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How to buy Bitcoin in Japan using local exchanges?

Japanese crypto exchanges require FSA registration, segregated assets, JPY-denominated trades, strict KYC (My Number + income proof), Zengin bank links, and 95% cold storage—non-compliant platforms risk penalties and user fund loss.

Jul 08, 2026 at 06:39 pm

Japanese Regulatory Framework for Crypto Exchanges

1. All licensed exchanges operating in Japan must be registered with the Financial Services Agency (FSA) under the Payment Services Act and the Act on Prevention of Transfer of Criminal Proceeds.

2. FSA-registered platforms are required to maintain segregated client asset accounts, undergo annual external audits, and comply with strict anti-money laundering protocols.

3. As of June 2026, there are 21 active FSA-registered exchanges, including Bitflyer, Coincheck, GMO Coin, and Liquid.

4. Unregistered platforms advertising services to Japanese residents face criminal penalties, and users transferring funds to such entities risk irreversible loss without legal recourse.

5. The FSA mandates real-name verification for all accounts, requiring a valid My Number card, residence certificate, and proof of income or source of funds for deposits exceeding ¥500,000 per month.

Account Setup Process on Domestic Platforms

1. Download the official mobile application or access the exchange’s website using a Japanese IP address and browser set to Japanese language.

2. Submit scanned copies of government-issued ID documents—only Japanese driver’s licenses, My Number cards, or residence cards are accepted; foreign passports require prior registration with the local municipal office.

3. Complete video-based identity confirmation where users must hold their ID next to their face while reading aloud a randomly generated phrase displayed on screen.

4. Link a domestic bank account registered under the same name as the ID—only accounts held at banks covered by Japan’s Zengin System (e.g., Mitsubishi UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui, Mizuho) are supported.

5. Enable two-factor authentication using either an FSA-compliant authenticator app or a physical security key certified under Japan’s JIS X 5090 standard.

Funding Methods Accepted by Japanese Exchanges

1. Bank transfers via the Zengin Network are processed within one business day, with no fees for transfers under ¥1 million, but subject to daily limits imposed by individual banks.

2. Konbini payments through Seven-Eleven, Lawson, or FamilyMart kiosks allow cash deposits up to ¥300,000 per transaction, though these incur a flat ¥300 fee and require QR code scanning at the register.

3. Real-time transfers using PayPay or Rakuten Pay are supported only on Bitflyer and GMO Coin, with instant settlement but capped at ¥50,000 per day unless upgraded to “Premium” tier.

4. Credit card purchases remain prohibited under FSA guidelines due to concerns over speculative leverage and consumer protection risks.

5. Corporate accounts may use wire transfers from designated corporate bank accounts, provided the company is registered with Japan’s Legal Affairs Bureau and has filed its most recent corporate tax return.

Trading Mechanics and Tax Implications

1. All Bitcoin trades executed on Japanese exchanges are denominated in JPY, with order books displaying bid/ask spreads in yen per BTC, not percentage-based slippage indicators.

2. Margin trading is restricted to users who pass a mandatory knowledge assessment and maintain a minimum net asset value of ¥10 million across all linked accounts.

3. Capital gains from cryptocurrency transactions are taxed as miscellaneous income under Japan’s National Tax Agency rules, with rates ranging from 15% to 55% depending on total annual income.

4. Exchanges automatically generate end-of-year transaction reports in XML format compliant with e-Tax submission standards, accessible only after completing year-end reconciliation with uploaded expense receipts.

5. Losses from trading cannot be carried forward beyond the fiscal year in which they occurred, nor offset against salary or business income under current NTA interpretation.

Security Practices Unique to Japanese Platforms

1. Multi-signature cold wallets used by all FSA-licensed exchanges must store at least 95% of user BTC assets offline, with signing keys physically separated across geographically dispersed vaults in Tokyo, Osaka, and Sapporo.

2. Withdrawal requests trigger SMS notifications to registered Japanese mobile numbers only—international numbers or VoIP services are rejected during setup.

3. Daily withdrawal limits reset at midnight JST and vary by verification level: ¥1 million for basic accounts, ¥10 million for verified corporate accounts, and ¥50 million for institutional clients with FSA-approved custody agreements.

4. All login attempts from unrecognized devices trigger mandatory re-authentication via J-Alert compatible emergency broadcast system integration, requiring confirmation through a government-issued digital ID portal.

5. Transaction logs are retained for ten years under Japan’s Electronic Record Keeping Act and must be producible within 72 hours upon request by FSA inspectors.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Can non-residents open accounts on Japanese crypto exchanges?Non-residents holding valid Japanese visas with residency status longer than six months may apply, but must provide certified residence certificates issued within the last 30 days and proof of domestic income.

Q2: Are stablecoin deposits accepted on domestic platforms?Only JPY-pegged stablecoins approved by the FSA—currently limited to JPYC and JPYB—are supported; USDT and USDC remain prohibited for deposit or trading.

Q3: What happens if my bank rejects a transfer to an exchange?Banks may block transfers flagged as high-risk under internal AML policies; users must obtain written rejection notices and submit them to the exchange’s compliance desk for manual review.

Q4: Do Japanese exchanges support SegWit or Taproot addresses?All FSA-licensed platforms accept native SegWit (bech32) addresses; Taproot (bc1p) support was rolled out industry-wide in March 2026 following METI’s updated blockchain interoperability directive.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

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