The Core Filing Mechanics
Japan and the US both run calendar-year tax systems, simplifying reconciliation. With a real tax treaty in force, Americans in Japan have more structure to lean on than most countries in our coverage, but the mechanics still require careful handling given Japan's genuinely high rates.
Form 1040 and the Automatic Extension
The standard deadline is April 15, with an automatic extension to June 15 for Americans abroad. Tax owed still accrues interest from April 15, so estimate and pay by then if you expect a balance due. A further extension to October 15 is available on request (Form 4868).
Form 2555 and Form 1116: Both Do Real Work
Given Japan's genuinely high tax rates, most mid-to-high earners here benefit from Form 1116 (Foreign Tax Credit) alongside or instead of Form 2555 (FEIE). Lower earners, particularly teachers, may still do fine with the FEIE alone.
Worked Example: A Tokyo Finance Professional
An American finance professional in Tokyo earns ¥18,000,000 (about $120,000 USD), taxed at Japan's higher brackets given combined national, local, and surtax rates. His accountant claims the FEIE on the first $132,900, but given his effective Japanese rate already exceeds comparable US rates, models whether skipping the FEIE and using only the Foreign Tax Credit produces a better result, since the FTC has no cap and the credit carries forward for future years if unused this year.
FBAR: FinCEN Form 114
Required if combined foreign account balances, Japanese bank accounts, investment accounts, exceed $10,000 USD at any point in the calendar year. Filed electronically, due April 15 with an automatic extension to October 15.
FATCA: Form 8938
A separate, higher threshold attached to your Form 1040: generally $200,000 in specified foreign assets at year-end (or $300,000 at any point) for a single filer abroad, doubled for married filing jointly.
Japanese National Tax Agency Filing
Japanese individual income tax returns for the prior calendar year are typically due in mid-March, with your residency classification (non-resident, non-permanent resident, or permanent resident) determining whether Japan-source income only, remitted foreign income, or worldwide income is taxed locally.
Streamlined Compliance for Late Filers
If you've been in Japan for years without realizing citizenship-based US taxation still applied, the IRS Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedures let you catch up on the last three years of returns and six years of FBARs without standard failure-to-file penalties, provided the omission was non-willful.