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Last reviewed: 15 June 2026
Understanding how to file bankruptcy in Japan begins with one core step: submitting a petition to the competent district court under the Bankruptcy Act (Hasan‑hō), after which the court issues a commencement order and appoints a trustee to administer the estate. Japan’s insolvency framework, however, offers more than a single path, debtors may also pursue civil rehabilitation or special liquidation, depending on whether the goal is to rescue the business or wind it down in an orderly fashion. This guide walks company directors, owner‑managers and individual consumers through every stage of the process, from assembling the filing pack to understanding realistic costs, court timelines and director exposure.
Whether you operate a small kabushiki kaisha facing mounting trade debts or are an individual resident weighing personal bankruptcy in Japan, the sections below provide the practitioner‑level detail you need to make informed decisions in 2026.
Before filing any petition, it is essential to understand which insolvency procedure fits your circumstances. Japan’s statutory framework provides three principal court‑supervised routes, each governed by separate legislation and suited to different debtor profiles.
Bankruptcy (hasan) is a terminal liquidation procedure. Once the district court issues a commencement order, a court‑appointed bankruptcy trustee takes control of the debtor’s assets, investigates transactions, collects receivables and distributes proceeds to creditors in statutory priority. For companies, this ends with dissolution; for individuals, it leads to a discharge of most remaining obligations. The procedure is governed by the Bankruptcy Act (Act No. 75 of 2004), the full English text of which is available via the Japanese Law Translation database.
Civil rehabilitation (minji saisei) under the Civil Rehabilitation Act is designed for debtors, both companies and individuals, that wish to continue operating while restructuring their debts. The debtor typically remains in possession under court supervision, proposes a rehabilitation plan and seeks creditor approval. Industry observers note that civil rehabilitation in Japan is often the preferred route for viable small and medium enterprises that need breathing space rather than a full wind‑down.
Special liquidation (tokubetsu seisan) applies exclusively to kabushiki kaisha (stock companies) already in voluntary dissolution. It is triggered when the liquidator discovers that the company’s liabilities exceed its assets or that an orderly voluntary liquidation is otherwise impracticable. The process runs under the Companies Act rather than the Bankruptcy Act and requires creditor consent to a settlement agreement.
| Feature | Bankruptcy (Liquidation) | Civil Rehabilitation | Special Liquidation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Governing law | Bankruptcy Act (Act No. 75 of 2004) | Civil Rehabilitation Act (Act No. 225 of 1999) | Companies Act (Part IX) |
| Who can file | Debtor (company or individual) or creditor | Debtor (company or individual); creditor in limited cases | Liquidator, creditor, or shareholder of a kabushiki kaisha already in dissolution |
| Typical debtor profile | Insolvent entity or individual with no viable rescue plan | Company or individual that can be rehabilitated with restructured debts | Stock company in voluntary dissolution whose liabilities exceed assets |
| Debtor control | Control passes to court‑appointed trustee | Debtor in possession; supervisor appointed by court | Liquidator remains but under court supervision |
| Outcome | Asset realisation, distribution, dissolution (company) or discharge (individual) | Court‑approved rehabilitation plan; debtor continues operations | Settlement agreement with creditors; company dissolved after distribution |
| Typical duration | 6–18 months (individual); 12–36 months (company) | 6–12 months to plan approval; implementation over several years | Variable; depends on creditor negotiation |
Industry observers expect that for most owner‑managers asking “how do I close a company in Japan?”, the choice comes down to whether the business has a viable future. If it does, civil rehabilitation is typically explored first. If not, or if creditor pressure is overwhelming, bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Act is the most common terminal option. For a deeper comparison of rescue versus terminal proceedings, see our guide to restructuring vs liquidation, choosing the right path in insolvency.
Filing for bankruptcy in Japan follows a structured sequence: identify the trigger, assemble documents, file the petition with the district court, and cooperate with the appointed trustee through to closure. Each stage involves specific requirements under the Bankruptcy Act.
The statutory trigger for bankruptcy is that the debtor is unable to pay debts as they fall due (shiharai funō) or, for a corporate debtor, that liabilities exceed assets on a balance‑sheet basis. Practical warning signs include:
Before approaching the court, the petitioner must compile a comprehensive filing pack. District courts publish their own local filing guidelines, but the standard requirements include:
| Document / Item |
|---|
| Completed bankruptcy petition form (court‑prescribed format) |
| Statement of reasons for insolvency |
| Full list of creditors with names, addresses and amounts owed |
| Full list of assets (real property, movable assets, bank deposits, receivables, intellectual property) |
| Most recent financial statements (balance sheet, profit‑and‑loss statement), typically the last two fiscal years |
| Copies of bank statements for all accounts (recent six months) |
| Tax returns for the last two years |
| Board resolution authorising the filing (for corporate petitions) |
| Certificate of registered matters (tōki jikō shōmeisho) from the Legal Affairs Bureau |
| Copies of significant contracts (leases, loan agreements, guarantees) |
| Employee register and outstanding wage/retirement‑benefit calculations |
| Schedule of pending or anticipated litigation |
For individuals seeking personal bankruptcy in Japan, the filing pack is simpler but still includes proof of income, a household budget breakdown, a creditor list and evidence of assets and liabilities. Houterasu, Japan’s publicly funded legal support centre, provides preliminary guidance and referrals for individuals who cannot afford a lawyer.
The petition is filed at the district court that has jurisdiction over the debtor’s principal office (for companies) or domicile (for individuals). Under the Bankruptcy Act, either the debtor or a creditor may file. In practice, debtor‑filed petitions are far more common because they allow the company to control the narrative, preserve records and cooperate with the trustee from the outset.
The petition must be accompanied by the required deposit for anticipated administrative costs (yonō‑kin), which covers trustee remuneration and procedural expenses. The deposit amount is set by each district court based on the estimated size of the estate. Along with the petition, the court filing fee (revenue stamps) and postal prepayment for creditor notifications must be paid.
Once the court is satisfied that grounds for bankruptcy exist and the deposit has been paid, it issues a commencement order (hasan tetsuzuki kaishi kettei). The order has several immediate effects:
For entities regulated under the Japan Payment Services Act, additional notifications to the relevant financial supervisory authority may be required concurrently with the court filing.
One of the most common questions from debtors considering whether to file for bankruptcy in Japan is what the process will actually cost. Expenses fall into three main categories: court fees, trustee remuneration and attorney fees.
| Cost item | Typical range (individual) | Typical range (company) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (revenue stamps) | ¥1,500 | ¥1,000 | Set by statute; minimal |
| Postal prepayment (creditor notifications) | ¥3,000–¥15,000 | ¥5,000–¥50,000+ | Depends on number of creditors |
| Court deposit (yonō‑kin) for administrative costs | ¥200,000–¥500,000 | ¥700,000–¥5,000,000+ | Set by the district court based on estimated estate size; refundable to the extent not consumed |
| Trustee remuneration | Included in court deposit (small cases) | Often ¥1,000,000–¥10,000,000+ | Determined by the court based on the complexity and size of the estate; paid from estate assets |
| Attorney fees (for the petitioner’s own lawyer) | ¥200,000–¥500,000 | ¥500,000–¥3,000,000+ | Market rates; flat‑fee arrangements common for straightforward cases; hourly billing for complex matters |
| Other costs (translation, appraisals, advertising) | Variable | Variable | Translation fees relevant for foreign nationals; real‑property appraisals sometimes required |
For individuals with very limited assets, a simplified “simultaneous termination” (dōji haishi) procedure is available, in which the bankruptcy is opened and immediately terminated because there are insufficient assets to cover administrative costs. In these cases, the court deposit is typically at the lower end of the range. For consumers who cannot afford legal representation, Houterasu may provide subsidised legal aid.
Industry observers note that the overall bankruptcy cost in Japan is modest by international standards, particularly for straightforward individual cases. For companies, however, costs escalate significantly where the estate includes real property, ongoing litigation or complex creditor structures.
Timelines vary by district court, estate complexity and the volume of creditor claims. The table below provides realistic benchmarks based on practitioner experience in Tokyo and Osaka district courts.
| Milestone | Individual (small case) | Company (medium case) | What to expect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing to commencement order | 1–2 weeks | 1–4 weeks | Court reviews petition and deposit; may request supplementary documents |
| Commencement order to first creditors’ meeting | 2–3 months | 3–4 months | Trustee investigates assets, prepares report; creditors file proofs of claim |
| Asset realisation period | 1–4 months | 6–18 months | Trustee sells assets, collects receivables, resolves disputes |
| Distribution to creditors | Concurrent with or shortly after realisation | After final asset realisation and claim adjudication | Pro rata distribution per statutory priority |
| Closure / termination order | 6–12 months from filing | 12–36 months from filing | Court closes proceedings; company dissolved; individual proceeds to discharge |
| Discharge order (individuals only) | 1–2 months after closure | N/A | Court grants discharge unless statutory objections apply |
Cases that involve avoidance actions (clawing back preferential or fraudulent transfers) or contested creditor claims can extend well beyond these benchmarks. Early and thorough document preparation, following the filing checklist above, is the single most effective way to keep the process on track and reduce delays.
Creditors must file a proof of claim (saiken todokede) with the court within the deadline specified in the commencement order. The proof of claim in Japan typically requires the creditor to state the amount and nature of the claim, its legal basis and any security interests. Supporting documents, invoices, contracts, loan agreements, court judgments, should be attached.
The bankruptcy trustee examines all filed claims. If the trustee contests a claim, the creditor may object and the court will adjudicate the dispute. Claims filed after the deadline may still be admitted in certain circumstances, but late‑filed claims receive lower priority in distribution.
Upon issuance of the commencement order, the court directs the trustee to notify all known creditors by post and by public notice in the Official Gazette. The trustee then convenes a creditors’ meeting at which the estate’s status and proposed administration plan are reported. Distributions follow a strict statutory priority: estate administration costs and trustee remuneration first, then employee wages and tax claims (as estate claims or priority claims), followed by general unsecured creditors on a pro rata basis.
The bankruptcy trustee is the central figure in proceedings after the commencement order. Appointed by the court, the trustee, typically a practising attorney, assumes full management and disposal authority over the bankruptcy estate. Key trustee powers and responsibilities include:
Debtors (individuals) are required to cooperate fully with the trustee. During active proceedings, the debtor may need permission from the court or the trustee before travelling overseas. In practice, trustees generally grant permission for reasonable business or personal travel, but they expect advance notice and an itinerary. Failure to cooperate, including leaving Japan without permission, may result in the court denying discharge.
The most effective approach for debtors is proactive cooperation: respond promptly to trustee requests, provide complete documentation and attend all scheduled meetings. Early indications from practitioners suggest that cooperative debtors routinely see shorter timelines and smoother proceedings.
For directors of insolvent companies, filing for bankruptcy in Japan carries specific personal risks that must be managed carefully. Understanding these risks, and taking documented steps to mitigate them, is critical for any director facing a potential filing.
Under the Companies Act and the Bankruptcy Act, directors may face personal liability in several scenarios:
Industry observers consistently recommend the following practices for directors who recognise that their company may be approaching insolvency:
In most cases, director liability in bankruptcy is civil, a damages action brought by the trustee or creditors. However, the Bankruptcy Act also creates criminal offences for fraudulent conduct, including concealment of assets, destruction of books and records, and fraudulent acknowledgment of non‑existent debts. Penalties include imprisonment. While criminal prosecution is relatively rare, the risk is real where there is evidence of deliberate misconduct rather than mere commercial misjudgment.
Foreign nationals residing in Japan, and foreign creditors of Japanese debtors, face additional practical considerations when navigating bankruptcy proceedings.
For individuals, the discharge order is the end‑point. Once granted, most unsecured debts are extinguished and the debtor can begin rebuilding financially. However, a bankruptcy notation remains on the individual’s credit record (maintained by credit information agencies such as JICC, CIC and KSC) for a period that varies by agency, typically five to ten years. During this time, access to new credit, credit cards and certain loan products will be severely restricted.
For companies, bankruptcy ends with dissolution and deregistration. Directors should ensure that final tax filings are made and that any outstanding obligations to employees (unpaid wages, retirement benefits) have been addressed through the bankruptcy estate’s priority distribution or the government’s wage‑guarantee system.
Practical next steps for individuals after discharge include:
To help debtors and their advisors prepare efficiently, the following templates are recommended as starting points. Because each district court publishes its own prescribed forms, always confirm the latest versions with your local court clerk’s office.
Understanding how to file bankruptcy in Japan requires careful assessment of the available options, thorough document preparation and a realistic understanding of costs, timelines and risks. Whether the appropriate path is bankruptcy, civil rehabilitation or special liquidation, early engagement with qualified insolvency counsel is the single most important step. Directors facing potential corporate insolvency should prioritise the safe‑harbour measures outlined above to protect themselves from personal liability. For individuals, prompt action and full cooperation with the trustee remain the surest route to a clean discharge and financial fresh start. To connect with an experienced insolvency practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kanako Watanabe at Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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