Just finished setting up one of these accounts (http://www.ebank.co.jp/) for no particular reason other than to check it out, I do sh*t like that to test the water for gaijinphobia from time to time, its become sort of a hobby to see if I get declined.
I don't know if this is a problem for many in Japan anymore as I got a bunch of J-credit cards already and I've been here under a year.
After I finished my account setup (half online / half paper) they sent me a J-VISA debit card (pink naturally) that doubled as their ATM card as well. I was thinking this might be a good bank for recent arrivals that need a J-VISA debit card for whatever reason. I also think these cards open an official credit profile for you as wel because they are processed by the same companies that do normal credit cards, I asked.
I only bring any of this up because none of my other bank cards where available with a VISA type debit option when I first got here so I felt I had to start applying for credit cards the moment I arrived, my US ones where hit or miss and I was told it was an uphill battle to get one.
In fact a lot of my seasoned friends in Japan even lifers which I have since met didn't even have a single J-credit card, IMHO having a J-credit profile is important for a whole lot of reasons.
There is a lot of reasons you should want a J-credit card and profile. Like, to save money for example. I also noticed early on that a lot of places I shop at use point cards (like this http://www.yodobashi.com/enjoy/more/gpc2/index.html) connected to credit cards. Using these I have saved me around 180,000円 in the last year alone. You must however apply and use the store sponsored cards, back to that credit profile thing again...
You might be thinking, that you can just use a paper pointcard connected to nothing and use cash, and I'd tell you that sure is better than nothing but the points are in many cases doubled when you use a store linked credit card and half of what you get with cash if you use a non-linked credit card

I did things a little backwards but, I did get the SAISON INTERNATIONAL VISA with ETC pretty easily from an application at the Japan Post. They won't offer it to you gaijin folk, you gotta ask for the application. You will undoubtedly see ads in the post office for various mystery credit cards that you apply for onsite, the caveat usually being that payments can only be made through your postal account balance. I also did get a card from Shinsei bank where I hold my primary bank account. Both of these came the first two months I arrived in Japan.
Other interesting to note, none actually verified anything other than my name and address. My company and income was never investigated even once and hasn't ever yet which is astonishing to me.
Also, there is a lag between when you pay a J-credit card bill and to when your account is updated to reflect that payment. So if you have a 500000円 line of credit, and use 120000円 your payment could take a few weeks to post. In my case, as long as 8 weeks.
I was so concerned they may have not been receiving my payments that I called my credit card companies and they all told me not to worry this is normal and everything is ok. So then I took the opportunity to asked if they could increase my credit line since the payment delay actually affects my available purchasing power and to my surprise they actually doubled my credit on what was essentially new cards not more than 4 months old at that point.
I also want to point out that I used my J-Drivers license and national insurance card as ID, I never offered my gaijincard on my successful credit card applcations. They don't actually ask for it specifically, but list it as a usable ID, you simply need to provide enough IDs in there list to prove who you are. I have never been asked to prove my residential status incidentally using that method nor my passport.
I suspect that is because in order to obtain a J-drivers license you have to be a japanese national or a legal resident properly registered with your ward. I had to show a valid Visa, gaijincard and certificate of alien registration (a print out from the ward) to apply for a drivers license.
Moving on, and ironically enough, after receiving a few credit cards already and pretty happy about my credit card experience so far and having nothing to loose I decided to include my gaijincard with some recent applications as a form of ID in place of my drivers license and I promptly received letters declining my application, not even a phone call to qualify me, the common line was I had no credit profile... despite actually having a established credit profile from numerous places and even having two with a credit line of over 1 million yen each, along with a stellar payment history, hmm.
Now I suspect they never knew I already had a credit profile, or its status because they never actually looked. These applications are very hands on I have discovered, very little automation. They go to a pencil pusher at a desk and the first pencil pusher reviews that the applications are actually completed BEFORE stamping it and sending it along to reaching the folks that actually perform an evaluation of you credit worthiness. They really aren't looking for gaijin they just happens to have a way of dealing with them.
Thus those letters declining you never actually decline you based on anything other than the fact that you included your gaijincard that is perhaps too new. Reminding me of stories of gaijin who said they applied for years and then got one after residing in Japan for 4 or 5 or getting married. Yet, I had none of those things and qualified...
Here's my take on it. No one gets a credit card without first going through some sort of back and forth (mail) with the credit card issuer.
In every instance I successfully received a credit card I first received a phone call from the credit card company. In every call, they asked me exactly the same series of questions, in Japanese.
1) Who am I speaking with?
2) Did you apply for a this credit card?
3) I want to confirm your application information do you have time?
4) Spell out your name (Katakana and then your Romaji name in Japanese pronunciation of the alphabet)
5) What is your date of birth (using Japanese calendar)?
6) What is your address (in proper Japanese)?
- they source the questions from your application answers you provided and nowhere else.
Then they thank you tell you they will be sending you another letter to record your bank account information so they can automatically withdraw money from your bank account for your credit card bills and that you will recieve your card after that. From that point forward everything happens very quickly and your card shows up in a week or two.
Why is this important? and how is the pencil pusher and this person that called me connected? Well, these two people are the main things standing between you and a credit card in my experience. If you include your gaijincard as an ID it results in an unofficial negative mark on your application that often is fatal because depending on perhaps how old that card is and your visa type the default assumption is your Japanese is not good enough and will cause a problem for the call center when they call you to verify information due to a perceived language problem.
The pencil pusher, rather than actually forwarding this application for verification to the call center simply kills it right then and there in order to avoid taxing the call center staff with a stupid gaijin that doesn't speak Japanese.
So if you have a J-License, use it, and leave your gaijincard and passport hidden in your wallet. They don't need to know your details such as how long you have been in Japan or your status so why volunteer it. This makes it more difficult to shove your application to the side and reject it without investigating it because you might not be a stupid gaijin.
Now to the person that calls you. The very first time I got a call I admit I messed up and got declined. They started asking me questions and I panicked and started mixing japanese and english and was clearly uncomfortable speaking Japanese. The operator said that she was sorry but I needed to understand Japanese in order for "HER" to consider approving the application and the call ended with my apologizing for my crummy Japanese.
Later, I realized that if your getting the call, you are getting the card because you have basically been pre-qualified by not being killed before it gets to the callers desk by the pencil pusher. They also would have performed any credit check PRIOR to that call and you passed muster there too. The FINAL task is in the call you receive in itself to make sure you are you and in the rare case of a gaijin, that you understand enough Japanese in the opinion of the call center operator. Its all scripted, answer the questions nicely and briskly makes for a happy call center person. Don't ask them to repeat things, its pretty much over if you do.
So if you can, get a drivers license, any vehicle and use it in place of your gaijincard it will open doors faster for you. This has also worked for other things like cell phone contracts and insurance. I never got asked for my gaijincard at DoCoMo/AU/Softbank, I simply gave them my drivers license no problem, even at the airport and finally to police at J-government buildings that I sometimes need to visit.
continue to next post...