Why Japan for Filipinos
- Around 3.4% of all OFWs are in Japan - and the number is growing fast.
- Japan's ageing population creates chronic, structural demand for workers.
- Government-to-government recruitment programs give Filipinos protected pathways.
- A short 4-hour flight keeps you close to home.
- Cultural compatibility - respect, discipline, and a service mindset are valued.
TITP - Technical Intern Training Program
TITP is a government-managed program. Despite the "training" label it is genuine work, lasting 3 years (extendable to 5 with TITP3), in manufacturing, agriculture, fisheries, construction, food processing, caregiving, and nursing.
Requirements
- Age 18 or over.
- JLPT N4 (basic Japanese) - some employers accept N5.
- TESDA certification relevant to your sector.
- Clean NBI clearance and medical clearance.
Salary and limitations
- Salary ¥170,000-250,000/month (~₱65-95K); after tax, housing, and insurance, take-home is ¥120,000-200,000.
- You are tied to one employer and cannot switch.
- No family allowed during TITP.
SSW - Specified Skilled Worker (the better option)
SSW1 - up to 5 years
- 14 sectors including nursing care, building cleaning, agriculture, food and beverage manufacturing, food service, construction, shipbuilding, auto maintenance, aviation, accommodation, fisheries, and machinery/metal/electronics.
- Requires a sector-specific skills exam plus JLPT N4.
- You can change employers within the same sector.
- Salary ¥200,000-300,000/month. Family is NOT allowed in SSW1.
SSW2 - unlimited, with a PR pathway
- Available for an expanding list of sectors including construction and shipbuilding.
- Requires passing an advanced skills exam.
- Family CAN join you.
- You can apply for permanent residency after meeting the requirements.
Caregiver pathway - Japan's biggest need
There are three routes for Filipino caregivers into Japan:
- TITP Caregiver - 3-5 years, requires TESDA Caregiver NC II and JLPT N4.
- SSW Nursing Care - requires the sector skills exam and JLPT N4.
- EPA - a bilateral agreement route, but you must pass the Japanese nursing exam (the hardest path).
Japanese language - the JLPT guide for Filipinos
| Level | Description | Needed For | Study Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| N5 | Basic | Some TITP placements | 2-3 months |
| N4 | Elementary | SSW and most TITP | 4-6 months |
| N3 | Intermediate | Better jobs, higher pay | 8-12 months |
| N2 | Advanced | Professional roles | 1-2 years |
| N1 | Fluent | Japanese nursing exam | 2-3 years |
Where to study in the Philippines
- Nihongo centres in Manila (Makati, Ortigas), Cebu, and Davao.
- TESDA Japanese language programs.
- Japan Foundation Manila - free courses.
- Online options: Nihongo-Pro, JapanesePod101.
- A typical N4 course costs ₱10,000-30,000.
Finding a legitimate Japan employer
Japan deployment must go through a DMW-accredited sending organisation (SO). Check accreditation at dmw.gov.ph and filter for Japan. Direct hiring is rare and often illegal.
Salary and cost of living in Japan
| Role | Monthly Salary | Deductions | Take-Home | In ₱ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TITP factory | ¥180,000 | ¥50,000 | ¥130,000 | ₱50K |
| SSW caregiver | ¥220,000 | ¥55,000 | ¥165,000 | ₱63K |
| SSW food service | ¥200,000 | ¥50,000 | ¥150,000 | ₱57K |
| SSW construction | ¥250,000 | ¥60,000 | ¥190,000 | ₱73K |
| Nurse (licensed) | ¥350,000 | ¥80,000 | ¥270,000 | ₱103K |
- Company housing: ¥20-40K/month, often subsidised.
- Food: ¥30-40K/month. Transport: ¥5-10K/month.
- Remittance potential: ¥80-150K/month (₱30-57K sent home).
Japan vs Gulf - which is better for Filipino workers?
| Factor | Japan (SSW) | Saudi Arabia | UAE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salary | ¥200-300K (₱76-115K) | SAR3-8K (₱50-130K) | AED5-12K (₱80-190K) |
| Tax | Taxed (15-20%) | Tax-free | Tax-free |
| PR path | SSW2 → Yes | No | No |
| Family | SSW2 only | Salary threshold | Salary threshold |
| Language | Japanese (N4+) | English / Arabic | English |
| Contract | 5yr (SSW1) | 2yr renewable | 2yr renewable |
| Worker protection | Strong (improving) | Bilateral agreement | Bilateral agreement |
DMW process for Japan deployment
All Japan-bound OFWs complete the standard DMW process: registration at dmw.gov.ph, the PEOS seminar, contract verification, a Japan-specific PDOS, an OEC (Overseas Employment Certificate), and OWWA membership (₱1,300). The full checklist is on the Philippines visa guide hub.
Action plan
- Months 1-6: study Japanese to JLPT N4 and sit the exam (July or December).
- Months 3-9: complete TESDA certification relevant to your sector.
- Month 6: pass the SSW skills exam in Manila, Cebu, or Davao.
- Months 6-9: register with DMW and apply through an accredited sending organisation.
- Months 9-12: visa processing, PDOS, OEC, and deployment to Japan.
Frequently asked questions
More Philippines visa guides
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