Last updated: Apr 27, 2026

JESTA — Japan’s new Electronic System for Travel Authorization — is a pre-travel clearance that visa-exempt visitors will need before flying to Japan once it launches in fiscal year 2028 (April 2028 to March 2029).

It works much like the US ESTA, Canada’s eTA, the UK ETA, and Australia’s ETA, a quick online form you fill in before you fly, not a visa.

What is JESTA?

JESTA stands for Japan Electronic System for Travel Authorization. It’s a digital pre-screening step that visa-exempt travellers will complete online before boarding a flight to Japan.

The point of the system is to screen visa-exempt visitors before they board, not after they land.

Japan has seen record-breaking tourist numbers since reopening, and JESTA gives officials a way to filter out high-risk arrivals while keeping the visa-free experience smooth for everyone else.

It will likely be launced in 2028.

Who will need a JESTA and who won’t

JESTA will apply only to nationals of countries and regions that currently enter Japan visa-free. If you already need a visa for Japan today, JESTA changes nothing for you — you’ll continue applying for a visa as usual.

According to the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan currently has visa exemption arrangements with 74 countries and regions. JESTA will cover all of them.

Middle East: United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Israel, Türkiye
Southeast Asia: Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Brunei
Africa: Tunisia, Mauritius, Lesotho
North America: United States, Canada
Oceania: Australia, New Zealand
Europe: United Kingdom, all EU member states, Switzerland, Norway, and most other European countries

If your nationality is on Japan’s visa-exempt list, you will need a JESTA from fiscal 2028 onwards.

Until then, you can still travel to Japan with just your passport, exactly as before.

Travellers from countries not on the visa-exempt list — including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the Philippines, Vietnam and most African countries — will continue to apply for a regular Japanese visa through an embassy or the Japan eVisa portal. JESTA does not replace that process.

What JESTA is expected to cost and its validity

The exact fee has not been finalised.

During the parliamentary debate on the cabinet bill, Japanese officials indicated the JESTA fee will sit somewhere around ¥2,000 to ¥3,000 per person (roughly USD 13–20).

Validity is also still being finalised. The Japanese government has not yet announced an official validity period.

Comparable ETA systems range from two years (US ESTA, UK ETA) to five years (Canada eTA), and most observers expect JESTA to follow the two-year norm.

Like most peer ETA systems, JESTA is expected to be tied to the passport number you apply with, meaning it will likely expire when your passport does.

If you renew your passport, you should expect to apply for a new JESTA tied to the new passport number.

How the application is expected to work

JESTA will be a fully online process: no embassy visits, no paper forms, no in-person interviews.

You’ll apply through an official portal run by Japan’s Immigration Services Agency.

Based on the cabinet amendment and comparable ETA systems worldwide, applicants will be asked for:

Personal details (full name, date of birth, nationality, contact information)
Passport information (number, issue date, expiry date)
Purpose of travel (tourism, business, visiting family)
Accommodation details in Japan
Intended length and dates of stay
Background questions on criminal history and previous immigration issues

Once approved, your JESTA is linked electronically to your passport. There’s nothing to print and nothing to show at the airport beyond your passport itself. Airline check-in staff and Japanese border officers will see your authorisation in the system.

What this means for your Japan trip in 2026 and 2027

Right now, JESTA does not exist as a working system. You do not need to do anything to fly to Japan in 2026 or 2027 beyond what you do today: have a valid passport and, if your country is not visa-exempt, a Japanese visa.

The Immigration Services Agency had selected the JESTA development contractor by April 2026, and the system is being built now.

The official portal, exact fee and final validity period will be published closer to launch, likely in late 2027 or early 2028.

Once JESTA goes live, we will publish a step-by-step application guide. In the meantime, you can search and compare flights to Japan and hotels in Tokyo on Wego with no extra paperwork required.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need JESTA to travel to Japan in 2026?

No. JESTA is not yet active and is targeted for launch in fiscal year 2028. Travel to Japan in 2026 follows existing visa or visa-exempt rules.

Is JESTA the same thing as a Japanese visa?

No. JESTA is a pre-travel authorisation only for visa-exempt nationals. If you currently need a visa to enter Japan, you’ll still need one — JESTA does not change that.

How much will JESTA cost?

Around ¥2,000 to ¥3,000 is the range floated in parliamentary debate. The final fee will be set by ministerial ordinance closer to launch.

Will UAE and Qatar passport holders need JESTA?

Yes — once it launches. Both the UAE and Qatar are on Japan’s visa-exempt list (subject to ePassport conditions), so their nationals will need to apply for JESTA before flying once the system is active in fiscal 2028.

Where will I apply for JESTA?

On the official portal run by Japan’s Immigration Services Agency. The exact URL has not yet been published — bookmark moj.go.jp/isa for updates.

Sources

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan — Exemption of Visa (Short-Term Stay)
Immigration Services Agency of Japan — Official Portal
VisasNews — Japan officializes JESTA, its electronic travel authorization system
VisasNews — Japan’s Parliament unveils new details on JESTA
VisasNews — Tokyo approves bill to introduce JESTA
Time Out Tokyo — Japan moves to implement new pre-travel JESTA authorisation system from 2028
Stellex Law Firm — Electronic Travel Authorization System “JESTA” Scheduled for 2028
Japan Today — Japan weighs 2,000–3,000 yen fee for new pre-travel screening system
Kanpai Japan — JESTA: New Travel Authorization for Japan Starting 2028
Japan Visa Information — Official eVisa Portal

Disclaimer: Wego strives to ensure all information presented in this article is accurate and up to date at the time of publication. Travel policies, prices, visa requirements, and conditions can change rapidly. We strongly recommend verifying critical details with official sources before making travel decisions. Wego does not accept liability for any inaccuracies, oversights, or changes that may occur after publication.

AloJapan.com