Film production support in Japan — for the trade.
Location scouting, permits, crews and fixers across Japan — from neon Tokyo to alpine villages and subtropical islands, supported on the ground.
Operated in-house, accountable end to end.
We support international productions with location scouting, permit applications, local crew and equipment, transport, accommodation and government liaison. Japan’s range — megacity, snow country, temples, coastline — is deliverable within tight schedules through our fixer network.
Why Japan for this segment
Within a few hours Japan delivers neon megacity, snow country, ancient temples, alpine valleys and subtropical coast, with deep, disciplined crews and an efficient permit culture that keeps international productions on schedule.
Who it's for: Production companies, commercial shoots and documentary teams filming in Japan.
Japan offers world-class range within short distances, and the practical lesson of working here is that the country rewards productions that respect its process. Neon megacity, snow country, ancient temples, alpine valleys and subtropical coast all sit within short flights or shinkansen legs. National and regional film commissions actively support foreign productions with location introductions and liaison, and some prefectures offer location-support funding for qualifying shoots — we confirm current incentive terms at feasibility stage, because they shift and vary by region. The headline truth: Japan's locations are extraordinary, and access is a matter of planning the permissions as seriously as the shoot.
Permits are the core of the legal picture. Filming on public land, at temples and shrines, in stations and on transport, and in national parks each carries its own permission layer, fees and conduct rules, arranged through the relevant authority and a licensed local coordinator. Crew need the correct visa class and work authorisation for paid filming — not tourist entries. Drones require Civil Aviation Bureau registration and flight permissions, with controlled airspace, crowds and parks each adding rules. Lead times run from days for simple commercial shoots to weeks for drama with sensitive locations. We sequence all of it against your production calendar.
- Location scouting and securing
- Permit and government liaison
- Local crew, fixers and equipment
- Transport and accommodation logistics
- Talent and extras coordination
- Customs and gear carnet support
How film production support works with Explera — step by step.
Every file follows the same accountable sequence from first enquiry to closed account. Here is the workflow your booking moves through, and what you can expect from us at each stage.
Script & feasibility review
Send the treatment, locations brief, shoot window and budget frame. We come back with a feasibility read: permit pathway and lead times, incentive eligibility estimate, location suggestions with reference photography, and the honest flags — what is straightforward in Japan, what is slow, and what is simply not going to be approved.
Location scout & permit filing
A scouting package follows — library options first, then a physical recce with stills, sun-path notes, access and power assessments for shortlisted sites. In parallel we file the location permissions, temple and shrine consents, park permits and drone authorisations, sequenced so approvals land before your tech recce.
Crew, kit & logistics plan
We assemble the local side: heads of department and crew from Tokyo and Osaka's freelance pools, camera and grip rental coordination, generators, picture vehicles, snow and marine assets where the script needs them. Accommodation, transport and catering plans are built around the shooting schedule, priced net per shoot day.
Pre-production on the ground
Tech recces with your DP and first AD, location agreements signed, holding areas and unit bases arranged, weather, snow and tide tables built into the schedule, and the incentive paper trail opened with auditable spend tracking from day one. A bilingual production coordinator becomes your single point of contact.
Shoot support
During principal photography our fixers run locations, permits-on-site, police and authority liaison where required, crowd and road control, daily transport and set catering — with contingency locations and covered standby plans for weather days. Problems are solved at unit level so your AD hears about them in past tense.
Wrap & incentive filing
We close location agreements and make-goods, reconcile the production account against budget, and compile the audited in-country spend documentation any incentive claim requires. Final deliverable: a clean cost report and an incentive file ready for submission, plus everything archived for your production accountant.
What is included in film production support — in detail.
The summary list above is what fits in a card. This is what each line actually means operationally, because partners deserve to know what the net rate buys before they resell it.
Location scouting and securing
Location scouting and securing — produced, not just booked. Our event side works from written run sheets, named supplier contracts and site visits, so the creative ambition is matched by load-in schedules, power plans and backup options. Suppliers are drawn from a vetted bench we use repeatedly, which is what gives us leverage on both price and performance when your client's date is on the line. It is itemised on the quotation, so you can show clients exactly what their rate buys.
Permit and government liaison
Permit and government liaison — produced, not just booked. Our event side works from written run sheets, named supplier contracts and site visits, so the creative ambition is matched by load-in schedules, power plans and backup options. Suppliers are drawn from a vetted bench we use repeatedly, which is what gives us leverage on both price and performance when your client's date is on the line. Partners can request the underlying detail — supplier names, specifications, timings — at any point.
Local crew, fixers and equipment
Local crew, fixers and equipment — included in the net rate and operated under the same standards as every other element of film production support: licensed suppliers, written confirmations, a named coordinator and the 24/7 desk behind it. We treat the quiet line items with the same care as the headline ones, because programs are judged by the day that goes wrong, and any element can be that day. If a file does not need it, we say so and quote without it; nothing is padded in.
Transport and accommodation logistics
Transport and accommodation logistics — run on GPS-tracked, insured vehicles from our own fleet and contracted operators, with drivers briefed on the specific movement rather than handed an address. Flight numbers are tracked against delays, pickup times are reconfirmed the evening before, and dispatch holds standby cover on event and arrival days. The logistics layer is where Japan programs usually fray; ours is run as a discipline. The operations desk owns delivery on this line, with a named coordinator accountable for it.
Talent and extras coordination
Talent and extras coordination — included in the net rate and operated under the same standards as every other element of film production support: licensed suppliers, written confirmations, a named coordinator and the 24/7 desk behind it. We treat the quiet line items with the same care as the headline ones, because programs are judged by the day that goes wrong, and any element can be that day. It is covered by the same 24/7 support and incident process as every other element.
Customs and gear carnet support
Customs and gear carnet support — part of the paperwork discipline that makes a B2B file run clean. Documents are issued accurately and on time, in your branding where the service is white-label, with net rates that hold from quotation to final invoice. Reconciliation at the end of the file matches what was quoted, what was delivered and what was invoiced — and discrepancies are ours to resolve, not yours to chase. Documentation for this element travels in the client pack, in plain language, before departure.
Two practical notes on reading this list. First, it is a floor, not a ceiling: requirements that fall outside it — an unusual language, a tighter timing, a compliance document your market demands — are quoted as named lines rather than refused, and the answer to "can you also" is usually yes with a price attached. Second, every line above is auditable: registered partners can request the supplier contracts, licence copies and specification sheets that sit behind any element of film production support, because reselling a service you cannot verify is a risk no agent should be asked to carry.
Where we run film production support in Japan.
Service lines are only as good as the ground they stand on. City by city, here is how this one actually operates — gateways, seasons and the local logic that shapes delivery.
Film production support in Tokyo
Japan’s electric capital — where neon districts and centuries-old shrines share a city block. It is one of the proven home grounds for film production support on the Explera network. Tokyo carries the deepest event infrastructure in Japan — Tokyo Big Sight, convention-grade ballrooms, production suppliers and crew depth all within reach of the venue. That density is what lets us hold load-in schedules and replace a failed supplier on the same day, and the two airports give delegate flows the lift capacity large programs demand. Delegate and guest flows arrive via NRT Narita & HND Haneda, where we run name-board meet-and-greet, luggage marshalling and staggered vehicle waves sized to the manifest. Site inspections here can be arranged within days, hosted by the same team that will run the program.
Film production support in Kyoto
Japan’s thousand-year capital of temples, geisha districts and Zen gardens. For film production support, it is a market we operate week in, week out — not an occasional request. Kyoto brings Kyoto's heritage venues and Osaka's convention capacity together within fifteen minutes by bullet train — a temple gala one evening, a plenary the next morning. We run the local supplier layer through a Kansai bench we know personally, with KIX handling international delegate arrivals close to the action. Delegate and guest flows arrive via Via KIX Kansai or Tokyo — 2h15 by shinkansen, where we run name-board meet-and-greet, luggage marshalling and staggered vehicle waves sized to the manifest. Local supplier contracts carry our standard penalty and replacement clauses, protecting your delivery dates.
Film production support in Sapporo
Hokkaido’s capital — beer, ramen, the Snow Festival and a gateway to powder country. Our Sapporo team handles film production support as core daily business, with the local relationships to show for it. Sapporo trades on the snow and the space — winter incentive programs, ski-resort conferences and summer escapes from the southern heat. Every program here carries a written weather and transfer plan, because Hokkaido's distances and winter roads are real, and indoor backup is contracted alongside the primary venue, never assumed. Delegate and guest flows arrive via CTS New Chitose International, where we run name-board meet-and-greet, luggage marshalling and staggered vehicle waves sized to the manifest. Run sheets for this destination build in local load-in rules, noise curfews and licensing hours.
Film production support in Mt Fuji & Fuji Five Lakes
Japan’s sacred peak, mirrored in the lakes and framed by the Chureito Pagoda. Demand for film production support here is strong across the season, and our local bench is sized for it. Mt Fuji & Fuji Five Lakes is chosen for setting: alpine backdrops, castle towns and Mt Fuji views that read beautifully in event staging and on camera. Infrastructure is thinner than the metros, so we truck key production elements in and lock local permissions well in advance — the payoff is a program no Tokyo ballroom can replicate. Delegate and guest flows arrive via Via Tokyo — 2 h by road/rail, where we run name-board meet-and-greet, luggage marshalling and staggered vehicle waves sized to the manifest. Our bilingual event managers bridge your client's production team and the venue's Japanese operations staff.
These 4 bases are where film production support runs at full operational depth — resident teams, contracted suppliers and daily movements. But the map does not stop at the labels above: the same desk quotes and operates this service anywhere in Japan a partner needs it, from secondary prefectures to multi-region circuits, drawing on the regional office nearest the action. If your client's brief names a destination you do not see here, send it anyway — the answer is usually yes, with a costed plan attached.
Seasonality runs in two distinct directions on this part of the map. Winter (December to March) is the powder-and-festival peak — deep, dry snow, the Sapporo Snow Festival, ski-in inventory that clears six to twelve months out at premium rates. The green season flips it: lavender and flower fields, cool, low-humidity air, brilliant early-autumn foliage and sharply better value. We sell both windows deliberately, steering date-flexible files toward whichever season the client's brief actually wants.
Tokyo
Japan’s electric capital — where neon districts and centuries-old shrines share a city block.
Agent guideKyoto
Japan’s thousand-year capital of temples, geisha districts and Zen gardens.
Agent guideSapporo
Hokkaido’s capital — beer, ramen, the Snow Festival and a gateway to powder country.
Agent guideMt Fuji (Fujikawaguchiko)
Japan’s sacred peak, mirrored in the lakes and framed by the Chureito Pagoda.
Agent guideWhat to expect — scenes from the ground.
Our operating standards for film production support.
Standards are only real if they are specific. These are the controls we hold ourselves to on every file in this service line — the checks that run whether or not anyone is watching.
Licensed coordination
Foreign shoots run with proper local coordination and every required location permit in place — we do not operate grey-zone shoots. It protects the footage: improperly permitted material can be challenged at export and in distribution.
Vetted crew bench
Local HoDs and crew come from a bench with verified credits; key positions are referenced from previous productions before we attach them. Rates are agreed on industry-standard deal memos, in writing, before the tech recce.
Insured kit & vehicles
Rental houses and transport providers must evidence equipment insurance and public liability; picture vehicles and unit drivers are licensed and rest-houred, with winter-rated drivers on snow-country legs. Marine units add vessel licences, certified skippers and safety crew as standard.
Drone & airspace compliance
UAV work flies only with Civil Aviation Bureau registration, licensed operators and site-specific permissions — controlled airspace, parks and crowds all have their own rules. A grounded drone day is recoverable; a confiscated one is not.
Set safety & welfare
Heat and cold protocols, hydration, medic thresholds for stunts and water or snow work, earthquake awareness, and honest turnaround times. Catering follows food-safety practice with crew dietary lines manifested like any group file.
Auditable spend trail
Every yen of in-country spend is documented to audit standard from day one — proper tax invoices, contracted suppliers, traceable payments. Productions that start this on wrap day lose incentive value; ours start it at prep.
These standards are not marketing furniture — they are the audit points we invite partners to test. Ask for the licence copies, the insurance certificates, the inspection notes; send a mystery booking through the desk and grade what comes back. Operators who have been burned elsewhere in Japan tend to become our most demanding auditors in their first season and our longest-standing partners in every season after, because a standard that survives scrutiny is the only kind worth printing. Where we fall short of our own bar — it happens, this is a real operation in a real country — the incident note says so plainly, and the fix is documented on the same page.
Who books film production support — and how to sell it.
Four client profiles account for most of the demand we see in this line. If your book includes any of them, this service has a place in your Japan offer.
International features & streaming series
The marquee files: multi-week shoots with hundreds of hotel nights and full local crew complements. Japan sells on range — Tokyo's skylines, Kyoto's temples, the Alps, Hokkaido snow and Okinawa coast within short hops — plus crew depth built by decades of domestic and foreign production. These need the longest lead times and reward them with the deepest local support.
Commercials & branded content
The volume business: three-to-seven-day shoots for agencies and production companies who need permits fast, a reliable fixer and predictable costs. Japan's light, locations and crew discipline make it a prized commercial destination. We quote per shoot day, move quickly on permits for non-sensitive locations, and keep contingency options warm because agency schedules never hold still.
Documentary & factual crews
Small crews, long access lists: documentaries need permissions more than infrastructure — temples, communities, parks, experts and translators. Our value is the relationship layer: knowing who actually grants access and how to ask. Visa class and permit correctness matter doubly here because crews are small enough to be turned back at a checkpoint.
Stills, fashion & content production
Fashion editorials, brand campaigns and high-end content shoots run lighter — a fixer, locations, permits where needed, vans and a good production assistant bench. Cherry blossom, autumn foliage, neon streets and snow country shoot to the season. These files often convert from our luxury and FIT clientele, and they book on speed: a complete production package quoted within days.
If your client book does not map neatly onto any profile above, send the brief anyway — the four segments describe the centre of the demand we see, not its edges. The desk quotes film production support for niches these cards do not name every week, and an unusual file gets the same 24-hour response discipline as a standard one. The commercial logic for partners is consistent across all of them: net rates that leave your margin yours, white-label delivery that keeps the client relationship yours, and an operations layer in Japan that makes the promise you sold survivable in practice.
Film production support pricing — what drives the quote.
We publish how pricing works because guesswork wastes everyone's time. Here is what moves the number on this service, and what the net rate does and does not contain.
Film budgets price per shoot day plus prep and wrap, and the drivers are crew complement, kit list, locations and movement. A Tokyo-based commercial with local crew is a different cost universe from a multi-region drama with company moves — each move costs a day of trucks, fuel and reassembly. Location fees range from modest public-space permits to serious temple, station and national-park rates; snow and marine days add specialist vehicles, safety crew and weather margin. We quote a line-item production budget, not a day-rate guess.
Seasonality in film is weather, light and availability. Cherry blossom and autumn foliage are short, in-demand windows that lift hotel and location premiums and compete hard for crew; winter delivers snow country but short daylight; summer is hot and humid with a rainy spell. Crew rates hold fairly stable year-round; it is hotels, flights and the seasonal locations that move with the calendar. We schedule around the light and the season the script actually needs.
Our production quotes are net: local crew on deal-memo rates, kit at rental-house net prices, locations at negotiated fees, hotels and transport at our DMC contract rates — with our production-services fee a visible line. Excluded unless specified: international shipping and carnets for your own kit, cast and above-the-line costs, and incentive-application disbursements, quoted separately. Payment runs on a production float schedule — prep deposit, weekly or milestone drawdowns against cost reports, wrap balance — in JPY or USD, fully receipted for your accountant and any incentive audit.
To turn these principles into a live number, send the dates, party size and the shape of the file — the quotation that returns within one business day is itemised against everything described above, valid for a stated window, and rate-locked the moment you confirm. Registered partners receive the current seasonal rate guidance for film production support as a matter of course, including the surcharge calendar for the sakura, autumn and ski peaks, so annual budgeting can start from real numbers rather than last year's hopes. And where a budget and a brief genuinely cannot meet, we say so on the first pass — with the closest workable alternative costed alongside, because a fast honest no is worth more to a working agent than a slow optimistic maybe.
Ready-to-quote starting points.
Commercial shoot — Tokyo
Scouting, permits, crew, equipment and logistics.
Request this net rateDocumentary — multi-region
Fixers, transport, accommodation and government liaison.
Request this net rateFilm production support — trade terms, quick reference.
Five terms that come up constantly in this line of business, defined the way we use them in quotations and contracts.
Fixer
The local production specialist who unlocks locations, permits, crew and problems on the ground. In Japan the role works alongside a licensed local production coordinator and the regional film commissions.
Film commission
A national or regional body supporting productions with location introductions, liaison and sometimes funding. Japan's network spans national and prefectural commissions we work with directly.
Tech recce
The technical location survey with HoDs before the shoot — camera positions, power, access, sun path and safety — that turns a scouted location into a shootable one.
Company move
Relocating the entire production unit between locations or regions mid-schedule. Each move costs transport, time and reassembly, and is budgeted as its own line.
Cover set
An interior or weather-protected location held in reserve so shooting continues when weather takes the planned exterior. Essential schedule insurance, especially in snow and rainy seasons.
Film production support — asked by agents.
How do agents book film production support with Explera?
Send an RFQ from the contact page or WhatsApp with dates, pax and requirements — a fully-costed, client-ready quotation returns within 24 hours (2–3 business days for complex MICE programs).
Are rates net or commissionable?
All trade rates are net — your margin is yours to set. Quotations come in your working currency, rate-locked at confirmation.
Who looks after our clients on the ground?
Explera's own operations teams and licensed guides, backed by a 24/7 desk on Japan ground time. An emergency contact is printed in every set of travel documents.
Can this service combine with other Explera products?
Yes — most programs combine hotels, transfers, tours and dining under one itinerary, one invoice and one coordinator.
How long does a Japan filming permit take?
It depends entirely on the location. A commercial on private property or a studio can move in days; public-space, station and temple permits take one to several weeks; national-park and sensitive-location permissions take longest and cannot be rushed. The reliable rule is to open the permit track the week the project greenlights, not the week before travel. We map the lead times per location at feasibility stage so the schedule is built on real dates.
Does Japan offer financial incentives for foreign productions?
Support exists but varies. National and regional film commissions provide location introductions, liaison and logistical help; some prefectures and cities offer location-support or production-incentive funding for qualifying shoots, with conditions on spend, local hiring and local benefit. Terms change and differ by region, so we confirm what is currently available for your specific locations and budget at feasibility stage, and prepare any application as part of the service.
Can we bring our own camera gear into Japan?
Yes, on temporary-import documentation — ATA Carnet where applicable, or bonded temporary import — reconciled against a serialised kit list at both borders. We coordinate the broker, the carnet check and the shooting schedule so clearance lands before your prep days. Renting bodies, lenses and grip locally is often smarter for shorter shoots: Tokyo rental houses carry current Arri, Sony and RED inventory at competitive rates.
How deep is the local crew pool?
Tokyo and Osaka support strong professional crew markets: experienced ADs, gaffers, grips, art department and production accountants, many with international credits and working bilingually. Full local crews for features and series are routine; parallel units are achievable with planning. Outside the metros, core crew travels with the production and local hands fill out the complement — we budget accommodation and travel accordingly.
Can you arrange filming at temples, shrines and in national parks?
Yes, each with its own permission layer. Temples and shrines require the institution's consent and strict conduct rules on sacred ground; national parks require park-authority permits with fees and sometimes ranger escorts; stations and transport need operator agreements. Some sites are simply unavailable for certain content, and we say so early. Allow extra lead time — these permissions move at their own pace and cannot be bought faster.
What visa do foreign crew need?
Crew on paid foreign productions need the correct visa class with work authorisation for filming — arranged ahead, not improvised on tourist entries. Requirements differ for shoots of different lengths and roles, and the rules are applied for real at immigration. We prepare the document set per crew member as part of production planning; it is routine when handled early and a shoot-stopper when skipped.