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¥15,000,000 Salary in Tokyo: Is It Enough?

¥15,000,000 gross in Tokyo 2026: NTA income tax + shakai hoken + residence tax — ~¥10,245,742 take-home from our engine. Rent, share houses, and what "enough" means.

June 21, 2026·8 min read·By Sammy S.
15m salary JapanTokyo take home pay 2026Japan income taxshakai hoken calculatorNTA tax calculatorcost of living Japan

Double-digit millions in yen still has to survive Tokyo rent.

¥15,000,000 is serious money nationally — locally, taxes, shakai hoken, and housing decide how it feels. We ran ¥15,000,000 through our 2026 Japan tax engine (same math as the live calculators) so you can plan in net, not gross.

Let's be honest about why you're here.

You got an offer — or a raise — that says ¥15,000,000 on paper. You want to know what actually hits your bank account in Tokyo, not what a generic "Japan average" calculator says. Japan uses NTA progressive rates nationwide — there is no separate Tokyo income tax. What makes Tokyo expensive is rent, transit, and groceries, not a different tax stack.

Here's what our own tax engine says for 2026, because we ran the same math as the Japan paycheck calculator.

After the table, the article continues with payroll context at ¥15,000,000, housing bands, Japan city comparisons, age 40+ take-home, mistakes people make, calculator links, and a full FAQ — the same depth and section mix as our Singapore salary city series.

The Take-Home Number (¥15,000,000, 2026)

We used NTA progressive rates, ¥15,000,000 gross employment income, single employee under 40, national income tax + 2.1% reconstruction surtax + residence tax estimate + FY2026 shakai hoken included, no dependents — exactly how the Japan calculator runs a clean baseline.

Annual take-home (after tax + shakai hoken): about ¥10,245,742

That's about ¥853,812 per month before voluntary deductions.

PieceAnnual (approx.)
National income tax (NTA progressive)¥2,066,874
Reconstruction surtax (2.1%)¥43,404
Residence tax estimate (住民税)¥1,091,780
Shakai hoken (employee, FY2026)¥1,552,200

Total deductions: about ¥4,754,258 of your ¥15,000,000 gross.

Age 40+ at the same gross: about ¥10,177,329/year (~¥848,111/month) — long-term care insurance (0.81%) adds roughly ¥5,701/month.

Run your own scenario (age 40+, dependents, bonus, tax toggles) with the Japan paycheck calculator.

See also: Japan salary table on the calculator page.

Why Tokyo feels different at ¥15,000,000

Our cost model assigns Tokyo COL index 130 (national baseline ≈ 100, Tokyo ≈ 130). Japan has no city-based income tax. You pay NTA progressive rates nationwide, plus residence tax (住民税), and employee shakai hoken. Tokyo's premium is rent and lifestyle, not a different tax code.

¥15,000,000 on payroll: NTA income tax, shakai hoken, and what "gross" hides

We assume single employee, under age 40, ¥15,000,000 gross employment income, national income tax + reconstruction surtax + residence tax estimate + employee shakai hoken included, no dependents — the same clean baseline as our Japan paycheck calculator.

At ¥15,000,000, pension hits the ceiling early — ¥714,150/year employee max (¥650,000 × 12 × 9.15%). NTA marginal rates climb through 23%–33% bands on taxable income above ¥6.95M.

Practical: ~¥853,812/month net is your baseline. Year-end adjustment (年末調整) and dependent deductions can reduce actual liability — claim via employer or tax return.

Note: Your gross exceeds the ¥650,000/month pension standard remuneration ceiling — pension is fully capped. Bonuses use a separate ¥1,500,000 ceiling per payment.

The real cost breakdown (2026)

Directional monthly ranges for a single person renting a one-bedroom apartment:

Rent: One-bedroom ¥140,000–¥198,000 depending on building age and exact location; premium corridors skew high.

Transport: ¥8,000–¥15,000 (Suica/Pasmo, no car needed) — Japan's transit makes car-free life practical; shaken (車検) and parking make car ownership expensive in cities.

Groceries: ¥35,000–¥55,000 cooking at home; convenience stores (コンビニ) and supermarkets (スーパー) vary widely by chain.

Utilities: ¥12,000–¥20,000 — heating in winter and AC in summer both matter.

Consumption tax: 10% on most goods and services — not deducted from payroll, but it shapes spendable income.

~¥853,812/month net vs. fixed costs (sketch)

ItemRough monthly
Rent (1BR, decent area)¥140,000–¥198,000
Groceries¥35,000–¥55,000
Utilities + broadband¥12,000–¥20,000
Transport (no car)¥8,000–¥15,000 (Suica/Pasmo, no car needed)

Stack those against ~¥853,812/month take-home: housing + utilities + commute eat first.

Age 40+ at the same gross: ~¥848,111/month — long-term care insurance (0.81%) adds ~¥5,701/month vs. under-40 baseline.

¥15,000,000 in Tokyo

¥15,000,000 is strong Tokyo income — solo renting is comfortable in many areas, and wealth building is realistic.

Share house: Share houses (シェアハウス) at ¥50,000–¥80,000/month are the most common lever at ¥4M–¥6M in central Tokyo.

Solo one-bedroom: Solo one-bedroom at market rent is often tight below ¥8M gross unless the lease is below typical central asks.

Tradeoff: Central 23 wards vs. cheaper Setagaya or Saitama commute — same tax, very different rent

Tokyo vs. other Japan cities at the same ¥15,000,000 gross

Same offer letter, different city — our 2026 engine (single, under 40, shakai hoken included):

CityAnnual take-home (approx.)
Tokyo¥10,245,742
Osaka¥10,245,742
Yokohama¥10,245,742
Nagoya¥10,245,742
Fukuoka¥10,245,742
Kyoto¥10,245,742

Tokyo (this page): ¥10,245,742/year (~¥853,812/month).

Important: All cities share identical NTA income tax + shakai hoken at the same gross on this baseline. What changes is rent and COL, not tax.

At the same gross, take-home is identical in Osaka or Fukuoka — Tokyo vs Osaka is about rent, not tax.

Use our Japan salary table for quick reference at common gross levels.

Under 40 vs age 40+ at ¥15,000,000

ProfileAnnual take-homeMonthly (approx.)
Under 40 (this baseline)¥10,245,742~¥853,812
Age 40+ (LTC 0.81% added)¥10,177,329~¥848,111

From age 40, long-term care insurance (介護保険) adds 0.81% employee (FY2026). The child-support levy (0.115%) applies to all health insurance enrollees regardless of age. Toggle age 40+ in our calculator to model your scenario.

At a glance: ¥15,000,000 in Tokyo (2026)

QuestionAnswer
Monthly take-home (under 40)?~¥853,812
Monthly take-home (age 40+)?~¥848,111
Annual take-home (under 40)?¥10,245,742
Total tax + shakai hoken?¥4,754,258
National income tax (approx.)?¥2,066,874
Residence tax estimate?¥1,091,780
Shakai hoken (approx.)?¥1,552,200
Is ¥15,000,000 enough here?Comfortable — solo renting workable, savings and discretionary spending realistic

Check your numbers on the Japan paycheck calculator.

Who this is for

New grads, job changers (転職), foreign workers comparing offers, and anyone weighing Tokyo vs Osaka vs Fukuoka leases who needs net pay in JPY, not generic "Japan average" guesses.

What changes your paycheck vs. our table

We kept the baseline simple on purpose: single, under 40, shakai hoken on, no dependents. Real life adds:

  • Age 40+: Long-term care insurance 0.81% employee (FY2026) — toggle in Customise Japan tax.
  • Dependents: ¥380,000 deduction per qualifying dependent reduces taxable income.
  • Bonus (賞与): Taxed as employment income; full shakai hoken applies with separate pension ceiling (¥1.5M per payment).
  • Residence tax timing: Actual 住民税 is billed from June on prior-year income — our calculator uses a same-year estimate.
  • Prefecture health insurance: Kyokai Kenpo rates vary (Niigata 9.21% to Saga 10.55% total); we use Tokyo 9.85%.

Mistakes people make

1. Using a US or UK tax mental model. Japan uses NTA progressive income tax + shakai hoken + residence tax, not federal+state FICA or PAYE+NI alone.

2. Budgeting from gross. ¥15,000,000 on the offer letter is not ¥853,812/month in your account.

3. Assuming Tokyo has different income tax. It doesn't — rent and commute are the Tokyo premium.

4. Forgetting residence tax (住民税). It is 10% of taxable income — a major line item, often withheld from June.

5. Ignoring the FY2026 child-support levy. 0.115% employee on all Kyokai Kenpo enrollees from April 2026 — rising to 0.44% by FY2028.

Short answers

How much is ¥15,000,000 after taxes in Tokyo? About ¥10,245,742/year (~¥853,812/month) in our 2026 baseline.

Is ¥15,000,000 a good salary in Tokyo? Solid nationally (NTA average ~¥4.78M) — whether it feels comfortable is mostly rent + city + age.

Does Tokyo have a city income tax? No — you pay NTA progressive rates + residence tax + shakai hoken nationwide.

Make these numbers yours

Tax rules change each fiscal year — rerun the calculator before you sign a lease or accept an offer. Figures are rounded; payroll rounding and bonus treatment may differ slightly from annual estimates.

Rent ranges are directional estimates based on SUUMO, Homes, and MLIT rental statistics (2025–2026). Tax figures from our engine aligned to NTA income tax rates and Kyokai Kenpo FY2026 rates. Not financial advice.

FAQ

How much is ¥15,000,000 after taxes in Tokyo in 2026?

About ¥10,245,742/year take-home (~¥853,812/month) for single, under 40, ¥15,000,000 employment income — from our Japan paycheck calculator. Age 40+ at the same gross: about ¥10,177,329/year.

Do I pay income tax and shakai hoken in Tokyo?

YesNTA income tax, reconstruction surtax (2.1%), residence tax estimate, and employee shakai hoken apply nationwide. On this baseline, national tax is about ¥2,066,874, residence tax ¥1,091,780, and shakai hoken ¥1,552,200.

Is income tax different in Tokyo vs Osaka?

No for employment income — NTA rates are identical nationwide. Rent is what differs.

Is ¥15,000,000 enough to live alone in Tokyo?

Solo one-bedroom at market rent is often tight below ¥8M gross unless the lease is below typical central asks. At ~¥853,812/month net, share houses or value areas are common levers.

How does Tokyo compare to other Japan cities at the same salary?

At ¥15,000,000 gross, take-home is identical — all use national NTA + shakai hoken. Compare Osaka or Fukuoka for lower rent at the same net.

S
Sammy S.Author

Tax writer and the person behind Paycheck Tax Calculator. I write about US and Canadian taxes, take-home pay, and financial planning — breaking down the stuff that actually affects your paycheck.

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