Japan will ease its entry restrictions for non-tourist arrivals and increase the daily entry cap in March, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced Thursday, amid calls from business groups and student representatives for “a science-based entry policy.”
“We will continue to consider how the measures should be by taking into account the infection situations at home and abroad, border control measures taken by other nations, and progress in the rollout of vaccine boosters (in Japan),” he told reporters.
Japan will reopen its borders to non-tourist arrivals, including foreign nationals, beginning March 1, with the daily entry cap increased to 5,000 from the current 3,500.
The ministry stated that all entrants will be subject to a seven-day home quarantine, but the quarantine requirement may be lifted if the third-day test result comes out negative.
A Japanese government official told reporters on Friday that there was no estimate on how long it would take to let in all the waiting foreign nationals.
Marcus Schuermann, delegate of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Japan, said while the relaxation of border measures is a “positive development,” a roadmap on how people will be allowed into the country is still lacking.
Business groups and student representatives had previously called on the government to lift the entry ban on foreign nationals, saying that such restrictions harmed efforts to revive the economy and prevented international students from studying in Japan.
“Japan’s ban on entry by business and student travelers goes considerably beyond the steps its major partners have taken and has imposed real and increasing economic and human costs,” they stated.