The Incident at Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University
Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (APU), located in Beppu, Oita Prefecture, announced on March 28, 2026, that it had been removed from the Immigration Services Agency of Japan's list of "Proper Institutions" or "Suitable Schools" (適正校). This prestigious private university, known for its bilingual education and diverse student body, relies heavily on international enrollment, with nearly 50% of its 6,597 students being from overseas as of November 2025. The designation loss stems from a clerical oversight: APU failed to submit required reports on international student numbers for the 2023 academic year, marking the second consecutive year of non-compliance.
Under Japan's Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act (Article 19-17), universities must biannually report details like names, nationalities, and enrollment status of international students to regional immigration bureaus. This data ensures proper management and helps curb issues like overstays or unauthorized activities. APU met other criteria, such as maintaining a problematic enrollment rate below 5% and having no major attendance or academic issues, but the missed submission triggered delisting.
What is the 'Suitable School' Designation?
The "Suitable School" system, administered by the Immigration Services Agency, identifies institutions with exemplary compliance in managing international students. Designated schools benefit from streamlined procedures for issuing Certificates of Eligibility (COE), which are prerequisite for student visas. Normally, schools proxy applications, reducing paperwork and processing time from months to weeks. Delisted schools revert to individual student applications through embassies, involving more documents and scrutiny.
Criteria include:
- Problematic enrollment rate ≤5% (overstays, revocations).
- Full compliance with statutory reporting.
- No significant lapses in attendance, grades, or part-time work oversight.
Timeline of the Administrative Error
The oversight began with the 2023 report. In November 2024, Fukuoka Regional Immigration Bureau issued a first guidance letter noting the missing data, accompanied by a document suggesting continued designation. APU misinterpreted this and took no action. A second letter in October 2025 confirmed delisting for FY2026. President Hiroshi Yoneyama publicly apologized, calling it a governance failure.
This chain reaction delayed COE issuance for new admits, affecting entry for Japan's April semester start.
Impacts on New and Current Students
Of 330 planned international new students for April 2026, approximately 100 face entry delays. Without proxy COE, they must submit full applications individually, potentially missing orientation and classes. Current students (~3,291 intl) remain unaffected if compliant, but renewals may incur extra costs and time. Financial burdens include visa fees, travel changes, and lost wages from delayed part-time work (up to 28 hours/week allowed).
APU's intl-heavy model (49.9% intl) amplifies risks; students from Vietnam, China, Nepal dominate, per enrollment data.
| Category | Number | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Intl Students | 3,291 | 49.9% |
| Domestic | 3,306 | 50.1% |
| Total | 6,597 | 100% |
APU's Immediate Response and Mitigation Plans
APU pledged no disadvantages: expedited support for entries, online class access, financial aid for extras. They plan resubmission to regain status next FY. President Yoneyama emphasized intl education as core mission since 2000 founding, with 25,000+ alumni from 170 countries. Governance reforms target admin errors.
Check APU's official announcement for updates.
Broader Context: Japan's International Student Policies
Japan hit 400k intl students in 2025, ahead of 2033 target, but tightened rules post-fake student scandals. 2025 changes eased caps at top unis but stressed reporting. Delistings rare; APU first major case. System protects integrity amid 3.5% overstay rate drop.
Read more on criteria.
Stakeholder Reactions and Perspectives
Students express anxiety on social media; families worry over costs. Experts note admin burdens on intl unis. APU alumni praise resilience. No lawsuits yet; focus on resolution.
Lessons for Japanese Higher Education Institutions
APU case underscores compliance amid intl growth. Unis urged robust systems. Benefits: Streamlined visas boost enrollment 20-30%.
- Automate reporting.
- Train staff on Immigration Act.
- Monitor bureau notices.
Future Outlook and Recovery Path
APU eyes quick reinstatement via resubmission. Japan's intl ed thrives; APU's 26-year legacy endures. Positive: Highlights need for digital tools. Explore Yomiuri coverage.
Photo by Global Residence Index on Unsplash
Implications for International Students Considering Japan
Choose designated schools; verify status. APU remains top intl uni. Japan's policies balance growth/security.
