Tax Benefits and Deductions for Families with Children

Complete guide to tax deductions, child allowances, and financial benefits for families raising children in Japan — including 2025 reform updates for expats and foreign residents.
Tax Benefits and Deductions for Families with Children in Japan
Raising children is one of the most rewarding experiences in life — and one of the most expensive. If you are a foreign parent living and working in Japan, understanding the country's tax benefit system can make a meaningful difference to your household finances. Japan offers a range of deductions, allowances, and cash support programs specifically designed to ease the financial burden of child-rearing. Yet many expat families leave significant money on the table simply because they are unaware of what they qualify for.
This comprehensive guide covers every major tax benefit and deduction available to families with children in Japan, including the landmark 2025 tax reforms that changed the rules for working students and low-income households. Whether you are just starting a family, supporting a university-age child, or navigating single parenthood, there is something here for you.
Understanding Japan's Income Tax Deduction System
Japan uses a progressive income tax system at both the national (所得税, shotokuzei) and local (住民税, juminzei) levels. The national income tax rate ranges from 5% to 45%, while local inhabitant tax adds a roughly flat 10%. Before your taxable income is calculated, a series of deductions reduce the amount subject to tax — and this is where family-related benefits come in.
Deductions in Japan are categorized as either automatic (applied by your employer or built into the system) or declaration-based (you must actively submit forms to claim them). Many foreign workers miss out on declaration-based deductions simply because they do not know these forms exist or assume the process is too complicated.
Importantly, resident foreigners registered in Japan are entitled to exactly the same deductions as Japanese nationals. There is no legal distinction based on nationality for those with a valid residence card and registered address. The rules differ only for non-residents or for claiming overseas dependents.
Dependent Deduction: The Core Family Tax Break
The dependent deduction (扶養控除, fuyou koujyo) is the primary income tax benefit for families with children. However, there is a critical age rule that surprises many newcomers.

Children under 16 years of age do NOT qualify for the dependent deduction. This is because children in that age group receive support through the Child Allowance cash benefit program instead (covered below). The deduction kicks in starting at age 16.
| Child's Age | National Tax Deduction | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under 16 | ¥0 | Covered by Child Allowance instead |
| 16–18 | ¥380,000 | Standard dependent deduction |
| 19–22 (university age) | ¥630,000 | Special increased deduction |
| 23+ (still dependent) | ¥380,000 | Standard dependent deduction |
| 70+ (elderly parent) | ¥480,000–¥580,000 | Higher rate for elderly dependents |
For local inhabitant tax (juminzei), the deduction amounts are slightly lower:
- Standard dependent: ¥330,000
- University-age (19–22): ¥450,000
To qualify, the dependent's own annual income must not exceed ¥580,000 (revised upward in 2025 from the previous ¥480,000 threshold). The dependent does not need to live under the same roof as the taxpayer — financially supporting a child attending university in another city still counts.
For a parent in the 20% national tax bracket with a university-age child, the ¥630,000 deduction translates to approximately ¥126,000 in annual national tax savings, plus additional savings on inhabitant tax. That is a substantial sum.
The 2025 Tax Reform: Breaking Down the "1.03 Million Yen Wall"
The 2025 tax reform introduced one of the most significant changes to Japan's family tax system in years, specifically targeting a problem known as the "1.03 million yen wall" (103万円の壁).

Under the old rules, if a dependent child (typically a university student working part-time) earned more than ¥1,030,000 in a year, the parent lost the entire dependent deduction. This created a brutal cliff effect: a student earning ¥1,050,000 would cause their parent to lose ¥630,000 in deductions, resulting in thousands of yen in extra taxes — all because the child earned just ¥20,000 too much. Predictably, this discouraged students from working.
The 2025 reform introduced the "Special Deduction for Specific Relatives" (特定親族特別控除):
- Parents can now claim a ¥630,000 deduction even if their university-age child (19–23) earns up to ¥1,500,000 annually
- The child's income must fall between ¥580,001 and ¥1,230,000 (net income)
- The deduction is gradually phased out as the child's income rises, rather than disappearing in a cliff
- Critical: This deduction is NOT automatically applied — parents must submit a special declaration form to their employer during the year-end adjustment
The estimated tax savings for families claiming this new deduction range from approximately ¥70,000 to ¥170,000 per year, depending on the parent's income bracket. If your child works part-time while attending university in Japan, this reform may be directly relevant to your tax situation.
Child Allowance (児童手当, Jidou Teate): Monthly Cash Support
Separate from the income tax deduction system, Japan's Child Allowance program provides direct monthly cash payments to families with children up to the end of junior high school (age 15). This benefit replaced the older Kodomo Teate system and has been expanded over recent years.
| Child's Age | Monthly Payment |
|---|---|
| 0–2 years | ¥15,000/month per child |
| 3 years – elementary school (age 12) | ¥10,000/month (¥15,000 for 3rd child or later) |
| Junior high school (ages 12–15) | ¥10,000/month |
Payments are made three times per year (February, June, October) covering four-month periods. To receive the allowance, you must:
- Register with your local municipal office (city hall or ward office)
- Submit applications within 15 days of the child's birth or your move to Japan
- Renew your application every June
Foreign residents who are registered in Japan and have a valid residence card are eligible for Child Allowance on the same terms as Japanese nationals. The key requirement is that the child is physically residing in Japan.
For a family with three children, monthly Child Allowance payments can reach ¥35,000–¥45,000 per month, adding up to over ¥400,000 per year in direct support.
Medical Expense Deduction: Recovering Costs of Childbirth and Child Healthcare
Healthcare in Japan is relatively affordable compared to countries like the United States, but costs accumulate — particularly around pregnancy, childbirth, and managing children's illnesses. The Medical Expense Deduction (医療費控除, iryouhi koujyo) allows you to recover some of those costs through your tax return.
How it works:
- If your household's total qualifying medical expenses exceed ¥100,000 in a calendar year (or 5% of your net income if that is lower), you can deduct the excess from your taxable income
- The maximum deduction is ¥2,000,000
- This deduction must be claimed via the annual tax return (確定申告, kakutei shinkoku) — it is NOT processed through employer year-end adjustments
Qualifying expenses for families include:
- Prenatal checkups and examinations
- Childbirth and delivery costs (including hospitalization)
- Neonatal care and infant medical treatments
- Children's dental treatments (preventive care may not qualify)
- Prescription medications for children
- Transportation costs to/from medical facilities (train/bus fares — taxi only if medically necessary)
What does NOT qualify: cosmetic procedures, over-the-counter supplements, health checkups not related to a diagnosed condition.
For a family that gives birth in Japan, where hospital costs for a standard delivery often range from ¥500,000 to ¥800,000 before the ¥420,000 Lump-Sum Childbirth Allowance, the net out-of-pocket expense may well exceed ¥100,000, making this deduction worth claiming.
Single Parent Tax Benefits and Allowances
Japan provides dedicated financial support for single parents through both the tax system and direct allowance programs.
Tax Deduction for Single Parents (ひとり親控除, hitorioya koujyo):
- A national income tax deduction of ¥350,000 for single parents (unmarried or widowed/widowered) with children under 18
- Applies regardless of gender (the old "Widow's Deduction" was replaced with this gender-neutral rule in 2020)
- The taxpayer's own income must be under ¥5,000,000
- The taxpayer must not be living with another person in a de facto marital relationship
Child Rearing Allowance (児童扶養手当, Jidou Fuyou Teate) — Monthly Cash:
- Paid to single parents (or guardians) raising children under 18
- Maximum for one child: approximately ¥44,140/month (income-tested, full rate)
- Second child: additional ¥10,420/month
- Third and subsequent children: additional ¥6,250/month each
- Amount is reduced as income rises and cuts off entirely above a certain threshold
A single parent raising two children could receive up to ¥54,560/month in direct allowance plus the ¥350,000 tax deduction — a substantial combined benefit.
Claiming Deductions for Overseas Dependents
Many foreign workers in Japan support family members — parents, siblings, or spouses — living in their home country. Japan does allow the overseas dependent deduction, but the rules are strict and require careful documentation.
Eligibility rules for overseas dependents (from 2023 reforms):
- Ages 16–29 or 70+: Can be claimed as dependents without additional conditions
- Ages 30–69: Only eligible if the relative is: (a) a student on a study visa, (b) has a disability, OR (c) receives remittances of at least ¥380,000/year from the Japanese taxpayer
- The dependent's income must be under ¥580,000 equivalent per year
Required documents:
- Proof of family relationship (foreign government-issued ID, birth certificate, family register)
- Proof of financial support (bank transfer records, international remittance receipts)
- Japanese translations of all foreign-language documents
Foreign-language documents must be accompanied by certified Japanese translations. Your company's payroll department or a licensed tax accountant (税理士, zeirishi) can assist with preparing the overseas dependent declaration.
For information on broader financial planning for expat families, see our guide on Financial Planning for Expat Families Raising Children in Japan. You may also want to review Government Benefits and Subsidies for Families in Japan for non-tax financial support programs.
2025 Basic Deduction Expansion: Temporary Relief for Lower-Income Households
Beyond the dependent deduction reforms, the 2025 tax package also temporarily expanded Japan's Basic Deduction (基礎控除, kiso koujyo):
- For households with salary income of ¥2,003,999 or less: the basic deduction rises to ¥950,000 (up from ¥580,000)
- This provides annual tax relief of approximately ¥20,000–¥40,000 per household
- This is a temporary measure: it applies through fiscal year 2026 before reverting to previous levels
Additionally, the Minimum Employment Income Deduction was raised from ¥550,000 to ¥650,000 for salary earners with income up to ¥1,900,000.
These changes disproportionately benefit families with younger children (who tend to have lower dual-earner household incomes) and single-parent households where one person is the sole earner.
Spouse Deduction: Relevant for Single-Income Families
If one parent has stopped working or works limited hours to care for children, the Spouse Deduction (配偶者控除, haigousha koujyo) may apply:
- Standard deduction: up to ¥380,000 (national tax) if the spouse earns under ¥1,230,000/year
- Spouse Special Deduction: a graduated deduction if the spouse earns between ¥1,230,000 and ¥2,015,999
- Condition: the taxpaying spouse's own income must not exceed ¥10,000,000
The 2025 reform raised the spouse income threshold from the old ¥1,030,000 limit to ¥1,230,000, expanding who qualifies. For details on visa implications when one parent reduces work hours, see our guide on Visa and Legal Issues for Foreign Families with Children in Japan.
How to Actually Claim These Benefits: Practical Steps
Knowing about deductions is only half the battle. Here is how to actually receive them.
For salaried employees:
- At the end of each year (November–December), your employer conducts the Year-End Tax Adjustment (年末調整, nenmatsu chousei)
- You will receive declaration forms to submit — fill in all qualifying dependents
- New 2025 forms include the "Special Deduction Declaration for Specific Relatives"
- Submit with required supporting documents (relationship certificates, income declarations)
For self-employed or those with other income:
- File the annual tax return (確定申告, kakutei shinkoku) between February 16 and March 15 each year
- Medical expense deductions and certain overseas dependent claims must always go through this route
- You can file online via the NTA's e-Tax system (English guidance available at nta.go.jp). For a detailed breakdown of all Japanese individual income tax deductions, see the PwC Japan Tax Summaries and the Japan Dev guide to maternity and child allowances
Language resources and support:
- The National Tax Agency publishes English-language guides at nta.go.jp/english
- Many municipal offices have multilingual tax consultation days
- Living in Nihon and For Work in Japan are useful English-language resources for expats navigating life in Japan
- Chuukou Benkyou provides further study guides on Japanese systems
- For detailed individual tax planning, a licensed tax accountant (税理士) who handles foreign clients is strongly recommended
Quick Reference: All Major Benefits at a Glance
| Benefit | Amount | Who Qualifies | How to Claim |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent deduction (16–18, 23+) | ¥380,000 off taxable income | Child income < ¥580,000 | Year-end adjustment |
| Dependent deduction (19–22) | ¥630,000 off taxable income | Child income < ¥580,000 | Year-end adjustment |
| 2025 specific relative deduction (19–23) | ¥630,000 off taxable income | Child income ¥580,001–¥1,500,000 | Special declaration form |
| Child Allowance | ¥10,000–¥15,000/month | Children 0–15 in Japan | Municipal office registration |
| Medical expense deduction | Medical costs over ¥100,000 | All resident taxpayers | Annual tax return |
| Single parent deduction | ¥350,000 off taxable income | Unmarried/widowed parent | Year-end adjustment |
| Child Rearing Allowance | Up to ¥44,140+/month | Single parents, income-tested | Municipal office |
| Spouse deduction | Up to ¥380,000 off taxable income | Spouse earns < ¥1,230,000 | Year-end adjustment |
| Basic deduction (2025–2026) | Up to ¥950,000 off taxable income | Household income < ¥2,003,999 | Automatic |
For the broader picture of raising children in Japan, including school enrollment, healthcare, and language support, see our guide on The Complete Guide to the Japanese Education System for Foreign Families. If you are expecting a child, our guide on Pregnancy and Giving Birth in Japan as a Foreign Parent covers the financial support available from conception through early infancy.
Conclusion
Japan's tax and benefit system for families with children is genuinely generous — but it demands active engagement. From the dependent deduction that kicks in at age 16, to the 2025 reforms that dismantled the notorious "1.03 million yen wall," to monthly Child Allowance payments that anyone raising children in Japan can receive, the system rewards families who understand and use it.
For foreign residents, the key message is simple: you are entitled to the same benefits as Japanese citizens. Language barriers and unfamiliarity with Japanese bureaucracy should not stand between you and legitimate tax relief. Use English-language resources, attend municipal consultation sessions, and consider working with a bilingual tax professional — especially if you have overseas dependents or variable income.
The steps required are rarely complicated: fill in the right form at year-end, register your child with the municipal office, and keep receipts for medical expenses. The financial rewards can easily exceed ¥500,000 per year for a family of four — money that is far better in your pocket than left unclaimed.

Originally from Vietnam, living in Japan for 16+ years. Graduated from Nagoya University, with 11 years of professional experience at Japanese and international companies. Sharing practical information for foreign parents raising children in Japan.
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