Our Expert in Japan
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Last reviewed: May 12, 2026 | Next review: Upon publication of final ministerial ordinances (expected late 2026)
Japan’s Early Business Recovery Act, formally the Act on Financial Debt Adjustment Procedures, represents the most significant expansion of the country’s pre-insolvency toolkit in over two decades. Enacted in June 2025 and now moving through phased implementation and ministerial rulemaking in 2026, the legislation creates a statutory out‑of‑court restructuring pathway designed for enterprises showing early signs of financial distress. Unlike existing court‑supervised proceedings such as civil rehabilitation or corporate reorganisation, this new framework prioritises speed, confidentiality and creditor consensus, giving general counsel, CFOs and turnaround advisors a structured alternative to formal insolvency filings. For lenders and credit officers, it introduces a binding majority‑vote mechanism that reshapes how financial creditor claims can be adjusted outside the courtroom.
This guide delivers the practical, step‑by‑step compliance roadmap that practitioners navigating early business recovery Japan decisions need in 2026.
Before diving into the detail, here is a summary of the critical action items and risk factors under the Early Business Recovery Act.
The Early Business Recovery Act (known formally as the Act on Financial Debt Adjustment Procedures) was enacted by the Japanese Diet in June 2025. Its stated purpose is to establish a pre-insolvency framework for Japan that allows financially troubled enterprises to restructure their financial debts through a supervised out‑of‑court process, avoiding the cost, publicity and operational disruption of formal court proceedings under the Civil Rehabilitation Act or the Corporate Reorganisation Act.
The policy rationale is clear: Japan’s existing insolvency regime, while comprehensive, has long lacked a middle ground between purely private, non‑binding creditor workouts (which can be derailed by a single hold‑out creditor) and full court supervision. The Act fills this gap by introducing a statutory mechanism with binding effect on financial creditors who meet defined voting thresholds, overseen by a neutral third party rather than a court‑appointed supervisor.
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be transformative for mid‑market corporate restructuring Japan, where the stigma of formal insolvency filing has historically discouraged companies from seeking help until it is too late.
Eligibility under the Early Business Recovery Act is intentionally broader than for civil rehabilitation, reflecting the Act’s design as a pre‑insolvency framework Japan practitioners can deploy before a company’s situation deteriorates beyond negotiation.
When deciding between out‑of‑court restructuring Japan under the Act and a formal filing, consider the following decision points:
The following section outlines the practical steps, approximate timelines and documentation requirements for companies initiating a process under the Early Business Recovery Act. This is the operational heart of corporate restructuring Japan under the new framework.
Before any external engagement, the debtor company must prepare comprehensive internal materials. This includes updated management accounts, a detailed cash-flow forecast (typically covering 12–24 months), an analysis of the financial creditor universe and a preliminary restructuring term sheet outlining proposed adjustments to financial debts. The board of directors must pass a resolution authorising management to commence the process and engage a neutral third party.
The debtor selects and engages a neutral third party, the functional equivalent of a trustee or supervisor. Selection criteria should include restructuring experience, independence from the debtor and major creditors, and familiarity with the Act’s procedural requirements. The engagement letter should clearly define the scope of duties, reporting obligations, fee arrangements and indemnity provisions.
With the neutral third party in place, the debtor issues formal notices to identified financial creditors and distributes an information memorandum. This document typically contains the company’s financial position, the causes of distress, the proposed restructuring plan and a request for creditor feedback. The neutral third party facilitates bilateral and multilateral meetings, mediates disputes and manages information flow.
Once negotiations have produced a plan acceptable to the debtor and a sufficient number of creditors, a formal vote is conducted. The Act specifies majority‑of‑financial‑creditors rules for plan approval. The neutral third party certifies the vote count and confirms whether the statutory threshold has been met. Dissenting creditors who fall within the minority may be bound by the approved plan.
Where the debtor seeks enhanced enforceability, particularly against dissenting creditors or to secure recognition overseas, an application for court sanction can be made. The court reviews the process for procedural regularity, confirms that the voting threshold was met and assesses whether the plan is fair and equitable to dissenting creditors. If granted, the court order gives the plan binding legal effect.
After approval (and court sanction if sought), the restructuring plan takes effect. The neutral third party may continue in a monitoring role for a defined period, reporting to creditors on the debtor’s compliance with plan milestones. Any material default triggers reporting obligations and may allow creditors to exercise remedies specified in the plan.
| Phase | Key Activities | Indicative Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Internal preparation | Financial analysis, term sheet, board resolution | Weeks 1–3 |
| Neutral third‑party appointment | Selection, engagement, independence verification | Weeks 2–4 |
| Creditor outreach | Notices, information memorandum, bilateral meetings | Weeks 4–10 |
| Voting | Formal ballot, vote certification by neutral third party | Weeks 10–14 |
| Court sanction (if sought) | Application, court review, order | Weeks 14–18 |
| Execution and monitoring | Plan implementation, milestone reporting | Ongoing (12–24 months typical) |
Practitioners should prepare the following core documents when launching a process under the Act:
For lenders, bondholders and other financial creditors, the Early Business Recovery Act introduces both opportunities and risks. Understanding creditor protections under the Act is essential before engaging in any restructuring negotiation.
The Act establishes a majority‑of‑financial‑creditors voting mechanism. The precise thresholds, expected to be specified in detail by ministerial ordinance, follow a dual test: a majority by number of voting creditors and a majority by value of claims. When both thresholds are met, the approved plan binds all financial creditors within its scope, including those who voted against the plan or abstained.
This cram‑down mechanism is narrower than under civil rehabilitation, where the court can impose a plan on broader creditor classes including secured lenders. Under the Early Business Recovery Act, the cram‑down applies primarily to financial creditors and its scope can be extended through optional court sanction.
Secured lenders face a distinct set of considerations under the out‑of‑court restructuring Japan framework:
Where multiple financial creditors hold different types of claims, for example, a syndicate of bank lenders alongside public bondholders, intercreditor dynamics become critical. Banks may prefer a consensual workout while bondholders, who are harder to coordinate, may resist. The neutral third party’s role in mediating these tensions is essential, and creditors should be prepared to negotiate inter‑creditor agreements governing voting, information sharing and enforcement standstills alongside the restructuring plan itself.
Industry observers expect that creditor protections under the Early Business Recovery Act will be tested most rigorously in cases involving mixed creditor pools, where the balance between consensual negotiation and statutory cram‑down will define the practical limits of the new framework.
The neutral third party, functionally the trustee role in Japan insolvency under the new Act, is the central figure in the out‑of‑court process. Understanding their appointment, powers and limitations is critical for both debtors and creditors.
The neutral third party is selected by the debtor but must meet independence requirements. Candidates are typically experienced restructuring lawyers, licensed insolvency practitioners or, in some cases, accounting professionals with relevant expertise. The Act and implementing rules set minimum qualification standards, and the neutral third party must disclose any conflicts of interest to all parties.
The Act provides limited liability protections for neutral third parties acting in good faith. Nevertheless, trustees should insist on clear engagement letters specifying the scope of duties, liability caps, indemnification by the debtor and professional indemnity insurance requirements. Fee arrangements should be agreed upfront and disclosed to creditors to maintain transparency and confidence in the process.
One of the most consequential decisions facing distressed companies and their advisors in 2026 is whether to pursue out‑of‑court restructuring Japan under the Early Business Recovery Act or file for formal civil rehabilitation. The comparison table below maps the key differences practitioners should weigh, for a more detailed exploration of insolvency pathway selection, see our guide on restructuring vs liquidation.
| Feature | Early Business Recovery Act (Out‑of‑Court) | Civil Rehabilitation (Court) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical speed | Faster, negotiated process; court involvement only if sanction sought | Slower, formal court procedure with statutory timelines and appointed supervisor |
| Court involvement | Optional, primarily neutral third‑party led; court sanction available for enhanced enforcement | Mandatory, court supervises entire process and may exercise avoidance powers |
| Creditor voting / cram‑down | Majority‑of‑financial‑creditors mechanism; statutory cram‑down limited but expandable via court sanction | Statutory voting and broad cram‑down under court orders, including avoidance powers |
| Effect on secured assets | Negotiated, secured lenders retain enforcement rights unless plan provides otherwise | Court can issue stays and avoidance orders; secured creditor rights more tightly regulated |
| Public record | Confidential (out‑of‑court) unless court sanction is sought | Court filings are public; greater transparency but also greater reputational impact |
| Avoidance actions | Not available, out‑of‑court process lacks power to challenge pre‑petition transactions | Full avoidance powers available to court‑appointed supervisor |
| Best suited for | Enterprises at early stage of distress where creditor consensus is reachable and confidentiality is valued | Companies already economically distressed or requiring formal stay, avoidance or broad cram‑down powers |
Companies with international operations or foreign creditors must consider how a plan approved under the Early Business Recovery Act will be treated outside Japan. This is an area where the pre-insolvency framework Japan has adopted raises novel questions.
The following ten‑point pre‑flight checklist summarises the essential steps before launching an early business recovery process. Use this alongside the documentation templates listed above to ensure comprehensive preparation.
Templates for each document referenced in this checklist, including the neutral third‑party engagement letter, creditor ballot form and plan summary, should be adapted to the specific transaction. Practitioners are encouraged to find a qualified restructuring lawyer through our directory to assist with document preparation and process management.
The Early Business Recovery Act marks a watershed moment for corporate restructuring Japan and for the broader insolvency landscape in the Asia‑Pacific region. For the first time, Japanese companies facing early‑stage financial distress have access to a statutory, binding out‑of‑court mechanism that combines the speed and confidentiality of private workouts with the enforceability of legislated creditor voting thresholds.
Debtors should act proactively: the Act is designed for companies that recognise distress early, not those that wait until formal insolvency is unavoidable. Creditors, particularly secured lenders, should familiarise themselves with the voting mechanics, standstill dynamics and DIP financing implications before they receive their first creditor notice under the new regime. Both sides should monitor the publication of remaining ministerial ordinances, which will finalise key procedural details.
Early business recovery Japan is no longer a concept paper, it is operational law demanding immediate practical attention. Practitioners across the restructuring ecosystem should prepare now.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kanako Watanabe at Anderson Mori & Tomotsune, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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