Abandoned Japanese house being renovated — before and after

Buying Akiyas in Nagano

Why and how we buy abandoned houses in Japan. The math is absurd. The opportunity is real. The community makes it compound.

The Japanese Arbitrage

Japan has 9 million empty homes and a currency at multi-decade lows. Rural property prices have decoupled from intrinsic value — world-class timber construction, traditional joinery, antique fixtures — all going for less than a used car. We buy what the domestic market has abandoned and the global market hasn't noticed yet.

Price vs. Value

Tokyo condos sell for ¥93 million. A functional family home in Komoro goes for ¥300,000–¥5,000,000. The vacancy rate here is 19.5% — a buyer's market of unprecedented scale. We've bought properties for as little as $2,200. At that price, the seller is paying their agent more than they receive.

Currency advantage

The yen is at multi-decade lows against USD and EUR. For anyone earning in dollars, Japanese real estate and cost of living are 20–30% cheaper than historical norms. A $1,500/month budget in Komoro buys a lifestyle that costs $7,000 in San Francisco. The math rewards foreign income paired with Japanese living.

The inflation shift

After decades of deflation, Japan is entering an inflationary regime. The Bank of Japan ended negative interest rates. Cash-heavy households and corporations are beginning to rotate into hard assets. Early movers who acquired during the deflationary bottom — like us — are positioned for structural appreciation.

We're based in Komoro, Nagano Prefecture — 90 minutes from Tokyo by shinkansen, 20 minutes from Karuizawa.

4
Properties acquired
800m²
Total land area
500m²
Building floor space

The Portfolio

$2k–$30kAcquisition range

Three houses and one event venue, all within walking distance. Every property is near Komoro Station and the Shinkansen, under 90 minutes from Tokyo. We paid between $2,200 and $30,000 per property — less than one month's rent in most Western cities buys permanent ownership here.

Browse our spaces and upcoming events on the app.

From the Founder

Substack|Jan 2026

Living the Dream: Building a Coliving Neighborhood in Rural Japan

Kiba describes ZuCity's first-year achievements — acquiring four properties within walking distance, establishing community-owned coliving, and generating revenue through events and services while reinvesting profits into infrastructure.

Kiba Gateaux

The Public Goods Flywheel

This isn't charity. It's a positive feedback loop — the same model JR East used to build train stations that increase surrounding property values, then develop that land. We buy abandoned properties, renovate them, bring high-value residents and tourists, which improves the neighborhood, which increases the value of everything we already own. Each property makes the next one more valuable.

Buy cheap

Acquire abandoned properties at $2k–$30k through the municipal akiya bank, direct negotiation, and government subsidies for cleanup and renovation. Our cost basis is negligible.

Build community

Renovate into coliving spaces, workshops, venues, and gardens. Bring artists, entrepreneurs, and builders who create culture and economic activity. Host popup cities and events that put Komoro on the map.

Compound value

More residents means more local spending, more events, more tourism, more government cooperation, higher property values. Capital that would evaporate in rent or event costs instead accumulates in community-owned real estate that appreciates.

Repeat

Use increased value and revenue to acquire the next property. Each cycle, the community gets bigger, the infrastructure gets better, and the flywheel spins faster. The neighborhood improves for everyone — us, our neighbors, the city.

Want to understand the community behind the properties? Read about ZuCity.

Community Capital in Action

Substack|Dec 2025

ZuCity Japan Popup City Recap — Unlocking Community-Owned Coliving Infrastructure

A deep dive into ZuCity's first Zuzalu popup city event in rural Japan. The event generated ¥480,000 in revenue while converting 26% directly into community assets like vehicles and furniture.

Taiko Aki

Beyond houses

Japan's population is shrinking. Business owners are retiring with no heirs. Entire businesses — restaurants, workshops, farms — are closing not because they failed, but because nobody is there to run them. We're acquiring cash-flow positive businesses to sponsor visas for community members who want to live here and run them. Preservation through participation.

Visa pathways

Japan launched the Digital Nomad Visa in 2024 and expanded the Startup Visa in 2025. The government is actively subsidizing environments for remote workers and entrepreneurs. ZuCity aligns with the national Chihou Sousei strategy — rural revitalization through immigration. We're not fighting the system. We're what it's asking for.

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Buying Akiyas in Nagano | Zuzalu City Japan