The ryokan gyō-hō and the kan'i shukusho licence in a nutshell
Japan's Hotel Business Act ryokan gyō-hō distinguishes three operations: hotel-ryokan (ryokan / hotel eigyō), simple lodging kan'i shukushoeigyō and long-stay boarding (geshuku eigyō). For a house, a machiya or a small building rented whole to tourists, the relevant category is kan'i shukusho: the guesthouse licence, granted as a permit (kyoka) by the hokenjo health office — a genuine review, not a mere notification.
Its appeal comes down to one number: no cap on nights. Where the registered minpaku is capped at 180 nights a year, a kan'i shukusho can operate 365 days — which transforms the cash flow of an Airbnb investment.
yōto chiiki zoning: the make-or-break condition
A ryokan-gyō licence can only be issued where planning law allows hotel-type use. The property's yōto chiiki zoning therefore decides everything before any paperwork:
| Zone yōto chiiki | ryokan-gyō allowed? |
|---|---|
| shōgyō chiiki (commercial), kinrin shōgyō chiiki (neighbourhood commercial) | Yes |
| jun-kōgyō chiiki (semi-industrial) | Yes |
| dainishu jūkyo chiiki, jun-jūkyo chiiki (mixed residential) | Yes |
| daiisshu jūkyo chiiki (category-1 residential) | Yes if ≤ 3,000 m² |
| daiisshu/dainishu teisōjūkyo sen'yō chiiki (exclusive low-rise residential) | No |
| daiisshu/dainishu chūkōsōjūkyo sen'yō chiiki, den'en jūkyo chiiki | No |
| kōgyō chiiki, kōgyō sen'yō chiiki (industrial) | No |
This is the first thing to check before buying for year-round rental. The zoning chapter of our guide to buying property in Japan explains how to read a property's yōto chiiki before making an offer.
Floor area, washrooms, fire code: the technical standards
- Floor area: at least 33 m² of guest space, reduced to 3.3 m² per guest when capacity is under 10 (a 2016 relaxation).
- Sanitary facilities: washbasins, toilets and baths proportionate to capacity, per hokenjo standards.
- Fire: automatic fire alarms (jidō kasai hōchi setsubi), evacuation lighting, extinguishers — evidenced by the shōbō hōrei tekigō tsūchisho required in the file.
- Hygiene: lighting, ventilation, linen changes — set by each prefecture's ordinance.
The permit is issued by the hokenjo after review and an on-site inspection. Depending on the municipality, add neighbourhood notification and, above 200 m² of converted floor area, a change-of-use procedure (yōto henkō) for the building.
Kyoto: tougher rules, but very much possible
Kyoto, the machiya city, does grant kan'i shukusho licences — but its ordinance adds conditions:
- Nearby manager: an operator or manager able to reach the property within about ten minutes, in practice stationed within 800 m, unless someone is on site.
- Neighbourhood consultation: prior explanation of the project to residents (jizen setsumei), with a report attached to the application.
- Extra requirements in some districts (school surroundings, paysage landscape rules in heritage areas).
These rules cleaned up the market: less rogue competition and a premium on professional operations. Remember that in Kyoto's residential zones, registered minpaku can only run about two months a year, in winter — kan'i shukusho is often the only profitable route there.
Cost and timeline: budget the real number
A kan'i shukusho application is a project in itself. Through a gyōsei shoshi (administrative scrivener), expect ¥300,000 to ¥1,000,000 all-in (€2,000 to €6,667): pre-consultations, drawings, the hokenjo file, fire-department coordination. On top of that:
- compliance works (fire, sanitary), highly variable by building;
- the hokenjo application fee (a few tens of thousands of yen depending on the city);
- where needed, an architect for the yōto henkō.
Timewise, pre-consultation, works and review typically stretch over several months. Budget it from the offer stage — with Japanese acquisition costs staying at no more than about 6% of the price (see the line-by-line breakdown of buying costs) and a cash purchase to plan for unless you are a resident employed in Japan, the kan'i shukusho remains the most profitable licence over time. Model the impact of 365 days with the immoJapon yield tools.
Minpaku, kan'i shukusho or hotel: the comparison
| Minpaku minpaku (todokede) | kan'i shukusho (kyoka) | ryokan / hotel eigyō | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nights per year | 180 max | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Procedure | Notification | hokenjo permit | hokenjo permit (strictest standards) |
| Exclusive residential zones | Possible (unless jōrei) | No | No |
| Minimum area | Standard dwelling | 33 m², or 3.3 m²/guest if < 10 guests | 7 m² per room (9 m² with beds) |
| Management | jūtaku-shuku nuitskanri gyōsha mandatory if absent | Per municipality (Kyoto: ≤ 800 m) | Front desk, staff |
| Best for | Testing, second home | Whole house, year-round | Hotel-scale operation |
A third path exists in the strategic zones: Osaka's tokku minpaku, with no night cap, under a simple municipal certification.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get a ryokan-gyō licence in a residential zone?
Not in exclusive residential zones (daiisshu/dainishu teisōjūkyo sen'yō chiiki, 中高層, 田園住居). Possible in daiisshu jūkyo chiiki (≤ 3,000 m²), dainishu jūkyo, 準住居 and in commercial and semi-industrial zones. Check the yōto chiiki before any offer.
What is the minimum floor area for a kan'i shukusho?
33 m² of guest space, reduced to 3.3 m² per guest when capacity is under 10. A 60-70 m² house therefore hosts a family comfortably and compliantly.
Do I need to live in Japan to hold the licence?
No: a non-resident can hold it, directly or through a company. In practice you need a local operator or manager — mandatory in Kyoto (≤ 800 m) — and a cash purchase, since Japanese mortgages are reserved for residents employed in Japan.
Does the kan'i shukusho licence transfer to the buyer of the property?
Historically no: each operator refiled a full application. Since the late-2023 reform of the ryokan gyō-hō, a takeover with approval (shōkei) is possible when the business is sold — a real plus when buying an already-licensed guesthouse.
How much does the kan'i shukusho licence cost in total?
Expect ¥300,000 to ¥1,000,000 (€2,000 to €6,667) for the full application through a gyōsei shoshi, with compliance works on top. Fire safety is usually the heaviest line in the budget.
Official sources
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