emily wrote:For those applying this year with dependents, we have loads of advice we are willing to share via emails etc.
I came with my husband and three children and have been supported very well in applying for kids schooling, and all the paperwork that goes along with having dependents. Where we live there are at least 5 others families from babies to Yr 4 students.
If you have some questions, let me know!
Emily
dtrue wrote:So does anyone have advice on getting the whole family to Japan? JET says it would be better to have the family come a few weeks after the participant. Anyone in the program now do this and have any advice? My husband and I are thinking that it would be way easier to go together for many reasons, but maybe I'm overlooking something.
altplustwo wrote:We kept my contracting organization well informed and we gave them lots of reassurance that my husband and daughter could be independent and they didn't need to worry about them. We weren't demanding in our request either.
altplustwo wrote:The first week your at your new home in Japan, there are a lot of decisions to be made. I think my husband enjoyed being involved in these decisions...
William MacDonald wrote:Not only am I braver, wiser and generally a better human than [word] (and humbler to boot), but I'm also more knowledgeable than [him]...
Are Jay wrote:I know this is off topic, but I read this as "Did you apply with deodorant?"
ume no hana wrote:On the application, you HAD to list your dependents, so I think it would rather hard to hide them (there's also the issue of them needing a visa unless they are Japanese citizens)....![]()
marbotic wrote:I really don't think they'd discriminate applicants with dependents unless there were more dependents than could reasonably survive on a JET salary. Just one definitely won't hurt your chances, probably not even two would.
dtrue wrote:So does anyone have advice on getting the whole family to Japan? JET says it would be better to have the family come a few weeks after the participant. Anyone in the program now do this and have any advice? My husband and I are thinking that it would be way easier to go together for many reasons, but maybe I'm overlooking something.
bittersweet wrote:-First and foremost: TAX purposes. If your dependent is going to be making money while living in Japan, they need to reside in Japan for an entire year to take the foreign earned income exclusion. That's 330 days IN a foreign country during a SPAN of 365 full days (12 months). So now my dependent has to stay until mid-August because he came a few weeks after me ( I arrived Aug 1). We have to be out of the apartment by August 1st. See the problem here?
bittersweet wrote:-Doing everything over a second time: When I arrived I had to sign a bunch of papers, get my gaijin card, etc. The whole process had to be repeated over again a few weeks later, when it could have gotten done at the same time as me and saved the person from the BOE multiple trips to the city office.
bittersweet wrote:-I live in the inaka and had no car yet: My dependent had to get rides from strangers and stuff just to get here, and got lost in the process. Would have been a lot easier if we had just come together.
bittersweet wrote:-being lonely- once again, if you are in the inaka with no transportation and you're the only foreigner in town (not even my JTEs live here! they drive in), sitting around your apartment for a couple weeks by yourself really sucks. no internet or cellphone yet either, so i racked up a nice bill on my usa cellphone at $1.99 a minute (it was worth every penny).
William MacDonald wrote:Not only am I braver, wiser and generally a better human than [word] (and humbler to boot), but I'm also more knowledgeable than [him]...
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