Japan Work Visa from Philippines 2026 - TITP, SSW & Caregiver Guide

David Okafor
Global Mobility Correspondent··14 min read
Filipino OFWs in Japan
3.4% of total
SSW sectors
14 industries
JLPT needed
N4 minimum
SSW2 → PR
Possible ✓
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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.
Japan was traditionally a temporary destination. SSW2 changes everything - permanent residency is now possible for blue-collar workers for the first time.

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.
TITP has faced criticism for worker exploitation. The Japanese government is reforming it, and SSW is the better long-term option for most Filipinos.

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.
SSW2 is revolutionary for Filipinos in Japan - it is the first pathway to permanent residency for blue-collar workers. SSW exams are conducted in Manila, Cebu, and Davao; register at the official SSW portal for around ¥10,000 (~₱3,800).

Caregiver pathway - Japan's biggest need

There are three routes for Filipino caregivers into Japan:

  1. TITP Caregiver - 3-5 years, requires TESDA Caregiver NC II and JLPT N4.
  2. SSW Nursing Care - requires the sector skills exam and JLPT N4.
  3. EPA - a bilateral agreement route, but you must pass the Japanese nursing exam (the hardest path).
TESDA Caregiver NC II is required for TITP and recommended for SSW. The 6-12 month training program costs ₱20,000-50,000 at accredited centres in Manila, Cebu, Davao, and Baguio. Caregiving in Japan pays ¥200-280K/month (₱76-107K) versus a Philippine caregiver salary of ₱10-15K.

Japanese language - the JLPT guide for Filipinos

LevelDescriptionNeeded ForStudy Time
N5BasicSome TITP placements2-3 months
N4ElementarySSW and most TITP4-6 months
N3IntermediateBetter jobs, higher pay8-12 months
N2AdvancedProfessional roles1-2 years
N1FluentJapanese nursing exam2-3 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.
The JLPT is held twice a year (July and December) at test centres in Manila, Cebu, and Davao; registration is about ₱1,500. Start Japanese now - N4 takes 4-6 months. To deploy by 2027, begin studying today.

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.

Red flags: an agency charging more than ₱20,000 in processing fees, promising an unrealistically high salary, showing no DMW accreditation, or asking for your original passport. Report illegal recruitment to the DMW hotline 1348.

Salary and cost of living in Japan

RoleMonthly SalaryDeductionsTake-HomeIn ₱
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?

FactorJapan (SSW)Saudi ArabiaUAE
Salary¥200-300K (₱76-115K)SAR3-8K (₱50-130K)AED5-12K (₱80-190K)
TaxTaxed (15-20%)Tax-freeTax-free
PR pathSSW2 → YesNoNo
FamilySSW2 onlySalary thresholdSalary threshold
LanguageJapanese (N4+)English / ArabicEnglish
Contract5yr (SSW1)2yr renewable2yr renewable
Worker protectionStrong (improving)Bilateral agreementBilateral agreement
Choose Japan for a long-term career and a possible PR pathway. Choose the Gulf for maximum tax-free savings in the shortest time. See how to move to Dubai for the Gulf route.

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

  1. Months 1-6: study Japanese to JLPT N4 and sit the exam (July or December).
  2. Months 3-9: complete TESDA certification relevant to your sector.
  3. Month 6: pass the SSW skills exam in Manila, Cebu, or Davao.
  4. Months 6-9: register with DMW and apply through an accredited sending organisation.
  5. Months 9-12: visa processing, PDOS, OEC, and deployment to Japan.

Frequently asked questions

More Philippines visa guides

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