Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - Some questions about going to Japan! Don't copy!

Some questions about going to Japan! Don't copy!

I am a Japanese student. Maybe my answer can help you.

1. What you need to apply for is an employment or work visa (prerequisite: you can only go to PS if you are hired by a Japanese company. Because there are Sino-Japanese joint ventures among relatives and friends, many employees go to work in local factories in Japan in this way every year. However, I would like to remind you that it is very difficult to sign a work visa unless you are from Taiwan Province province. That would be easy. How to apply for a specific work visa, you can go to the place where you apply for a Japanese visa, or find a related firm. In this case, I suggest you consult a firm for more details.

2. I study in a language school in Shinjuku, Japan, and live in Ikebukuro, Japan. There are not as many people in Ikebukuro as in Okubo, but there are already many. 654.38 million yen a month is enough (including accommodation and transportation), which is equivalent to more than 8,000 RMB a month. In this case, you can hardly go shopping or do anything else. The rent is 55 thousand. I can live like this for a month without working or saving money. 65438+ million yen, it can be said that you can't eat anything good in a month.

3. Work because you can't speak Japanese. Because you can find a job after going to Japan for three months, Japanese was not good at that time. I got a job as a cleaner in a hotel. Pure cleaning will not appear in the hotel lobby. 800 yen an hour. I usually work 5 hours a day (this cleaning job is not complicated, I found it in Ikebukuro. If you want to find such a cleaning job in a hotel in Shinjuku, you probably won't find it. The hotel there must require you to be fluent in Japanese. You can also find an employment agency opened by China people (but you have to give the other party money, and the agency fee ranges from 20,000 to 60,000). Employment agencies in China usually find you a job in a factory. Since you can't speak Japanese, it is not recommended that you go to a place where there are professional introductions for international students or people who need employment. (There is no agency fee in these places) Because of the economic crisis, it is difficult to find a job in Japan. I suggest you think it over.

In all parts of Japan, the rent should be directly proportional to the income. Anyway, you can survive, you can rest assured. When I say in direct proportion, I mainly mean convenience stores, restaurants and other good places, which guarantee to work 5 hours a day and 4-5 days a week. Although the rent in Tokyo is a little expensive, the minimum wage is 800. If you go to the west, I'm sorry, even if you go to izakaya (izakaya is usually the highest place in Japan, and izakaya is just a place to drink and eat snacks, please forget about it), your hourly minimum wage is 750. Convenience stores are lower. But maybe some places will be higher. Maybe the rent there is cheap. Compared with Tokyo, Osaka will be much cheaper. But please think about it yourself. If you want to travel, it's really not cost-effective to go to Osaka, which is not a fashionable city here in Tokyo. There are many antiques in Osaka.

There are many difficulties, for example, you can't speak Japanese. When you go, you must contact the domestic agent first to help you find a place to live in Japan. You can't live without a place. Usually in Japan, I stay in a hotel and my sister and I travel to Osaka. One night 1 10,000 yen, deposit 1 10,000 yen, which is 20,000 yen. This kind of hotel is also very cheap. Someone better be there to pick you up. Or if you are independent and have a good sense of direction, you don't have to pick up the plane, because you usually take the subway when you leave the airport, and you must change stations. Going to Tokyo means going to Narita Airport. I'm not sure where to go. The airports are in the suburbs anyway. You must know. Taking a taxi must be expensive to vomit blood. You know, most Japanese commute to work by subway every day. Change stations by subway, no one knows, no way, and no Japanese. It is estimated that you will be very helpless. Then you will understand that if you have to rely on yourself.

What I want to say next is that if you want to travel to Japan, you can join a tour group, and don't think about working while traveling. A tourist visa is absolutely not acceptable. It should be the same in every country. To work in Japan, you must stay for more than three months. I don't know if I can apply for a tourist visa for such a long time. Besides, I don't know if the embassy can give you a permit to be outside. If you want to work, you must have this permit, otherwise no one will dare to accept you. Without permission, you are an illegal worker. The Japanese attach great importance to the law unless you know someone.

Next, if you have a job and take the subway every morning, you will really feel crowded. I have personal experience. It is really impossible to enter the subway every day, and the staff at the subway station will push it from the outside to the inside. Very crowded, no exaggeration. This kind of congestion is more than the buses in our country in the morning. Really, everyone is desperately trying to squeeze in.

You will be cheated if you ask a China person to introduce you to a job. I can tell you for sure. Stay for a long time and you will gradually understand.

It is difficult to find a job in Tokyo. It's really, really hard. Even people with basic knowledge of Japanese find it difficult to find a job. Because Japanese people are more self-centered, if Japanese-speaking people from China and Japan apply for this job at the same time, people will definitely choose Japanese. I'm not sure about the rest of Japan.

Finally, can you cook? I suggest you come here and learn to cook by yourself. Never go out to eat, it's expensive. If you buy it at a convenience store, a box lunch is very small. The cheapest is 398 yen. I don't know how much you ate, but come at that time anyway. I can't adapt at all. Most Japanese MM are a rice ball, and a box of milk is their breakfast. If you buy lunch every day, you will be poor.