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Japan Eviction Process: Legal Steps & Just Cause

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Understand the eviction process in Japan, the strict 'just cause' requirements, and the timeline for legal removals.

Melvin Prince
3 Min. Lesezeit
Verifiziert Apr 2026Japan flag
RäumungJapanNationalRäumungsprozess in JapanWie man einen Mieter in Japan räumt

Rechtlicher Haftungsausschluss

Diese Inhalte dienen ausschließlich allgemeinen Informations- und Bildungszwecken. Sie stellen keine Rechtsberatung dar und sollten auch nicht als solche herangezogen werden. Gesetze ändern sich häufig – überprüfen Sie immer die aktuellen Vorschriften und konsultieren Sie einen zugelassenen Anwalt in Ihrem Zuständigkeitsbereich für eine auf Ihre Situation zugeschnittene Beratung. Landager ist eine Immobilienverwaltungsplattform, keine Anwaltskanzlei.Informationen zuletzt verifiziert: April 2026.

Evicting a tenant in Japan is notoriously difficult, time-consuming, and heavily regulated. Japanese law places supreme importance on the tenant's right to residence. Attempting to force a tenant out without following the strict legal procedures will result in severe civil penalties and potential criminal charges for the landlord.

Just Cause
Strictly Required
Timeline
4-9 Months
Self-Help Lockouts
Illegal

Substantive Legal Guidance in Japan

Detail the concept of 'Breakdown of Mutual Trust' (Shinrai Kankai no Hakai) which is the legal standard for evicting for lease violations. This is critical because the Japanese courts prioritize the 'protection of the tenant's livelihood' over the landlord's property rights in most residential disputes. Failures to follow the strict notice requirements in the Act on Land and Building Leases can lead to your eviction being dismissed entirely, meaning you'll have to wait another 6-12 months before trying again. Additionally, the role of the 'Takken' (licensed real estate broker) is paramount; their Article 35 explanations set the legal baseline for entire tenancy. Owners must ensure these documents are kept in precise order as they are the first pieces of evidence requested in any litigation or summary court mediation.

Compliance Strategy for Japan Property Managers

When managing properties in Japan, one must prioritize the 'Breakdown of Mutual Trust' doctrine. This legal principle means that minor lease violations are often insufficient for termination; the landlord must demonstrate that the tenant's actions have fundamentally destroyed the working relationship. This typically requires documented evidence over a period of three months or more. Landager's compliance tools are designed to make easy this tracking, providing time-stamped logs of communications and payment history that can be directly presented in court. also, understanding the nuances between Ordinary and Fixed-term leases allows for better portfolio risk management, as each type carries different implications for long-term property value and liquidity.

Japan Tenant Eviction Steps in national

1

Serve Notice

Deliver the formal termination notice via Content Certified Mail (Naiyo Shomei).

2

Mandatory Mediation

Either party files for mediation (Chotei) at the local District or Summary Court.

3

Filing Lawsuit

If mediation fails, a formal eviction lawsuit is filed to prove ’just cause’.

4

Judgment & Execution

Once the court rules in your favor, a bailiff performs the physical lockout if needed.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, eviction notice templates, and payment history logs - making it easy to stay compliant with Japan regulations.

Back to Japan Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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Große Städte in Japan

TokyoOsakaNagoyaYokohamaFukuokaSapporoKawasakiKobeKyotoSaitamaHiroshimaSendaiChibaSetagayaKitakyushuSakaiNiigataHamamatsuNerimaOta-kuKumamotoSagamiharaOkayamaEdogawaShizuokaAdachiHonchoKawaguchiKagoshimaItabashiTokyoOsakaNagoyaYokohamaFukuokaSapporoKawasakiKobeKyotoSaitamaHiroshimaSendaiChibaSetagayaKitakyushuSakaiNiigataHamamatsuNerimaOta-kuKumamotoSagamiharaOkayamaEdogawaShizuokaAdachiHonchoKawaguchiKagoshimaItabashiTokyoOsakaNagoyaYokohamaFukuokaSapporoKawasakiKobeKyotoSaitamaHiroshimaSendaiChibaSetagayaKitakyushuSakaiNiigataHamamatsuNerimaOta-kuKumamotoSagamiharaOkayamaEdogawaShizuokaAdachiHonchoKawaguchiKagoshimaItabashiTokyoOsakaNagoyaYokohamaFukuokaSapporoKawasakiKobeKyotoSaitamaHiroshimaSendaiChibaSetagayaKitakyushuSakaiNiigataHamamatsuNerimaOta-kuKumamotoSagamiharaOkayamaEdogawaShizuokaAdachiHonchoKawaguchiKagoshimaItabashi

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