Hello everyone! I am planning on enrolling in a Japanese language school this October but i have a slight hiccup and would like your opinion on it.
Context:
I am 24M with a university degree and jft basic certificate(\~JLPT N4)
Total income of my parents is about $30,000 but they don’t have much liquid funds as they like to invest most of it in assets.
My dad will retire in September.
I am planning on applying for a student loan.
What should i do to increase my chances of getting the coe.
Do i have any other options ?
Thanks a lot for your time !!!
Comments
by milo_peng on Mar 11, 2026
U ate going there to study. As long as u can pay the school fees, the school will sort out the visa.
Are you saying you don't have enough for the fees?
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
The main issue is my parents are not willing to sell/take a loan against their assets. They have this weird condition that i do not understand, they want me to take a student loan for my studies that they will pay off.
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
I have enough for the fees, its the living expenses that needs to be covered.
by StrengthInMind on Mar 11, 2026
I don't want to scare you but I've prepared about 25k euros for living expenses for a year, and I feel like it's barely enough. If I recall correctlly, Migration expects you to have 1 500 000 yen a year to qualify.
by dalkyr82 on Mar 11, 2026
>I am planning on applying for a student loan.
Where? In your home country? Because you're not going to be getting a loan in Japan to attend language school.
And frankly you should not be taking a loan to go to language school regardless of the source.
>Do i have any other options ?
If you and/or your sponsor do not have enough money to prove to immigration that you'll have enough support you're basically out of luck.
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
2. Yes in my home country .
2. They just do not have enough liquid money right now for CoE application. They have agreed to take full responsibility to pay for my student loan.
by dalkyr82 on Mar 11, 2026
That's not going to help you get the COE/Visa. Immigration asks for multiple months of bank statements specifically so to show things like loans being deposited in bulk.
Taking a loan makes zero sense. If they can afford to pay it off they can afford to liquidate enough assets to show immigration the required money.
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Yes they can easily afford to liquidate a minuscule amount of their assets as proof to immigration, and that’s what i have been trying to convince them to do but they absolutely DONOT want to touch that rather they are willing to pay my loan for me.
So instead of arguing with them and them straight up rejecting my plan i came to reddit for any other alternatives
by dalkyr82 on Mar 11, 2026
The problem is that their current plan makes it very likely that your visa application will be rejected.
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Well i guess i will have to persuade them harder.
Thanks a lot for your time !!
Also one last thing !
If they agree to sell the assets required to fund my education, would it not be an issue for the immigration department seeing sudden increase in the bank account ?
by rahulthomas on Mar 16, 2026
Hi!, wanted to update this post.
So my parents agreed on selling one of their assets worth $20k but now no language school is willing to accept me because i got rejected once for lack of funds.
Does that mean i cannot ever apply for CoE now ?
by dalkyr82 on Mar 16, 2026
If you've actually been rejected by *immigration* you need to wait at least 6 months before re-applying.
by StandardAd8744 on Mar 11, 2026
Why do you want to go to the Japanese language school? If that relates to your career, then some investment will be fine, but if it's just to experience some new cultures, then you'll have to think carefully about how you'll cover up the expenses after coming back home. It's not cheap to live in a different country 🙊
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
100% for my career, i want to pass jlpt n1 and then land a job there as i already have a university degree and am studying for jlpt n3.
by Glove_Right on Mar 11, 2026
I recommend you to have the full tuition for 1 year in cash before applying. That's non-negotiable, so get that money first (if you have it - great, if not get a job and work 3-6 months to save that cash). As for living expenses and other monetary requirements, it's enough to have your parents act as guarantor and make them fill out said paperwork, then add a statement of their investment account as proof of funds.
That should sort out your visa and your parents can send you monthly support money for living expenses/rent without you needing a loan + you can work part time in japan (i think 20 hours/week).
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Did exactly this last year and still got rejected.
Had money for tuition fees for 1 year and showed assets for living costs.
by dalkyr82 on Mar 11, 2026
> and showed assets for living costs.
Well, that's the obvious problem here. They want cash for ***all*** of the financial support. Not non-liquid "assets".
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
I absolutely agree with you.
I guess i got my answer.
Rather than haphazardly trying again and getting rejected again i will rather just save for the full year and apply next year.
Thanks again for your time.
by Glove_Right on Mar 11, 2026
Damn that's rough. Maybe all the slots were filled already? But since it got rejected, i'd try to have tuition + 2-5 grand (enough for the first couple of months) in your bank account + your parents investments statement.
by StandardAd8744 on Mar 11, 2026
If you'll be working on the stuff that doesn't require so much Japanese (ex. Software enginners, developers, international business manager) JLPT N2~N3 will be enough. JLPT N1 is often required for working at a 100% Japanese company. I studied on my own and have acquired JLPT N1 in 2024, and I'm convinced that this certificate will not be enough to get a jop in Japan. You'll have to have some professional skills to find a job among all the native job haunters.
I'm not trying to put you down or anything. I'm just telling you that once you get the N2, it'll better to develop different skills that can get you a job than studying another months to get the N1. Good luck with your studying tho
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Thanks a lot for your input!,
I am learning full stack development as well.
Will focus more on building projects than n1 for now.
by shinji182 on Mar 11, 2026
Its 2026, the field of linguistics has long proven classroom settings and language school to be inefficient for actual language learning. With an N4 you are more than ready to start reading books or watching shows in Japanese. If you are trying to get an N1 asap, just dont practice outputting and focus on inputting for now. Mass immersion method is the move now.
If you are going to language school just to be in Japan then whatever.
You will save yourself a lot of time if you just read this.
[https://learnjapanese.moe/](https://learnjapanese.moe/)
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Well.. it took me 6 weeks to go from zero to jlpt n4 and i am studying n3 by myself as well.
Even if i pass jlpt n1 by myself wouldn’t it be difficult for me to land a job from outside of japan ?
by RelativeLiving957 on Mar 11, 2026
What an utter crock.
by BabymetalTheater on Mar 11, 2026
Have you talked to the school about what they require in order to issue the COE? For me I had to show I had savings of at least $26,000 and my high income and for my wife she had to prove that a family member had an income of at least $13,000 a year and savings in the bank of at least $13,000. I wanted to self sponsor both of us but they said we needed to show around $55,000-60,000 in savings to do that.
I also haven’t heard anything about student loans for language school in Japan but that might be a thing.
by rahulthomas on Mar 11, 2026
Same here, savings of $13,000 and high income.
Tho my parents fulfil the latter requirement its the savings part that is the issue due to lack of liquidity
I have already applied for coe once by showing assets worth more than 5X instead of savings but still got rejected .
by BabymetalTheater on Mar 12, 2026
Damn, that sucks. Neither me or my wife have family members that have savings but we were able to find a cousin of hers that she hadn't spoke to in a while that was unbelievably cool that was able and willing to do it so it ended up working out. I wish you luck