3 Rules for Successful Real Estate Investing in Japan
If you're thinking about investing in Japanese real estate, you've probably heard that Japan offers some of the best cap rates in the developed world. But most foreign investors don't know how local Japanese investors actually evaluate properties — and it's completely different from what you might expect.
Here are the three rules that experienced Japanese real estate investors use to screen properties before even talking to a bank.
Rule 1: Sekisan Hyoka Must Be 70% or Higher
Japanese banks use a valuation method called "sekisan hyoka" (積算評価) — essentially a cost approach that calculates land value plus depreciated building value. If this figure is less than 70% of the purchase price, most regional banks won't lend at favorable rates.
Here's the formula:
- Land value = Road price (路線価) × Area
- Building value = Construction cost × Remaining useful life ratio
- Sekisan Hyoka = Land value + Building value
If you're paying ¥50M for a property with sekisan hyoka of ¥35M, that's 70% — borderline acceptable. At 50%, most banks will require a large down payment or decline entirely.
The practical takeaway: Before making any offer, calculate the sekisan hyoka using the National Tax Agency's road price data (available free at https://www.rosenka.nta.go.jp). If it's under 70%, you're likely paying a premium that will limit your financing options.
Rule 2: Income Approach Valuation Must Reach 100%
The second filter is "shueki kangen hyoka" (収益還元評価) — the income capitalization approach. Japanese banks often use a cap rate of around 8-10% for this calculation:
- Income approach value = Annual rent income ÷ Cap rate (0.08 to 0.10)
If a property generates ¥4M per year in rent, the income approach value at 10% cap rate is ¥40M. If you're paying ¥50M, that's only 80% coverage — the bank sees a gap.
Properties where the income approach value equals or exceeds the purchase price (100%+ coverage) are considered well-balanced from a lender's perspective.
The practical takeaway: Run both calculations before approaching any bank. Properties that pass both the sekisan hyoka AND income approach tests will get the most favorable financing terms.
Rule 3: Cash Flow Must Be Positive at 80% Occupancy
The third rule is the most intuitive but most often ignored: your cash flow needs to be positive even at 80% occupancy.
Most investors calculate returns at full occupancy. But in Japan, even strong markets experience vacancy periods. Running your numbers at 80% occupancy (the standard conservative assumption used by experienced investors) gives you a realistic picture of what you'll actually earn.
Cash Flow Calculation (80% occupancy scenario):
- Effective rental income = Gross rental income × 0.80
- Net operating income = Effective rental income − Operating expenses
- Cash flow = Net operating income − Debt service
If the result is negative at 80% occupancy, the property only works in ideal conditions. If it's positive, you have a real margin of safety.
Putting It All Together
The three-filter approach works like this: only bring properties to the bank that pass all three tests — sekisan hyoka 70%+, income approach 100%+, and positive cash flow at 80% occupancy.
Properties that meet all three criteria are rare in major cities like Tokyo, but they do exist in regional cities like Nagoya, Osaka, Fukuoka, and Sapporo. With AI tools, you can now screen hundreds of listings in minutes using these exact criteria.
In my next post, I'll show you how to automate this screening process using Claude AI and public data sources — completely free.
The author is a Japanese real estate investor with experience in multi-unit residential properties. This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice.
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