Why Fukuoka? Demographics, youth and a low entry cost
Fukuoka (Fukuoka), capital of Kyūshū, is regularly named one of Japan's most demographically dynamic major cities — a striking contrast in an ageing country. A young population, a strong student presence and a cost of living below Tokyo make it a magnet for workers, creatives and investors.
Three structural drivers support the market:
- Population growth led by young professionals, rare at this scale in Japan — supporting long-term rental demand.
- A low entry cost vs Tokyo/Osaka: for the same budget you aim at larger or better-located properties, which mechanically improves the yield.
- Record tourism nationwide — 42.7 million visitors in 2025 — with Fukuoka a sea and air gateway to Kyūshū (cruises, Asian flights, Shinkansen).
Let us stay cautious: the figures below are orders of magnitude, to be checked property by property before buying. Compare real listings in our hand-picked properties and place Fukuoka against Osaka and Tokyo.
Fukuoka's startup visa: the edge that draws talent
Fukuoka is Japan's pioneer of the startup visa. Designated a kokka senryaku tokku (kokka senryaku tokku, national strategic deregulation zone) for entrepreneurship, it eases the arrival of foreign founders through an entry status designed to build a company on the ground.
For investors the appeal is indirect but real: this scheme feeds a lively startup ecosystem, attracts a skilled international population and supports rental demand for well-located studios and small apartments.
⚠️ A crucial point not to confuse: buying real estate grants NO visa. The startup visa is about an entrepreneurial project, not a purchase. If your goal combines relocation and investment, first read buying in Japan without a visa to keep the two logics separate.
Where to invest in Fukuoka: Hakata, Tenjin, Ōhori and beyond
Fukuoka is read ward by ward (-ku, ku) and hub by hub. Here are the key zones for investors.
博多-ku Hakata-ku — the transport and business hub
Around Hakata station (Shinkansen, airport a few metro minutes away) and the port. This is the logistics and business core: dense rental demand and excellent short-term visibility for travel and business guests.
Chūō-ku Chūō-ku (Tenjin, Ōhori) — the premium centre
Tenjin (天神), a major retail and office district, and Ōhori Park (大濠公園), a prized green residential lung. Higher tickets, but solid demand and address prestige.
Other hubs to watch
- 早良-ku Sawara-ku and family residential areas — good for long-term rental.
- The waterfront and urban projects around the Tenjin redevelopment (Tenjin Big Bang), which is renewing the office and retail offer.
immoJapon rule: favour proximity to a station (≤ 10-15 min walk) and shops. That is what makes the difference on resale and on rental.
District table: profile, ticket and use
An indicative overview to guide your search. Entry tickets are orders of magnitude for a small property (studio / small apartment), to be refined against the actual property.
| District (-ku) | Profile | Indicative entry ticket | Suggested use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 博多-ku Hakata | Transport / business hub | medium to high (≈ ¥15-35M / €100-230,000) | Business STR, salaried tenants |
| Chūō-ku Chūō (Tenjin/Ōhori) | Premium, central | high (often > ¥30M / ≈ €200,000) | Safe-haven value, long-term |
| 早良-ku Sawara | Family residential | medium (≈ ¥12-25M / €80-165,000) | Long-term rental |
| Served periphery | Affordable, yield | low (sometimes < ¥12M / ≈ €80,000) | Yield, only if a station is close |
To estimate a realistic net yield, run your assumptions (price, rent or ADR, occupancy) through our yield simulator.
Yield, budget and the fundamentals to respect
Fukuoka's yield edge is the combination of low prices + young rental demand + tourism. A small, well-located property can aim for a higher yield than Tokyo at a comparable budget, in long-term rental as well as short-term tourist rental.
On the budget side, recall the immoJapon fundamentals:
- Purchase costs ≤ 6% of the price (see the cost breakdown).
- Cash purchase for a non-resident: the Japanese mortgage is reserved for people both resident AND salaried in Japan.
- Freehold ownership for life: in Japan you own the property outright, with no ground lease.
- Plan for rental taxation — see tax on rental income (non-resident) — and natural risks (Kyūshū is exposed to typhoons).
Common mistakes to avoid
- Settling for a low price without checking station proximity and local rental vacancy.
- Aiming for short-term rental without checking the 180-night minpaku cap and zoning.
- Forgetting the annual property tax (kotei shisan-zei) and condo fees (kanri-hi / shūzen tsumitatekin).
- Confusing the startup visa with a purchase: buying grants no residence right.
In short: Fukuoka, betting on the rising city
Investing in Fukuoka means playing a demographically growing metropolis, a low entry cost versus Tokyo and Osaka, a dynamic startup ecosystem and record tourism — all serving often higher yields. Hakata for the business hub, Chūō/Tenjin/Ōhori for premium, the served periphery for yield.
Keep the fundamentals in mind: costs ≤ 6%, cash purchase for a non-resident, freehold for life, and absolute priority to station + shops proximity. To be guided from choosing the district to receiving the keys, discover our personalised buying support and browse our recent projects.
Frequently asked questions
Why is Fukuoka so dynamic?
Fukuoka is regularly cited among the Japanese major cities with the fastest population growth, driven by young professionals and students — a rare case in an ageing country. Add a cost of living below Tokyo, a municipal startup visa and record tourism (42.7M visitors in 2025 nationwide).
Does Fukuoka's startup visa let you get a visa by buying property?
No. Fukuoka's startup visa is tied to founding a company, not to a real-estate purchase. Buying property in Japan grants no residence right. The investment project and the visa project must be kept separate.
What are the best districts to invest in Fukuoka?
Hakata-ku (博多-ku) for the transport and business hub, Chūō-ku (Chūō-ku) around Tenjin (天神) and Ōhori Park (大濠公園) for the central premium, and Sawara-ku (早良-ku) for family residential. On the periphery, target yield only where a station is close.
Is the yield better in Fukuoka than in Tokyo?
Often yes at a comparable budget, because entry prices are lower while rental demand stays firm. Beware though: yield depends mostly on the precise location (station, shops) and management. Run your assumptions through our simulator before concluding.
Can a foreigner borrow to invest in Fukuoka?
In practice, no, if you live abroad: Japanese mortgages are reserved for people both resident AND salaried in Japan. A non-resident investor therefore buys in cash, with closing costs capped at 6% of the price.
Official sources
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