Can I Drive in Japan? IDP Requirements by Country (2026)
Find out if you can drive in Japan with your foreign license. Covers Geneva Convention IDP, JAF translation requirements, and country-specific rules.
Quick Answer: Can You Drive in Japan with a Foreign License?
It depends on your country. Japan recognizes only the 1949 Geneva Convention International Driving Permit (IDP) — not the more common 1968 Vienna Convention version. This creates three scenarios: (1) If your country is a 1949 Geneva signatory (US, UK, Australia, Canada, and 80+ others), get an IDP from your national automobile association before departure and you can drive legally for up to one year. (2) If you are from Germany, Switzerland, France, Belgium, Taiwan, or Monaco, a standard IDP will not work — you need an official JAF (Japan Automobile Federation) Translation of your license, which costs ¥6,000 and takes 1-2 weeks to process. (3) If your country has no agreement with Japan (China, Indonesia, and others), you simply cannot drive in Japan at all. Use the TravelSafe Japan IDP Checker at /tools/idp to instantly find out which category your country falls into.
1949 Geneva Convention Countries: IDP Is Valid
If your country signed the 1949 Geneva Convention on Road Traffic, you can drive in Japan with a valid IDP plus your original license and passport. The IDP must be specifically issued under the 1949 convention format — the 1968 Vienna Convention IDP is strictly invalid in Japan.
Countries in this category include (partial list):
- North America: United States, Canada
- Europe: United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Portugal, Greece, Ireland, Austria, Poland, Czech Republic, Finland, Iceland
- Asia-Pacific: Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, India, Sri Lanka
- Middle East: Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, UAE (with caveats — some UAE IDPs face format issues at rental counters)
- Americas: Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Peru, Ecuador
- Africa: South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, Kenya, Nigeria
Countries That Need a JAF Translation Instead
Six countries have special bilateral agreements with Japan or use an IDP format that Japan rejects. Drivers from these countries must obtain an official JAF Translation (日本語翻訳文) instead of an IDP:
Group 1 — Bilateral Agreement (IDP not valid):
- Germany — Your German license is recognized via a bilateral agreement, but you must carry a JAF Translation alongside it. German residents can apply through ADAC in Germany before departure.
- Switzerland — Same bilateral structure as Germany. The JAF Translation is mandatory.
- Taiwan — Taiwan is not a Geneva Convention signatory. A JAF Translation is required. Taiwan residents can apply through the Taiwan-Japan Relations Association (TECRO) before departure.
How to Get an IDP Before Your Trip
The process for obtaining a 1949 Geneva Convention IDP is straightforward in most countries. Here are the steps for the most common origins:
- United States: Visit any AAA office in person. Bring your valid US driver's license, a passport-style photo, and $20. Processing is same-day at most offices, or 4-6 weeks by mail.
- United Kingdom: Apply at a Post Office branch. Bring your UK driving license, a passport photo, and pay £5.50. Available same-day at the counter. Ensure you request the 1949 Geneva format specifically.
- Australia: Apply through your state automobile club (NRMA in NSW, RACV in Victoria, RACQ in Queensland, etc.). Cost is approximately AUD $39. Processing takes about a week by mail.
- Canada: Apply through CAA (Canadian Automobile Association). Bring your license, one photo, and $25 CAD. Available at CAA offices.
Essential Japanese Driving Rules for Tourists
Even with a valid IDP, driving in Japan has some critical differences from Western countries that can catch visitors off guard:
- Drive on the LEFT — Japan drives on the left side of the road. The steering wheel is on the right side of the car. This is the single biggest adjustment for US, European, and most Asian drivers.
- Zero alcohol tolerance — Japan enforces a strict 0.03% BAC limit, effectively zero tolerance. Penalties include immediate license suspension and potential arrest. The driver, passengers who allowed the driving, and even the person who served the alcohol can all face charges.
- Speed limits are strictly enforced — Urban roads: 30-40 km/h. National highways: 60 km/h. Expressways: 80-100 km/h. Speed cameras (オービス) are ubiquitous and fines are heavy.
- Expressway tolls — Japan's expressways are tolled. Rent an ETC card with your rental car to pass through toll gates automatically. A Tokyo-to-Osaka drive costs approximately ¥8,000-13,000 in tolls alone.
- Mandatory child seats — Children under 6 must use an appropriate child seat. Rental companies offer these for an additional fee.
- No right turn on red — Unlike many US states, turning on a red light is never permitted in Japan.
- Parking — Street parking is rare and strictly enforced in cities. Use coin parking lots (コインパーキング) which are abundant and cost ¥200-1,500 per hour in urban areas.
Check Your Country Instantly
Not sure which category your country falls into? The TravelSafe Japan IDP Checker covers 90+ countries and gives you an instant result — whether you need an IDP, a JAF Translation, or cannot drive at all. It includes country-specific warnings (like the US AAA requirement or Italy's dual-format issue) and direct links to the relevant application resources.
Check your driving eligibility now at /tools/idp — it takes less than 5 seconds.
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