LO-PAL
Living GuideTravel Guide
Ask for Free
Living GuideTravel Guide
🇯🇵 日本語🇺🇸 English🇨🇳 中文🇻🇳 Tiếng Việt🇧🇷 Português🇰🇷 한국어🇳🇵 नेपाली🇵🇭 Tagalog🇮🇩 Bahasa Indonesia🇪🇸 Español🇹🇭 ไทย🇲🇲 မြန်မာ
Guide/Daily Life/How to Get a Japanese Phone Number Without a Bank Account
4 min read
April 14, 2026(Updated: April 15, 2026) Daily Life

How to Get a Japanese Phone Number Without a Bank Account

You don't need a bank account to get a Japanese phone number. Rakuten Mobile accepts overseas cards with full English support.

How to Get a Japanese Phone Number Without a Bank Account
Back to Complete Guide:First Year in Japan? 7 Things Every Foreigner Sets Up Too Late

Table of Contents

  1. 1Why Tourist eSIMs Don't Count
  2. 2What You Actually Need to Sign Up
  3. 3Carrier Comparison for Foreign Residents
  4. 4Rakuten Mobile — The Easiest Path in English
  5. 5If You Don't Have a Credit Card
  6. 6After Sign-Up — What to Set Up Next
  7. 7Related Articles
  8. 8Ask a Local — It's Free

Bottom line: You do not need a Japanese bank account to get a phone number. Rakuten Mobile accepts overseas credit cards and has full English support. Sign up online with your residence card, and you can have a working Japanese number the same day via eSIM. Get the phone before the bank — not after.

If you just arrived in Japan and Googled "Japan SIM card," you probably found dozens of articles about tourist eSIMs. Those give you data — but not a Japanese phone number. And that number is what you actually need. Without it, you can't open a bank account (SMS verification), register for government apps (Mynaportal), sign utility contracts, or receive delivery notifications.

The chicken-and-egg problem is real: banks want a phone number, and some phone carriers seem to want a bank account for autopay. But several carriers accept credit cards — including overseas ones — which breaks the loop. Here's how.

Why Tourist eSIMs Don't Count

Tourist eSIMs and prepaid data SIMs (Ubigi, Airalo, Sakura Mobile tourist plans) provide mobile data but no Japanese phone number. This means:

  • Banks cannot send you SMS verification codes
  • You can't register for Mynaportal (マイナポータル) or other government services
  • Delivery services (Yamato, Sagawa) can't call you
  • You can't sign up for most Japanese apps that require phone verification

A resident mobile contract gives you an 070/080/090 Japanese number tied to your identity. This is the number that unlocks everything else.

What You Actually Need to Sign Up

RequirementDetails
Residence card (在留カード)Valid, with current address registered
Payment methodCredit or debit card (Japanese or overseas). Some carriers accept convenience store payment
Email addressAny email works — Gmail, etc.

That's it. You do not need a Japanese bank account, a My Number Card, or a hanko. If you have your residence card and a Visa/Mastercard from your home country, you can sign up today.

Carrier Comparison for Foreign Residents

CarrierMonthly Cost (tax incl.)English SupportOverseas Card OK?Contract
Rakuten Mobile¥1,078 (3 GB) – ¥3,278 (unlimited)Full (app, web, phone, shop)Yes (Visa/MC, may vary by issuer)No minimum
LINEMO (SoftBank)¥990 (3 GB) – ¥2,970 (30 GB)English guide availableLimitedNo minimum
ahamo (Docomo)¥2,970 (30 GB) – ¥4,950 (110 GB)Japanese onlyJapanese cards preferredNo minimum
IIJmio¥858 (2 GB) – ¥2,068 (20 GB)Japanese onlyJapanese cards preferredNo minimum

Prices current as of April 2026. All carriers listed are on major networks (Rakuten/Docomo/SoftBank/Docomo+au) with nationwide coverage.

Rakuten Mobile — The Easiest Path in English

Rakuten Mobile is the most foreigner-friendly carrier in Japan. The entire process — from signup to identity verification to eSIM activation — can be completed in English online. Here's the sequence:

  1. Go to the Rakuten Mobile website (English available)
  2. Choose the Rakuten Strongest Plan and select eSIM or physical SIM
  3. Upload photos of your residence card (front and back) for identity verification
  4. Enter your credit or debit card details for payment
  5. If you chose eSIM, activation is same-day — scan the QR code and your Japanese number is live
  6. Physical SIM cards ship to your address in 2–3 days

Rakuten also has physical shops in major cities with multilingual staff (English, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Portuguese, Spanish). If online verification fails — which happens with some overseas cards — visiting a shop usually resolves it.

If You Don't Have a Credit Card

Some new arrivals don't have a credit card at all — or their overseas card gets declined during online signup. Options:

  • Rakuten Mobile shop — in-store staff can try alternative payment processing and troubleshoot card issues on the spot
  • Mobal Japan — accepts PayPal and Alipay in addition to credit cards. Plans start around ¥1,100/month. English support included
  • Ask your employer — many companies help new foreign employees set up a phone contract as part of onboarding, sometimes using the company as the billing guarantor

If navigating carrier websites in Japanese feels impossible, or your overseas card keeps getting rejected, that's a common frustration — and one that LO-PAL can help with. Post your question for free and a local Japanese person can walk you through the options for your specific situation. If you need someone to go with you to a phone shop, you can request that as a task — you only pay when it's done.

After Sign-Up — What to Set Up Next

Once you have a Japanese phone number, you can immediately:

  1. Open a bank account — Japan Post Bank or SBI Shinsei Bank. See our bank account guide
  2. Register for Mynaportal — link your My Number Card to government services via the app
  3. Set up utility contracts — electricity, gas, and water all require a contact number
  4. Enable two-factor authentication — for banking, email, and other accounts that use SMS verification

The phone number is the first domino. Everything else falls into place after it.

Related Articles

  • First Year in Japan? 7 Things Every Foreigner Sets Up Too Late — The full first-year admin sequence
  • How to Open a Bank Account in Japan Before the 6-Month Mark — Next step after getting your phone
  • Best Translation Apps for Foreign Residents in Japan — Essential tools once your phone is set up

Ask a Local — It's Free

Phone contracts in Japan are full of fine print, and carrier websites love burying the English toggle. If you're stuck — declined card, confusing plan options, or a shop that won't serve you in English — post your question on LO-PAL for free. Local Japanese people in your area can recommend the right carrier, translate at the shop, or even handle the signup with you. You only pay if you request task help.

Written by

Taku Kanaya
Taku Kanaya

Founder, LO-PAL

Former Medical Coordinator for Foreign Patients (Ministry of Health programme) and legal affairs professional. Built LO-PAL from firsthand experience navigating life abroad.

Written with partial AI assistance

Read full bio →

Table of Contents

  1. Why Tourist eSIMs Don't Count
  2. What You Actually Need to Sign Up
  3. Carrier Comparison for Foreign Residents
  4. Rakuten Mobile — The Easiest Path in English
  5. If You Don't Have a Credit Card
  6. After Sign-Up — What to Set Up Next
  7. Related Articles
  8. Ask a Local — It's Free

Related Articles

My Number Card for Foreigners (2026): Apply, Pickup, June 14 Update
Daily Life

My Number Card for Foreigners (2026): Apply, Pickup, June 14 Update

Apply for and use the マイナンバーカード as a foreign resident in Japan (2026). Deadlines, 4 passwords, ¥1,000 reissue, iPhone, June 2026 特定在留カード.

3 months ago
Hanko in Japan 2026: When Foreigners Still Need a Seal (And When You Don't)
Daily Life

Hanko in Japan 2026: When Foreigners Still Need a Seal (And When You Don't)

Hanko vs digital signature in Japan, explained for foreigners. Which seals you need, where they're now optional after the 2020 reform, costs by ward, and how the My Number Card replaces a registered seal.

3 months ago
First Year in Japan? 7 Things Every Foreigner Sets Up Too Late
Daily Life

First Year in Japan? 7 Things Every Foreigner Sets Up Too Late

Bank account, phone, city hall, My Number — get the order wrong and you'll waste months. The first-year admin checklist for foreign residents in Japan.

about 2 months ago

Post your question for free. Local Japanese people in your area will answer. You only pay if you request a task

Ask a Local — It's Free

Ask for Free
← Back to articles
LP
LO-PAL

Ask a local in Japan. Get help with daily life, travel, and more.

Guides

  • Living Guide
  • Travel Guide
  • About the Founder

Languages

  • 🇯🇵 日本語
  • 🇺🇸 English
  • 🇨🇳 中文
  • 🇻🇳 Tiếng Việt
  • 🇧🇷 Português
  • 🇰🇷 한국어
  • Content Terms & Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2026 INNIT LLC (LO-PAL). All rights reserved.

Struggling with this?

Ask a local for free

Ask a local for free

Ask for Free