France Visa for Nepali Living in Japan 2026

Nepali citizens living in Japan can apply for a Schengen visa via France locally — you do not need to return to Nepal. You lodge at the France mission or its visa centre in Tokyo and show a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence. Processing runs 15 calendar days standard (can extend to 45 days during peak season or where consultation is required). The visa class is the Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Tourism / Private Visit (Up to 90 days within any 180-day period.). Yatra handles document review, cover letters, itineraries, and appointment guidance for the Nepali diaspora.
Key takeaways
- Nepali residents of Japan apply for a Schengen visa via France locally — at the France mission or visa centre in Japan, not in Nepal.
- Mandatory extra document vs applying from Nepal: a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence, valid for the full trip.
- Visa class: Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Tourism / Private Visit (Up to 90 days within any 180-day period.).
- Processing time: 15 calendar days standard (can extend to 45 days during peak season or where consultation is required).. Apply with a 1–2 week buffer.
- Yatra For Fun prepares the file end-to-end for diaspora applicants — document review, cover letter, day-by-day itinerary, and verifiable onward/return bookings.
Quick facts
| Applicant | Nepali citizen legally resident in Japan |
| Destination | France |
| Visa class | Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Tourism / Private Visit (Up to 90 days within any 180-day period.) |
| Where to apply | France mission / visa centre in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya |
| Residence proof | valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence |
| Processing time | 15 calendar days standard (can extend to 45 days during peak season or where consultation is required). |
| Government fee | Varies by class |
If you are a Nepali citizen building a life in Japan and planning a trip to France, the good news is simple: you can apply for a Schengen visa via France right here in Japan, without flying home to Kathmandu. This guide is written specifically for the Nepali diaspora in Japan — it covers exactly how the application differs from applying in Nepal, the one extra document that trips people up, realistic costs in JPY, processing times, the documents that reviewers actually weigh, and the mistakes that cause refusals.
Japan has a large Nepali community on work, student, and Specified Skilled Worker visas, concentrated around Tokyo and the Kanto region. That community context matters: France missions in Japan see Nepali third-country applicants regularly, and they approve well-prepared files. The job is to present yourself clearly as a settled, lawful resident of Japan who is taking a defined trip and coming back. Get that story straight across every document and your Nepali passport is no obstacle.
Overview: visiting France on a Nepali passport from Japan
France is a popular destination for Nepali travellers in Japan, whether for tourism, family visits, business, conferences, or onward study. As a Nepali passport holder you require a visa, and the route you take is shaped by where you live: missions assess third-country residents on the strength of their Japan ties just as heavily as the trip itself. Because you are legally resident in Japan, you apply at the France embassy/consulate (or its appointed visa centre) responsible for your part of Japan — usually through VFS Global or consulate appointment systems — rather than travelling back to Nepal. You must show a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence valid for the whole trip, alongside your Nepali passport.
Key points specific to France that every Nepali applicant should know:
- Every Nepali-language document MUST be accompanied by a notary-certified English translation — embassies will reject untranslated originals. Use a Nepal Bar Council–registered translator and have each translation notarised by a Notary Public.
- France has NO embassy or consulate in Nepal — every Nepali applicant submits at VFS Global Kathmandu (Chhaya Center, Thamel), which forwards the file to the French Embassy in New Delhi for adjudication.
- On the france-visas.gouv.fr online portal you MUST select "India" as the country of submission (not Nepal) — this is what links your file to the New Delhi consular section via VFS Kathmandu.
- VFS Kathmandu is open ONLY Tuesday and Friday, 09:00–13:00 — book the appointment well in advance, especially during peak summer (May–August) and winter (November–January) travel seasons.
Can Nepali citizens living in Japan apply for a Schengen visa via France?
Yes. International visa rules let you apply from your country of legal residence. As long as your Japan status is valid well beyond your travel dates, the France mission in Japan will accept your file as a third-country national. You apply on your Nepali passport, but you submit it through the France channel in Japan and prove that you live there lawfully.
The single most important difference from applying in Nepal: you must include a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence. Without it, the mission cannot confirm you are entitled to apply locally, and the file is returned. Everything else — passport, photos, funds, bookings, cover letter — follows the same logic as a Kathmandu application, adapted to your Japan bank and employer. The table below shows exactly what changes.
| Aspect | Applying from Nepal | Applying from Japan |
|---|---|---|
| Where you apply | France mission / visa centre in Kathmandu | France mission / visa centre in Tokyo, Japan |
| Extra document needed | None beyond the standard file | a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence |
| Bank statements | Nepali bank account | Japan bank account (3–6 months) |
| Ties shown | Employment / property in Nepal | Employment, study, or lease in Japan |
| Fee currency | NPR (or USD equivalent) | JPY |
| Need to travel home? | You are already in Nepal | No — apply from Japan |
France visa types available to Nepali citizens
Choose the class that matches your trip purpose — applying under the wrong category is a common, avoidable refusal.
| Visa type | Purpose | Stay | Govt fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Tourism / Private Visit | Tourism, sightseeing, private visits to family or friends, and short stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window in the Schengen Area. | Up to 90 days within any 180-day period. | — |
| Long-Stay "Visitor" Visa (VLS-TS / VLS-T) | Stays in France exceeding 90 days for tourist or personal reasons, without engaging in any professional activity. | 3 months – 1 year per visa (extendable via prefecture residence permit afterwards). | — |
| Airport Transit Visa (ATV-A) | Transiting through the international zone of a French airport en route to a third country — Nepali ordinary passport holders are EXPLICITLY required to hold an ATV-A (per EU Regulation 810/2009 Annex IV). | Strictly within the airport international zone — no entry into Schengen territory. | — |
| Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Business Travel | Attending business meetings, trade fairs, seminars, conferences, partner visits, or short training programmes / internships not exceeding 90 days. | Up to 90 days within any 180-day period. | — |
| Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Medical Care | Receiving consultation, diagnosis, treatment, or aftercare at a French medical institution (private or public). | Up to 90 days; longer treatments require a long-stay "Visitor" or specific medical visa. | — |
| Long-Stay Student Visa (VLS-TS étudiant) / Short-Stay Student | Pursuing higher-education studies, training, or research at a French university, grande école, school, or recognised institution. | Up to 1 year per visa (extendable via prefecture residence permit "étudiant"); short-stay (Type C) for training ≤ 90 days. | — |
| Student Trainee Visa (Long-Stay) | Internship / traineeship in France as part of a recognised training agreement or convention de stage. | Up to 1 year per visa. | — |
| Long-Stay Salaried Employment Visa ("travailleur temporaire" / VLS-TS) | Employment in France for more than 90 days — covers postings (intra-group transfers), service-providing assignments, and direct recruitment by a French company. | 3–12 months per visa; renewable through the prefecture once in France. | — |
Eligibility criteria for Nepali residents of Japan
You qualify to apply from Japan if you can answer yes to all of the following:
- You hold a Nepali passport valid 6+ months beyond your return date, with at least two blank pages.
- You hold a valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence, valid for the whole trip and ideally a few months beyond.
- You can show a clear, lawful purpose for visiting France (tourism, business, family, or study).
- You can demonstrate sufficient funds on 3–6 months of Japan bank statements.
- You can show ties to Japan — job, study enrolment, lease, or family — that prove you will return.
Financial requirement: EUR 65 / day with hotel booking OR EUR 120 / day without; bank statements showing capacity for the trip plus return. Show this comfortably; reviewers want a margin above the minimum, held steadily rather than deposited just before you apply.
Required documents checklist for France from Japan
- Nepali passport valid 6+ months beyond return, with two blank pages
- A valid Japanese Residence Card (Zairyu Card) and Certificate of Residence (the diaspora-specific requirement)
- Completed and signed visa application form
- Recent passport photographs to the mission specification
- 3–6 months of Japan bank statements showing stable funds
- Proof of employment, study, or business in Japan (letter, contract, or enrolment)
- Confirmed round-trip flight reservation matching your dates
- Hotel bookings or host invitation for the full stay
- Signed, dated cover letter stating purpose, dates, and return intent
- Travel medical insurance for the trip
- Original passport + photocopy
- Two ICAO-format photos (35 × 45 mm)
- Citizenship copy
- Long-form France-Visas application form (CERFA)
Documents not in English (or the destination's language) usually need a certified translation. Yatra checks each item against the current France mission list before you book the appointment.
Step-by-step: applying for a Schengen visa via France from Japan
- Confirm your visa class. Match your trip to the Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C) — Tourism / Private Visit category from the table above. The class decides the document list and the fee.
- Check your Japan residence validity. It must cover the full trip; if it expires within a few months, renew it first — an expiring residence is the top diaspora refusal reason.
- Assemble the file. Passport, residence proof, Japan bank statements, employment/enrolment letter, flight and hotel reservations, cover letter, and insurance.
- Complete the application form on the official portal (https://france-visas.gouv.fr (select India as country of submission) · https://visa.vfsglobal.com/ind/en/fra (VFS Global appointment booking)) and book the appointment through VFS Global or consulate appointment systems for the France mission covering Tokyo.
- Submit and give biometrics. Attend in person where required, hand over the file, and pay the fee in JPY (Cash in NPR at the VFS Kathmandu counter. No card / digital wallet.).
- Track and collect. Follow the dashboard; collect your passport or receive the e-visa by email on approval. Do not book non-refundable flights until the visa is granted.
France visa processing time from Japan
Official guidance is 15 calendar days standard (can extend to 45 days during peak season or where consultation is required).. For diaspora applicants the practical rule is to apply 2–4 weeks before travel for sticker visas and a few days ahead for e-visas. Missions in Tokyo slow down in peak season (summer and festival periods), and you want room for any document re-submission. If your trip is fixed, lodge as early as the mission's window allows — most accept applications up to three months before travel.
Estimated France visa costs from Japan
Budget for three things: the government visa fee, the visa-centre service charge (paid locally in JPY), and travel insurance. Optional concierge help is separate and quoted upfront.
| Cost item | Amount / note |
|---|---|
| Government visa fee | Varies by visa class — confirm on the official portal |
| Visa-centre service charge (VFS Global) | Paid locally in JPY; varies by centre |
| Travel medical insurance | Required — min €30,000 cover |
| Yatra concierge (optional) | Quoted upfront — document review, cover letter, itinerary, appointment guidance |
Common reasons Japan-based Nepali applications get refused
Almost every refusal we see for diaspora applicants comes down to one of these — and every one is fixable before submission:
- Residence proof missing or expiring before the trip ends — the mission cannot confirm you can apply locally.
- Last-minute funds. A balance topped up days before you apply reads as borrowed money, not your own.
- Dates that disagree across the form, flights, hotel, and cover letter — inconsistency signals a weak plan.
- No cover letter, or a generic one that fails to state purpose, dates, and return intent.
- Weak ties to Japan — without a job, study, or lease on file, reviewers read overstay risk.
- Wrong visa class — applying as a tourist for what is clearly a business trip, or vice versa.
Expert tips that raise France visa approval odds
- Lead with your Japan residence. Put the residence proof and employer/enrolment letter at the front of the file — it answers the reviewer's first question.
- Make every date agree. The form, the flights, the hotel, and the cover letter must tell one consistent story.
- Show funds over time, not a spike. Three to six months of steady balance beats a single large deposit.
- Write a one-page cover letter: who you are, where you live and work in Japan, why France, exact dates, and a clear statement that you will return to Japan.
- Use verifiable reservations, not non-refundable tickets, to prove onward travel.
- Keep copies of everything you submit, in case the mission asks for clarification.
Three common Japan scenarios
Student: If you study in Japan, include your enrolment letter, fee-payment record, and a no-objection or leave note from your institution for the travel dates. Term breaks are the natural window to travel to France.
Worker: If you work in Japan, include your employment contract, recent payslips, an approved-leave letter, and your Japan tax or social-security number where relevant. Steady salary credits in your statements do most of the convincing.
Family visit or tourism: Where someone in France hosts you, add their invitation and status proof; where you travel independently, your hotel bookings and day-by-day itinerary carry the file.
Why professional visa assistance helps the diaspora
Applying from Japan means reconciling two paper trails — your Nepali identity documents and your Japan residence and employment record. A small mismatch (a name spelled differently across passport and residence card, a date that does not line up, a missing certified translation) is enough for a refusal. A specialist who handles diaspora files daily catches these before submission, when they are still cheap to fix. You also save the hours of cross-checking the current France mission requirements, which change without much notice.
Why choose Yatra For Fun's Nepal-based visa assistance
Yatra For Fun is a Nepal-based visa-assistance company that works with Nepali passport holders worldwide. For applicants in Japan we provide tourist, business, and Schengen visa assistance, document verification, visa consultation, travel-itinerary and cover-letter preparation, appointment-booking guidance, travel-insurance guidance, and a full pre-submission application review — done remotely so your residence in Japan is never an obstacle.
- Diaspora-specific document review — Nepali + Japan papers reconciled.
- Cover letters and day-by-day itineraries written to mission expectations.
- Verifiable onward/return bookings without buying non-refundable tickets.
- Transparent, upfront pricing — no hidden charges.
Conclusion
Living in Japan does not stand between you and France — it simply changes where and how you apply. Lodge a Schengen visa via France through the France mission in Japan, prove your residence, keep your dates and funds consistent, and your Nepali passport is no barrier. Prepare the file carefully, apply with a buffer, and treat the cover letter as seriously as the bank statement.
Get expert help with your France visa
Ready to apply from Japan? Yatra For Fun's visa team will review your documents, write your cover letter and itinerary, and guide your appointment — start to finish. Message us on WhatsApp at +977 970-9066517 or email [email protected], and see the destination guide at https://yatraforfun.com/visa/france.
Sources and freshness
Destination facts are drawn from Yatra's curated embassy dataset (last verified 2026-04-25) and the official France visa portal. Residence-application facts reflect standard third-country-national practice in Japan as of 2026-06-13. Always confirm fees and appointment availability on the official portal before you travel.
About Sandeep Kumar Chaudhary
Founder, Yatra For Fun
Sandeep Kumar Chaudhary Chaudhary founded Yatra For Fun in Kathmandu after a decade running visa applications for Nepali pilgrims, students, and business travellers. He writes the visa guides personally — every fee, document list, and embassy address is verified against the source portal before publication, and updated when the embassy changes its rules.
Full profile →Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
Update log
- factualInitial publication — residence-axis guide from embassy_info_v1 + residence_facts_v1 — Sandeep

