Is Japan open to travelers? It’s where Singaporeans want to travel

Some 49% of Singaporeans say they are considering Japan for their next vacation abroad, according to the market research firm YouGov.

Interest may be even higher among young citizens. Some 68% of Singaporeans aged 16 to 24 years old indicated they are considering Japan for their “next vacation,” compared to 37% of those aged 55 and older, according to research published in May.

Japan was the top choice among survey respondents by a good margin, with the second choice, Taiwan, garnering interest from 39% of those surveyed. Some 26% indicated interest in vacationing in Malaysia, according to the results, but this may have been affected by the survey question, which specifically asked about travel plans “by air.”

Still, Wanping Aw, CEO of the Tokyo-based travel agency Tokudaw said her company saw a large uptick in business after Japan reopened its borders in June — with 50% of enquires and bookings coming from Singapore, she said.

Why Singaporeans like Japan

Confusion abounds

Singapore is one of more than 100 countries and territories marked “blue” in Japan’s color-coded entrance classification system.

Travelers from those places are not required to take a Covid-19 test or quarantine on arrival, or be vaccinated to enter. Visas and pre-flight Covid-19 PCR tests are required though, according to the website for the Embassy of Japan in Singapore.

But the requirements beyond this have left many travelers confused, said Aw.

This is especially true of the rule allowing tourists to enter “only when a travel agency among others organizing the trip serves as the receiving organization of the entrants,” as stated by Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Websites like these use “language that talks in loops,” said Aw.

Everyone is confused and stressed about the visa application process.

“And this misunderstanding is escalated with the fact that the Japanese embassies are using the word — package tour,” she said. This conjures up images of “30 to 40 strangers in a big bus, going on a fixed route with a pre-fixed itinerary.”

But this isn’t accurate, she said.

One person can book a “package tour,” she said, adding that she’s arranged three solo travel bookings — including one from Singapore — since Japan’s borders opened in June.

The term “pre-fixed itinerary” is also befuddling potential travelers.

“Everyone seems to have the impression that they have to fix their itinerary down to the hour or minute … that it is difficult to come up with,” she said. “But it is not as hard as it seems.”

Another problem — “everyone is confused and stressed about the visa application process,” she said.

To apply for a tourist visa, travelers need to plan an itinerary and book their flights and accommodations before she can process their “ERFS certificates,” she said, referencing an approval document that visitors need before they can apply for their visas.

Only Japanese companies can apply for the certificate, however travelers can work through tour agencies in their home countries, who in turn work with their local partners in Japan, she said.

Once an ERFS certificate is obtained, travelers can apply for their visas, said Aw.

Lastly, the chaperone

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/09/is-japan-open-to-travelers-its-where-singaporeans-want-to-travel.html