I’ve been thinking about this for a while and figured I’d just ask people here who actually know Japan better than I do.
I’m a foreign resident in Japan and I’ve been studying for the 宅建士 (Takken) exam. At one point I was pretty set on going all in on it. Lately though, especially with political uncertainty (like the talk around Sanae Takaichi and policy direction), I’m starting to wonder if I’m over-investing in something that may not pay off.
To be honest, the exam itself isn’t what scares me.
What worries me is after I pass.
Even if I get the license, I’m not sure where I’d realistically use it. Most real estate jobs I see seem very Japanese-network–driven, and I don’t really see many foreigners actually selling property unless they already have strong connections or are in very niche roles.
My fear is ending up with:
a hard-earned license
a lot of time sunk
but no clear place to apply it
I know people say Takken is more of a “base qualification” than a shortcut to money, and that makes sense. But I’m trying to be realistic about ROI, not romantic about it.
So I guess I’m asking:
If you don’t already have a foot in the Japanese real estate industry, is Takken still worth it?
Have any foreigners here actually used it in a meaningful way?
Or would time be better spent building skills in adjacent areas (property management, cross-border support, finance, bilingual roles, etc.)?
Not looking for hype or doomposting—just honest experiences.
Appreciate any thoughts.
by RequirementNaive6064