japan Raises Visa Fees Fivefold in First Hike Since 1978

Is this a long-overdue correction or a financial gut punch pricing out global travelers?
Japan Raises Visa Fees Fivefold in First Hike Since 1978
Above: Tourists photograph the three-story vermilion pagoda of Seiganto-ji Temple in Nachikatsuura, Japan, on June 19. Image credit: Artur Widak/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Spin


Government-critical narrative

This is a financial gut punch to millions of global travelers who already face mounting costs just to cross borders. This decision hits students, workers and entrepreneurs hardest, and more increases targeting residency and permanent status are already in the pipeline. International mobility is getting priced out of reach for everyday people.

Pro-government narrative

This is a long-overdue correction, not a barrier — fees haven't budged since 1978, and inflation plus yen depreciation made the old rates completely unsustainable. The hike brings Japan in line with other G7 nations, funds the administrative costs of managing a record-high foreign population, and is not expected to impact inbound tourism.

Narrative C

Japan's visa fee hike feels like a deliberate targeted financial barrier. By quintupling fees for visa-required nations while leaving visa-exempt allies completely untouched, Japan is quietly selecting which tourists it wants. The inflation justification doesn't tell the whole story — this is crowd control by another name.


The Controversies


© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1