By tax office standards, the Japanese tax website (which basically guides you through filling out the PDF forms if you don't have e-tax credentials) is quite reasonable. Once you've done it once it's just typing in this year's numbers and next next next.
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To clarify, I don't mean literal PDF forms, but rather you type in the relevant numbers into a web form and it does the math and generates a static PDF for you.
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The "other income" is not unlikely, already if your employer gives you stock, that applies. I have good experiences with lining up at Japanese tax offices and declare things directly there.
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I did it in person a few times, then learned how to do it and showed up with the forms already filled one year to check, and every year after that I've just been filing by mail.
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Got to say I was very dismissive of the website and its "you need Windows and a card reader" requirement, so I went to the tax office to make 100% sure I was doing it right; but this year I did it all online and yeah, it was a breeze. I didn't even NEED the card reader thing.
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Same in Norway, you get a notification that the report is ready, you check the list of registered income, debts etc, and change/submit only if you have edits like that. Most ppl can just do nothing and it's all A-OK.
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