There are NO laws in Japan preventing Muslims from renting homes. The right to own and hold property is guaranteed under Article 29 of the Constitution. Discrimination in renting exists, but it is not legal or officially sanctioned.
1. Your Legal Right to Housing
Under the Japanese Constitution, Article 29 states the right to own or hold property is inviolable. The Civil Code also provides for equal access to rental agreements. No landlord can legally refuse you solely on the basis of religion.
However, Japan currently lacks a specific anti-discrimination law for private rental housing. This means discrimination is difficult to prove and enforce, even if it occurs.
2. Real Challenges Foreigners Face
Many Muslims — and foreigners generally — face practical barriers when renting in Japan:
- Guarantor requirement (保証人) — most landlords require a Japanese guarantor
- Language barriers — lease agreements in Japanese only
- Foreigner refusal — some landlords refuse all non-Japanese tenants
- Key money (礼金) — non-refundable upfront payment, 1–2 months rent
- Short-term residence concerns — landlords may worry about visa renewal
3. The Guarantor System — Solutions
The guarantor (保証人) requirement is the biggest obstacle. Solutions include:
- Guarantee companies (保証会社) — private companies that act as your guarantor for a fee (typically 0.5–1 month's rent per year). Now accepted by most landlords.
- Employer guarantor — if you are employed, ask your company to act as guarantor
- Public housing (公営住宅) — some public housing allows foreign residents without a Japanese guarantor
- JICA / Embassy support — some embassies help their nationals with housing arrangements
4. Muslim & Foreigner-Friendly Real Estate Agencies
These agencies specialize in helping foreigners find apartments in Japan:
- Sakura House — Tokyo-based, popular with international residents
- Global Agents / Realestate Japan — English-language listings
- Leopalace21 — monthly rentals, foreigner-friendly
- SUUMO / HOMES foreigner search — filter for foreigner-OK properties
5. Prayer Space in Your Home
You have the full right to pray in your home. There are no restrictions on:
- Setting up a prayer space/musalla in your room
- Installing a qibla indicator
- Reciting Quran at normal volume
Japanese apartments have thin walls. Be mindful of your neighbors — recite at low volume, especially in the early morning (Fajr) and late evening (Isha). This is cultural courtesy, not a legal requirement.
6. Halal Cooking in Japanese Apartments
You can cook any halal food in your apartment. Some points to note:
- Most Japanese apartments prohibit open flame grills on balconies (fire safety)
- Ventilate properly when cooking aromatic spices — considerate of neighbors
- Lease agreements may restrict certain cooking appliances — check before signing
7. If You Face Discrimination
If a landlord refuses you based on religion or ethnicity:
- Document everything — emails, messages, witness accounts
- File a complaint with the Legal Affairs Bureau (法務局) — handles human rights violations
- Contact the Foreign Residents Support Center (FRESC)
- Many municipalities offer free multilingual legal consultations
📝 Summary
- No law bans Muslims from renting in Japan — it is fully legal
- Practical barriers exist: guarantors, language, foreigner policies
- Use a guarantee company (保証会社) to bypass the guarantor requirement
- Use foreigner-friendly agencies like Sakura House or Realestate Japan
- You can freely pray, set up a musalla, and cook halal food at home
- Report housing discrimination to the Legal Affairs Bureau