Renting an Apartment in Tokyo as a Foreigner: Step-by-Step Guide

Published July 7, 2026 | Kurabeel

Renting in Tokyo as a foreigner is very doable — but the process has quirks that surprise almost everyone: non-refundable fees, guarantor companies, and a screening process that can feel opaque. This guide walks you through the whole process, step by step, with the vocabulary you'll actually encounter.

Step 1: Know what you'll need before you search

For most standard apartments, you (or the agency helping you) will need:

Rule of thumb for screening: monthly rent should be under about one-third of your monthly income.

Step 2: Search — and know that listings aren't exclusive

Most people search on portal sites like SUUMO or HOME'S (Japanese, but they work fine with browser translation). A key fact that saves you money: the agency shown on a listing is not the only agency that can rent you that apartment. Most listings are shared across agencies through an industry database, so you can pick the agency with the best conditions — for example, one that charges no agency fee.

Step 3: Understand the vocabulary

JapaneseReadingMeaning
敷金shikikinDeposit (refundable, minus cleaning/repairs)
礼金reikinKey money (non-refundable gift to landlord)
仲介手数料chukai tesuryoAgency fee (0–1.1 months, set by the agency)
保証会社hosho gaishaGuarantor company (replaces a personal guarantor)
前家賃maeyachinFirst month's rent paid in advance
管理費・共益費kanrihi / kyoekihiMonthly maintenance fee, paid with rent
1K / 1DK / 1LDKLayout codes: rooms + Kitchen / Dining / Living

Confused by key money? We wrote a dedicated guide: Key Money in Japan Explained.

Step 4: The guarantor company

Traditionally, tenants needed a Japanese personal guarantor. Today, most apartments instead require a guarantor company (保証会社) — you pay a fee (typically 50–100% of one month's rent at move-in, plus a small annual renewal) and they guarantee your rent to the landlord.

This is good news for foreigners: you don't need to find a Japanese person to vouch for you. Some guarantor companies have stricter screening for non-Japanese applicants, but an experienced agency will know which companies and which landlords are foreigner-friendly, and route your application accordingly.

Step 5: Application and screening (1–7 days)

Once you apply (申込み), the guarantor company and landlord review your income, visa status and sometimes conduct a short phone interview — this can often be done with an interpreter or via your agency. Approval typically takes 2–5 business days.

Step 6: Contract and move-in costs

Expect total move-in costs of 4–5 months' rent: deposit, key money, agency fee, first month's rent, guarantor fee, fire insurance, lock exchange. For a ¥100,000/month apartment that's ¥400,000–500,000 — see the full breakdown in Move-in Costs in Japan.

The easiest ¥110,000 you'll ever save Deposit and key money are set by the landlord, but the agency fee (usually 1 month + tax) depends entirely on which agency you sign with. Kurabeel charges tenants no agency fee — we're paid by landlords instead. Same apartment, same contract, one month's rent cheaper.

Common questions from foreign renters

Can I rent without speaking Japanese?

Yes. The lease documents will be in Japanese, but an agency with English support can walk you through every clause before you sign. Kurabeel supports English via LINE chat.

Will landlords reject me for being a foreigner?

Some individual landlords do — it's frustrating but real. The practical answer is to work with an agency that checks the landlord's policy before you get attached to a listing, so you never waste an application.

When should I start looking?

Apartments in Tokyo move fast: start seriously looking 3–4 weeks before your target move-in date. January–March is peak season with the most listings but zero negotiating power; May–August is quieter and cheaper.

Apartment hunting in Tokyo? We'll help — in English, on LINE

Send us any SUUMO or HOME'S listing URL. We'll check availability, foreigner-friendliness, and whether the agency fee can be ¥0.

Chat with us on LINE
Chat on LINE — English OK