Britons in Japan
make up the 19th largest foreign resident community in Japan, with a population of 21,139 as of December 2024. The United Kingdom is the third largest source of non-Asian foreign residents in Japan, following Brazil and the United States.
Overview
According to data released by the Ministry of Justice's Immigration Bureau, there were 21,139 British citizens living in Japan as of December 2024. This does not include short-term residents, people naturalised as Japanese citizens, or those staying as government officials or diplomats. The prefectures with the highest concentration of British nationals were Tokyo, Kanagawa, Osaka, and Hokkaido. Permanent residents comprised 7,010 of the population, followed by those on working visas and those staying as spouses of Japanese nationals.People from Hong Kong, which was once a British colony, were allowed to retain their British passports following the UK's handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997; this allows them to enter and stay in Japan as British citizens, and they are categorised as such by Japan's Immigration Bureau.
The British [Chamber of Commerce in Japan] is an independent non-profit organisation that promotes trade and business ties between the UK and Japan. The British School in Tokyo provides an English language based educational curriculum for students of over 50 different nationalities. The school serves a number of children of British heritage living in the city.
Notable people
- William Adams, English navigator who became the first European samurai
- Peter Barakan, English broadcaster
- Thomas Baty, English legal advisor to the Ministry of [Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Japanese Foreign Office] and one of the first openly transgender people in Japan
- Chris Broad, English YouTuber
- Sky Brown, English-Japanese professional skateboarder
- Connor Colquhoun, Welsh voice actor
- Josiah Conder, English-French architect who designed many government buildings and brought Western architecture to Japan
- George Gauntlett, Welsh teacher of English who developed of one of the earliest Japanese shorthand methods
- Pico Iyer, English writer
- Iso Mutsu, English writer who married a Japanese nobleman and documented her life in Kamakura
- C. W. Nicol, Welsh writer and environmentalist
- Sarah Midori Perry, English-Japanese musician
- Venetia Stanley-Smith, English herbalist who documented her life in rural Kyoto
- Rita Taketsuru, Scottish businesswoman who co-founded Nikka Whisky with her Japanese husband Masataka