Dividend tax for Japan investors
If you're a Japan resident receiving dividends from a company domiciled abroad, the payer country typically withholds tax at source. A bilateral tax treaty usually lowers that rate below the statutory ceiling. Below, we show what's cited from a primary source — and flag every cell where a rate is still pending verification.
Estimate your withholding on cross-border dividends
Treaty rate for this country pair has not been verified yet from a primary source. The statutory non-treaty rate is shown as an upper-bound reference only — your actual rate depends on the bilateral tax treaty in force. Please consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation.
Until verified, we show the payer-country statutory non-treaty rate as an upper-bound estimate.
Estimates for educational purposes only. Tax rules change; consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation. Dividend-tax treatment depends on holding period, account type (taxable vs. retirement), investor type (individual vs. pension vs. mutual fund), limitation-on-benefits tests, and other factors not modeled here.
Resident tax treatment
Treaty rates for Japan investors
3 of 20 payer countries have a verified treaty rate cited below. The rest ship as “data pending verification” — never fabricated.
| Company domiciled in | Treaty WHT | Statutory |
|---|---|---|
| Australiapending | — | 30% |
| Belgiumpending | — | 30% |
| Canadapending | — | 25% |
| Denmarkpending | — | 27% |
| Finlandpending | — | 30% |
| Francepending | — | 25% |
| Germanypending | — | 26.375% |
| Irelandpending | — | 25% |
| Italypending | — | 26% |
| Japan Domestic — no cross-border withholding | 0% | 20.42% |
| Luxembourgpending | — | 15% |
| Netherlandspending | — | 15% |
| New Zealandpending | — | 30% |
| Norwaypending | — | 25% |
| Singapore Singapore domestic tax law — no WHT on dividends | 0% | 0% |
| Spainpending | — | 19% |
| Swedenpending | — | 30% |
| Switzerlandpending | — | 35% |
| United Kingdom UK domestic tax law — no WHT on ordinary portfolio dividends to non-residents | 0% | 0% |
| United Statespending | — | 30% |
Show citations for verified rates
- Japan: Japan Income Tax Act: domestic dividends subject to 20.42% aggregate withholding for tax-residents, separately from cross-border WHTNot a cross-border scenario. Domestic dividend tax applies — see resident_note for Japan.
- Singapore: IRAS: one-tier systemSingapore one-tier corporate tax system.
- United Kingdom: HMRC guidance0% UK withholding on ordinary portfolio dividends. UK REIT PIDs are a 20% exception.
Next steps
- For the exact rate in your case, consult a qualified tax professional — published treaty rates assume proper documentation and standard portfolio ownership.
- If you invest through a broker, ask whether they apply treaty relief at source or require you to reclaim later via tax refund.
- Your residence country may offer a Foreign Tax Credit that offsets the withheld amount against your domestic tax bill, up to the treaty rate.
Related
Frequently asked questions
What dividend withholding tax do Japan investors pay?
Japan investors receiving dividends from foreign companies typically face withholding tax at source. The exact rate depends on the bilateral tax treaty between Japan and the payer country. HoldLens shows verified treaty rates for 3 of 20 payer countries, with primary-source citations. 20.42% = 20% plus 2.1% reconstruction surtax. Japanese residents can claim foreign tax credit up to treaty rate.
Where do the Japan treaty rates come from?
Every cell with a verified rate cites a primary source: bilateral tax treaty text, OECD model commentary, or a country's tax authority. Cells flagged "needs_research" are NOT fabricated — they are shown as pending. Last verified: 2026-04-27.
Can a Japan resident reduce withholding tax on foreign dividends?
Often yes — via the treaty rate (vs statutory rate), correct broker custody documentation, and proper tax-residency proof at the payer's broker. Account type (taxable brokerage vs retirement) also affects net keep. Always consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation; rules change frequently and depend on personal facts (residency, domicile, account structure).
Is dividend tax different for Japan retirement accounts?
Yes — many countries grant additional treaty protection or exemption for qualified retirement-vehicle dividends. The exact rules depend on the specific retirement-account type recognized by Japan tax law AND its recognition by the payer-country treaty. See your country's tax authority for the qualifying-account list.
Estimates for educational purposes only. Tax rules change; consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation. Sources cited above were current as of 2026-04-27. Not investment advice.