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how to register as a qualified invoice issuer japan online

How to Register As a Qualified Invoice Issuer in Japan Online (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 47 minutes ago

If you sell goods or services to Japanese businesses, understanding how to register as a qualified invoice issuer in Japan online is now a compliance priority that directly affects your revenue. Japan’s Qualified Invoice System (適格請求書等保存方式), which took effect on 1 October 2023, requires suppliers to hold registered status before their customers can claim full input tax credits on Japanese Consumption Tax (JCT). With transitional purchase‑tax‑credit rules tightening from 1 October 2026, suppliers who have not yet registered face real commercial risk, their buyers will progressively lose the ability to deduct JCT paid on unqualified invoices.

This guide walks through eligibility, the online e‑Tax registration process, JP PINT e‑invoicing requirements, and the critical 2026 deadlines every business operating in or selling into Japan needs to know.

Quick‑Reference Checklist, Do You Need to Register?

Any business that wants its Japanese customers to claim JCT input tax credits must be a registered qualified invoice issuer (適格請求書発行事業者). If you are not registered, your invoices cannot support your buyers’ tax deductions, a situation that becomes significantly more costly after 1 October 2026 when the remaining transitional credit allowances are further reduced.

  • Domestic taxable corporations. Registration is effectively mandatory if you sell to other taxable businesses.
  • Sole proprietors and freelancers. Previously tax‑exempt businesses should evaluate whether opting in protects client relationships under the Japan invoice system for freelancers.
  • Foreign companies with a Japan PE. You can register through the tax office supervising your permanent establishment or via e‑Tax with a valid digital ID.
  • Foreign companies without a Japan PE. Online registration is generally not available without a local digital ID; a Japanese tax representative or agent is typically required.
  • Key deadline. Complete registration well before 1 October 2026 to ensure uninterrupted qualified‑invoice capability when the next transitional credit reduction takes effect.

Background: Japan’s Qualified Invoice System and Who It Affects

Japan levies Consumption Tax (JCT) on the supply of goods and services at a standard rate of 10%, with a reduced rate of 8% for food and beverages (excluding alcohol and dining‑out). JCT operates as a multi‑stage value‑added tax: each business in the supply chain charges JCT on its sales and offsets the JCT it paid on purchases, the “input tax credit” mechanism.

Before October 2023, buyers could claim input tax credits using ordinary invoices from any supplier, whether that supplier was a taxable person or a tax‑exempt small business. The Qualified Invoice System changed this fundamentally. Now, a buyer can only claim a full input tax credit if the invoice it holds was issued by a supplier registered as a qualified invoice issuer in Japan and the document meets prescribed content requirements.

The system was designed to improve transparency and prevent tax‑exempt businesses from collecting JCT they do not remit. Industry observers expect it to align Japan more closely with the European VAT invoice model over time, particularly as e‑invoicing adoption accelerates.

Key Definitions

  • Qualified Invoice (適格請求書). An invoice that includes the issuer’s registration number, applicable tax rates, tax amounts broken down by rate, and other prescribed items set out by the National Tax Agency (NTA).
  • Qualified Invoice Issuer (適格請求書発行事業者). A business that has applied for and received NTA registration, enabling it to issue qualified invoices.
  • Taxable Person (課税事業者). A business whose taxable sales exceeded ¥10 million in the base period (generally two fiscal years prior) or that has voluntarily elected taxable status. Only taxable persons may register as qualified invoice issuers.

Foreigners and non‑resident companies do pay consumption tax on taxable supplies made within Japan. Whether a foreign entity qualifies as a taxable person depends on whether it has taxable sales exceeding the ¥10 million threshold through a Japanese PE or direct transactions subject to JCT.

Eligibility and Consumption Tax Registration Requirements Japan 2026

To register as a qualified invoice issuer, you must first be, or simultaneously become, a JCT taxable person. The consumption tax registration requirements for Japan in 2026 remain grounded in the ¥10 million base‑period threshold, but the practical landscape has shifted: many formerly tax‑exempt businesses have opted in specifically to maintain qualified invoice issuer status and protect their B2B customer relationships.

Entity Type Registration Approach and Timeline Reporting / Invoice Obligation
Domestic corporation (taxable) File the Eligible Invoice Issuer Registration Application (適格請求書発行事業者の登録申請書) with the head of the competent tax office, or submit online via e‑Tax, complete before the accounting period that includes 1 October 2026 Must issue qualified invoices on request; retain copies for the statutory retention period; may adopt JP PINT for e‑invoicing
Sole proprietor / freelancer Same application form; digital ID requirements vary (MyNumber Card for e‑Tax); if currently tax‑exempt, consider the timing of opt‑in and its impact on buyers If not registered, buyers progressively lose input credit for purchases once the transitional phase narrows
Foreign company without a Japan PE Online registration via e‑Tax is generally unavailable without a local digital ID, register through a Japanese tax representative or agent; additional documentary proof (certificate of incorporation, power of attorney) required Buyers must confirm supplier status; foreign‑currency invoices may require JPY conversion under NTA guidance

Required Documentation

  • Corporate Number (法人番号) or Individual Number (マイナンバー). Needed for form completion and e‑Tax authentication.
  • Registered Japanese name and address. Foreign entities need a local registered address or an appointed tax representative’s address.
  • Recent tax returns. Confirmation of taxable person status or a concurrent election of taxable status if currently exempt.
  • Power of attorney. Required where a tax agent or representative submits on behalf of a foreign company.

Special Rules for Non‑Resident and Foreign Entities

For foreign companies not based in Japan, the EU‑Japan Centre for Industrial Cooperation confirms that it is generally not possible to register online as a qualified invoice issuer without a Japanese digital ID, which requires a legal presence in the country. The practical route for most foreign suppliers is to appoint a tax representative (納税管理人) in Japan and submit the application through that representative or directly at the competent tax office by post.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Register as a Qualified Invoice Issuer Japan Online

The NTA’s e‑Tax system allows domestic businesses and those with a valid Japanese digital ID to register as a qualified invoice issuer in Japan online. The process follows five core steps.

  1. Confirm your taxable person status. Verify that you are already a JCT taxable person or file an election to become one. If your base‑period taxable sales are below ¥10 million and you wish to register, you must simultaneously submit a Consumption Tax Taxable Period Election Notification (消費税課税事業者選択届出書).
  2. Obtain or verify your identification number. Corporations need their 13‑digit Corporate Number (法人番号). Sole proprietors use their MyNumber (Individual Number). These numbers are essential for e‑Tax authentication and will form the basis of your qualified invoice issuer registration number.
  3. Set up e‑Tax access with a digital ID. You will need a JPKI‑compatible IC card reader and a MyNumber Card (or a corporate digital certificate for juridical persons). Log in to the e‑Tax portal, which offers limited English navigation. If you are a foreign entity without local digital credentials, this step cannot be completed online, proceed via your appointed tax representative.
  4. Complete the Eligible Invoice Issuer Registration Application. The form is officially titled 適格請求書発行事業者の登録申請書. Fill in your business name, address, Corporate Number or Individual Number, the type of business, and the desired registration date. Attach any required supplementary documents (such as a concurrent taxable‑person election if applicable).
  5. Submit via e‑Tax or at the tax office. Submit electronically through e‑Tax. Alternatively, print and mail the completed application to the Qualified Invoice Issuer Registration Centre (適格請求書発行事業者登録センター) designated for your region, or submit it in person at your competent tax office.

Offline Submission Fallback

If e‑Tax is not available to you, whether because of digital‑ID constraints or technical limitations, the NTA accepts paper applications sent by post or delivered in person. The NTA’s Japan Invoice System Instructions PDF provides printable form templates and the postal addresses for each regional Registration Centre.

Processing Times

The NTA does not guarantee a fixed processing period. Early indications from practitioner experience suggest that e‑Tax submissions are typically processed faster than paper applications. Businesses should allow several weeks, and ideally submit well in advance of any critical deadline, to account for potential queries or additional documentation requests from the tax office. Upon approval, the NTA issues a registration notification containing your qualified invoice issuer registration number.

JP PINT E‑Invoicing and Technical Requirements for Qualified Invoice Issuers in Japan

Japan’s e‑invoicing framework uses the JP PINT format, aligned with the Peppol BIS Billing 3.0 standard. While e‑invoicing is not yet mandatory for all businesses, the government is actively promoting adoption, and the JP PINT specification ensures that electronic invoices contain all fields required under the Qualified Invoice System.

Minimum Qualified Invoice Fields

Whether issued on paper, as a PDF, or in JP PINT electronic format, every qualified invoice must include the following information:

  • Issuer’s name and qualified invoice issuer registration number. The registration number format is “T” followed by a 13‑digit number (the Corporate Number for corporations, or a separately assigned number for sole proprietors).
  • Transaction date. The date on which the taxable supply occurred.
  • Description of goods or services. Sufficient detail to identify the taxable transaction.
  • Taxable amount and applicable tax rate. Broken down by each applicable rate (10% standard or 8% reduced).
  • Consumption tax amount. Shown separately for each rate category.
  • Recipient’s name. The name of the customer receiving the invoice.

Adopting JP PINT in Your Accounting Systems

Businesses planning to adopt JP PINT e‑invoicing should ensure their accounting or ERP software can generate and receive XML invoices conforming to the Peppol BIS Billing 3.0 specification with JP PINT extensions. The key steps involve registering as a Peppol participant through a certified Access Point provider, mapping your existing invoice fields to the JP PINT schema, and testing document exchange with trading partners. Detailed technical mapping is available through the Digital Agency’s published JP PINT specifications and the Peppol network documentation.

Deadlines and Transitional Purchase Tax Credit Rules, 2026 Focus

The Qualified Invoice System includes a transitional period designed to ease the shift for buyers who deal with unregistered suppliers. However, the credit percentages available under this transitional regime decline over time, making the consumption tax registration requirements for Japan in 2026 especially pressing.

Date Rule / Event Practical Action
1 October 2023 Qualified Invoice System takes effect; transitional rule allows 80% input credit on purchases from unregistered suppliers Suppliers: apply for registration; Buyers: begin verifying supplier registration numbers
1 October 2026 Transitional credit reduced to 50% on purchases from unregistered suppliers Suppliers: complete registration before this date to avoid client loss; Buyers: audit supplier lists and renegotiate terms with unregistered vendors
1 October 2029 Transitional credit ends entirely, no input credit on purchases from unregistered suppliers Full compliance required across the supply chain; all suppliers must be registered or buyers absorb the full tax cost

The likely practical effect of the October 2026 reduction is significant: a buyer purchasing from an unregistered supplier will only be able to credit 50% of the JCT charged, compared to 80% in the current phase. For high‑value procurement relationships, this gap creates a strong commercial incentive for buyers to either require registration or renegotiate pricing, and for suppliers to register proactively.

Impact on Buyers’ Input Tax Credits, Penalties and Audit Risks

The consequences of dealing with an unregistered supplier fall primarily on the purchaser. If a buyer claims an input tax credit based on an invoice that does not qualify, because the supplier lacks a valid registration number or the invoice omits required fields, the credit may be denied on audit, potentially triggering additional tax, penalties, and interest.

Common risk scenarios include:

  • Unregistered freelancer or sole proprietor. A domestic buyer engages a freelance consultant who has not registered. After 1 October 2026, the buyer can only deduct 50% of the JCT shown on the invoice, and after 1 October 2029, none at all.
  • Foreign supplier without Japan registration. An overseas vendor invoices a Japanese company in a foreign currency without a qualified invoice issuer registration number. The buyer cannot claim any input tax credit, and may face retrospective adjustments if incorrectly claimed.
  • Incorrect or missing invoice fields. An invoice that omits the tax‑rate breakdown or the registration number is not a qualified invoice, even if the issuer is registered.

Common Audit Mistakes

Tax auditors increasingly scrutinise qualified invoice compliance. Frequent errors include failing to verify a supplier’s registration number before claiming credit, accepting invoices that do not separate tax amounts by rate, and neglecting to retain copies of qualified invoices for the required storage period. Buyers should implement systematic supplier verification and invoice‑checking procedures as part of their standard accounts‑payable workflow.

After Registration, Verifying Your Qualified Invoice Issuer Registration Number

Once the NTA approves your application, you receive a registration notification containing your qualified invoice issuer registration number. For corporations, this number follows the format “T” plus your 13‑digit Corporate Number. For sole proprietors, the NTA assigns a dedicated 13‑digit number prefixed with “T” that is distinct from the Individual Number (MyNumber) to protect personal privacy.

The NTA maintains a public registry where anyone can search for and verify a qualified invoice issuer registration number in Japan. Buyers should use this lookup tool to confirm supplier status before processing invoices for input tax credit purposes. The registry can be accessed through the NTA website and allows searches by registration number or business name.

Issuing and Storing Qualified Invoices

As a registered issuer, you are obligated to issue a qualified invoice whenever a taxable customer requests one. You must also retain a copy of each issued qualified invoice. The statutory retention period for tax documentation in Japan is generally seven years from the day following the filing deadline for the relevant tax return, though certain circumstances may extend this period to ten years. Ensure your record‑keeping systems, whether paper‑based, PDF, or JP PINT electronic, meet these retention requirements.

Handling Delayed Registration

If registration is not completed before a particular supply date, the invoice issued for that transaction cannot be a qualified invoice. Industry observers expect that retroactive registration is not available under the current rules, registration takes effect from the date specified in the NTA’s approval notification. Businesses that anticipate delays should communicate with affected customers and explore whether corrective invoices can be issued once registration is confirmed.

Practical Checklist: Pre‑Submission Registration Steps

Before submitting your Eligible Invoice Issuer Registration Application, verify the following:

  1. Confirm your JCT taxable person status or file a concurrent election.
  2. Have your Corporate Number (法人番号) or Individual Number (マイナンバー) available.
  3. Prepare a valid digital certificate and IC card reader if using e‑Tax.
  4. Complete all fields on the registration application form (適格請求書発行事業者の登録申請書).
  5. Attach concurrent taxable‑person election forms if applicable.
  6. For foreign entities: appoint a tax representative and prepare a power of attorney.
  7. Confirm the postal address of your regional Registration Centre if filing by mail.
  8. Review that your invoice template includes all required qualified invoice fields.
  9. Update accounting systems to capture and display the registration number on all invoices.
  10. Notify key customers of your registration status and number once approved.

Conclusion: Secure Your Registration Before the 2026 Transition

The narrowing of Japan’s transitional purchase‑tax‑credit allowances on 1 October 2026 makes timely registration as a qualified invoice issuer in Japan a pressing commercial and compliance priority. Whether you are a domestic corporation, a sole proprietor evaluating the Japan invoice system, or a foreign supplier navigating the process through a tax representative, the steps are well‑defined: confirm taxable status, prepare documentation, and submit via e‑Tax or the NTA’s regional Registration Centre. Businesses that act now protect both their customers’ input tax credits and their own competitive position in the Japanese market. For complex cross‑border structures or audit‑risk concerns, qualified tax law professionals and experienced lawyers in Japan can provide tailored guidance on registration strategy, JP PINT adoption, and dispute resolution.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Akira Tanaka at Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. National Tax Agency, Japan Invoice System Instructions (PDF)
  2. NTA (English), Simplified Guidance on Qualified Invoice System
  3. Stripe, What Is a Qualified Invoice Issuer? (Japan)
  4. Peppol, Official Network and JP PINT Resources
  5. PwC Japan, Tax News: Invoicing Rules for Foreign Currency
  6. RTC Suite, e-Invoicing in Japan: Complete Guide
  7. EU-Japan Centre, Qualified Invoice System
  8. City of Inagi, Qualified Invoice Storage Method

FAQs

Who must register as a qualified invoice issuer in Japan?
Any business that wants its Japanese customers to claim full JCT input tax credits must register. This includes domestic taxable corporations, sole proprietors who sell to taxable businesses, and certain foreign suppliers making taxable supplies in Japan. Registration is technically voluntary, but the commercial consequences of not registering, buyer loss and pricing pressure, make it effectively essential for B2B suppliers.
In most cases, foreign companies without a Japanese digital ID (such as a MyNumber Card or corporate digital certificate) cannot complete the online e‑Tax registration process directly. They typically need to appoint a tax representative in Japan who submits the application on their behalf, either through e‑Tax using the representative’s credentials or by paper submission to the competent tax office.
JP PINT is Japan’s e‑invoicing format, aligned with the Peppol BIS Billing 3.0 standard. It is not currently mandatory, qualified invoices can still be issued on paper or as PDFs, provided they contain all required fields. However, businesses planning to exchange e‑invoices electronically should adopt the JP PINT format for interoperability with Japanese trading partners and government systems.
The NTA provides a public online registry where you can look up a qualified invoice issuer registration number by entering the “T” number or searching by business name. Buyers should verify supplier registration numbers as part of their accounts‑payable procedures before processing invoices for input tax credit claims.
From 1 October 2026, buyers can only claim 50% of JCT as an input tax credit on purchases from unregistered suppliers, down from 80% in the initial transitional phase. After 1 October 2029, no credit will be available at all. Suppliers who remain unregistered risk losing customers or being asked to absorb the tax cost through price reductions.
Japan’s consumption tax is levied at a standard rate of 10%. A reduced rate of 8% applies to certain food and beverage items (excluding alcohol and restaurant dining). Both rates must be itemised separately on a qualified invoice for the buyer to claim the correct input tax credit.
Yes, but doing so means the business must become a JCT taxable person and begin charging, collecting, and remitting consumption tax. For small businesses whose annual taxable sales are below ¥10 million, the NTA has introduced a special measure allowing them to remit only 20% of the JCT they collect for a limited transitional period, reducing the initial compliance burden of opting in.

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How to Register As a Qualified Invoice Issuer in Japan Online (2026)

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