New-build subsidies are a world where information gaps turn straight into money: "know about them and tens of thousands to two million yen come back; don't, and you get nothing." And most cannot be applied for after construction starts or you move in — they can only be claimed at the early design stage. Here we set out the main 2026 schemes from a practical angle: amounts, requirements and application timing.
1. The 2026 subsidy map
Subsidies for new homes split into three tiers: national, prefectural and municipal. The national core rests on three pillars — the Child-Rearing Eco-Home support, the ZEH subsidy, and the tax breaks for long-life quality housing — on top of which each local government adds conditional extras. The key point: these are designed so that raising performance raises the money. So "going after subsidies" is in effect the same as "locking in the insulation, energy-saving and seismic spec at the early design stage." Because eligibility for stacking, timing and budget caps differ by scheme, the right move is to build a table with your designer and secure them in parallel.
2. Child-Rearing Eco-Home support (national)
The headline scheme of 2026 targets child-rearing and young-couple households. The grant is ¥1M for long-life quality housing and ¥800,000 at the ZEH level. Eligible are "child-rearing households (with a child under 18)" and "young-couple households (either spouse 39 or under)" — meeting either condition qualifies you. Note the nature of the budget: once the national allocation is reached, applications close even mid-year. Each year the cap tightens as the latter half approaches, so for eligible households, moving the contract and start date earlier raises certainty. A spec meeting the performance standard is a prerequisite, so the order is to fix the performance before the floor plan.
3. ZEH subsidy (national)
| Category | Grant | Main requirement |
|---|---|---|
| ZEH | ¥550,000 | insulation + saving + generation to cut primary energy use by ~100% |
| ZEH+ | ¥1,000,000 | higher insulation than ZEH, plus storage battery and other extras |
| Battery add-on | +¥200,000 | storage battery fitted (2 kWh or more) |
A ZEH (net-zero-energy house) cuts the energy it uses through insulation and offsets it to net zero with generation such as solar. Fitting solar is effectively a prerequisite, the grant runs ¥550,000–¥1,000,000 by grade, and a storage battery adds a further +¥200,000. What holds the key is the insulation performance (U_A value) and equipment plan decided at the design stage — roof shape, orientation and window placement all have to be built into the design from the start. Solar or insulation added later often falls short of the standard, so it is efficient to run the performance calculation alongside the floor-plan study.
4. Long-life quality / low-carbon housing (national)
The essence of this scheme lies less in a direct grant than in generous tax breaks. You gain a higher mortgage-tax-credit borrowing cap, reduced registration tax, an acquisition-tax deduction and a longer period of reduced fixed-asset tax — benefits that compound the longer you live there. Certification requires nine criteria including seismic grade 2 or above, energy-standard conformity and a maintenance plan, with a certification procedure by the competent authority separate from building confirmation. Certification costs application fees and document work, so it calls for weighing the tax merit against the acquisition cost — but it also helps long-term holding and resale value.
5. Osaka prefectural and city top-ups
- Osaka City: subsidies for decarbonising equipment such as solar, storage batteries and V2H (the budget varies by year)
- Osaka Prefecture: preferential treatment for holders of a housing-performance evaluation, and seismic/wood-related subsidies in specific areas
- Other municipalities: theme-based subsidies for child-rearing, relocation and vacant-home use. Always check the latest under "Housing" on the municipal website
The mark of local subsidies is that they can often be combined with national schemes, while their budgets are small and their terms shift year to year. Osaka City's decarbonising-equipment subsidy, for instance, can in cases be stacked on the national ZEH grant, lowering your net cost further. But because application windows, first-come ordering and eligible equipment are finely specified, the single best tip for avoiding misses is to check all three tiers — national + prefecture + city — together and map out which to apply for, and in what order, at the early design stage.
6. Application timing and watch-outs
- Apply before construction / before contract in most cases. After the fact is not allowed, so share the start date with your design office and builder and work backwards.
- Stacking limits. Child-Rearing Eco-Home and some ZEH grants cannot be double-claimed. Calculate the combination in advance to maximise.
- Budget cap (first-come). Many close once the budget is reached; the cap tightens toward year-end, so earlier is better.
- Lock performance early. The U_A value and seismic grade must be fixed at design; they cannot be retrofitted after construction starts.
In short, whether a subsidy succeeds is decided almost entirely by "schedule and performance decisions at the early design stage," not by construction quality. Before nailing down the floor plan and interior, list which schemes you are targeting, the performance they require (U_A value, seismic grade, equipment) and their deadlines, and work backwards from the start date. Settle this with your designer first and the misses drop sharply.
Subsidies are not "lucky if you get them" but something "to go after at the early design stage." Long-life quality + ZEH + a local top-up can realistically save over ¥2M in total. Because the latest schemes change mid-year, it is safest to proceed while checking with your design office each time.