Anti-Scam
守る
Every year, families lose lakhs to agencies that vanish after collecting fees. We'd rather you walk away from us if Inochi fails any of these checks than become a statistic. Here's exactly what to verify before signing.
Legitimate agencies issue numbered receipts for every payment. Anyone asking for cash without paperwork is preparing to disappear.
No legitimate agency can guarantee visa approval — final decision rests with the embassy. Anyone making this promise is either lying or planning to skip refunds when it fails.
If you can't walk into the office and meet a counsellor in person before paying, you have no recourse if things go wrong. Always visit before signing.
Cross-check every Japanese institution they mention against the JASSO official list. "Direct admission to Tokyo University" without N1 + entrance exam is a fairy tale.
"Last seat", "deadline tomorrow", "price increases Friday" are pressure tactics. Real intakes have months of runway. Take 48+ hours to read the contract.
Once you land, who picks you up at Narita? Who helps you open a bank account? An agency without Japan operations leaves you stranded after the visa.
Embassy interviews check whether you actually wrote your form. Agencies that file on your behalf often add false information that you'll be questioned about — leading to instant rejection.
If visa is rejected, what comes back? Government and school fees are non-refundable but agency service fees should have a clear, written partial-refund policy. "We'll talk about it then" = scam.
Before signing any agency contract, ask yourself these eight questions. If any answer is "no" or "unclear", walk away.
We have a public Dhaka office, a Saitama Japan office, numbered receipts, written refund policies, JASSO-listed partner schools, and 187 alumni you can verify by name. Walk in any business day before paying — we'd rather earn your trust than rush a contract.
Coverage
We've been profiled by The Daily Star, Prothom Alo, Bonik Barta, and DBC News. Each link below opens the original article.
The Dhaka-based agency, which has expanded to Saitama in Japan, says JLPT preparation before flying is the key to higher visa-approval rates.
Read coverageInochi's CEO outlines how 9–11 lakh BDT covers a Japan-bound student's first year — without the brokerage layer that has hurt many families.
Read coverageAmong the new generation of Bangladeshi consultancies, Inochi is highlighted for transparent fee disclosure and post-arrival support in Japan.
Read coverageTelevision feature on the rise of Japan-focused study-abroad agencies in Bangladesh, with Inochi profiled as one of the operators with a Japan office.
Read coverageJournalist or producer? Email press@inochieducation.com — we're glad to share student stories, visa data, and on-the-record interviews.
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