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  1. Japanese children must inherit the Japanese parent's last name per how the koseki works, so the embassy/consulates see this quite often. You can choose between <first name father's last name> , <first name mother's last / father's last> , etc. For ease of travel I'd suggest a combination that includes both.

  2. A family register (koseki) is an official document that records and certifies the identity and family relationships of Japanese citizens on the basis of family law. The principal items recorded and certified in a family register are (1) an individual’s full name; (2) gender; (3) birth date and birthplace; (4) parental relations (names of ...

  3. Jul 7, 2010 · Second, all members of a family, as listed on the 戸籍 koseki, must have a single family name. If you have heard that men must take a Japanese name when naturalizing, this is probably the source of the misconception. If you are already married to a Japanese citizen and/or have children, and if you and your spouse and children do not already ...

  4. Feb 11, 2017 · 2. In most of the time you're going to keep given name first, unless otherwise designated (like in some application forms). Japanese know, and expect that Western names (actually, almost everywhere outside East Asia) are expressed in this order. However, you may see your name spelled with family name first in some documents, when they are ...

  5. wife takes on foreign (katakana) name of husband. Advantage: everybody in the family has the same surname; matches standard convention in Japan of taking husband's name. Disadvantage: having to use a somewhat clunky katakana name for a Japanese person. 2) wife and husband keep their names. Children take wife's Japanese name.

  6. Therefore, to those familiar with Japanese names, which name is the surname and which is the given name is usually apparent, no matter in which order the names are presented. It is thus unlikely that the two names will be confused, for example, when writing in English while using the family name-given name naming order.

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  8. If you live in Japan, I think it would depend on your nationality. If you are a Japanese national, then you may use the Kanji surname in official documents because that is how it's supposed to be recorded in your Family Register (called 戸籍{こせき}), unless for some reason it was purposedly registered in Katakana, which is kinda strange if one of your parents is Japanese.

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