Taiwan Household Registration

A household registration transcript from Taiwan's Japanese colonial period (1895–1945).

What is in the record?

Personal Details

Name, birthdate, and gender.

Family Events

Births, marriages, divorces, adoptions, and deaths.

Residency Information

Current and previous addresses.

Family Relationships

Connections to parents, spouses, and children.

This system, in place from 1895 to 1945, served as a comprehensive record of an individual's life events.

Why is it Important?

Multi-generational Connections

Household registrations often list parents, spouses and children—sometimes 6 or 7 generations in one record. This helps you quickly build out your family tree.

Accurate Vital Information

These records include full names, birth dates, death dates, marriage details, and places of residence—crucial for verifying identities and timelines.

Name Changes and Alternate Characters

If an ancestor changed their name, household records often include aliases or former names, which can explain inconsistencies across documents.

How to Obtain Your Household Registration

What should you bring with you

Your Taiwan ID Card

Please bring your ID card. If you are applying on behalf of someone else, please bring a copy of the authorizer's ID card and their seal (chop/stamp).

Your Family Tree

A fan chart works best because it clearly shows which parts are missing from your family tree.

Your fan chart

A Signed Authorization Letter

If you are applying on behalf of someone else, you must bring an authorization letter signed by that person.

Get the form

Steps to get your household registration

1

Find the right office

Identify the correct local Household Registration Office (戶政事務所) for the area where your ancestor lived during the Japanese era (1895–1945).

Office locations
2

Request the record

Apply in person (or have a relative in Taiwan do so) for the "日治時代的戶籍謄本", submit documents proving your relationship and right to access the records, and pay the applicable fee (typically around NT$15 ($0.50USD) /page).

3

Build the Family Tree

Once you receive the household registration record, use the information to build your family tree.

Build your tree

How to read this record

We've created a helpful guide to show you how to read the household registration transcript from the Japanese colonial period.

Household Registration Guide

Give it a try

Understanding Dates in Japanese Eras

Some records use Japanese imperial era dates (e.g., Showa 10). To convert these, use our calendar converter.

When you add dates to the FamilySearch tree the software will automatically convert Japanese dates to the modern calendar date.

Try converter

Need Help Reading Your Records?

Historical household records may contain Japanese Kanji characters and other complex terms. For assistance visit Facebook page "Trees Go Green" for community support.

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