Each point is strong somewhere
d Point fits Docomo and d services. Ponta is familiar through Lawson and partners. JRE POINT is useful if you often use JR East or Suica.
If you live in Tokyo and ride JR daily, register JRE POINT. If you use Lawson often, Ponta is easy to earn.
Compared with Rakuten Point
Rakuten Point is strong when you combine mobile, card, and online shopping. d, Ponta, and JRE are strong by carrier, store, or transport habit.
Start from real spending habits: phone, supermarket, convenience store, and train. Register the point program you see most often first.
How to use this guide in real life
Read "d Point, Ponta, and JRE POINT: which should you use?" as a practical checklist, not as advertising. Foreign residents in Japan differ by visa status, Japanese ability, income, address history, phone usage, and spending habits, so the same service can be excellent for one person and only average for another.
Start by connecting the article to one concrete goal. If your goal is lowering fixed costs, focus first on mobile bills, recurring payments, and services you already pay for every month. If your goal is earning points, check where you actually shop before adding another account or card.
Before taking action, write down three numbers: what you pay now, what the new option may cost, and what conditions are required to receive points or discounts. This simple comparison prevents you from choosing only because a campaign looks large on the surface.
When using Rakuten services, keep one Rakuten ID as your main account whenever possible. Multiple accounts can split points, campaign entries, purchase history, and service conditions, which makes the ecosystem harder to manage and can reduce the benefits you receive.
What to check before you decide
Check your documents first. Your name, birth date, address, identity document, residence card, bank information, and payment method should be consistent. Many foreign residents are not rejected because they are ineligible; they run into trouble because details do not match across systems.
Confirm the latest official conditions before applying. Prices, point campaigns, entry requirements, and eligibility rules can change. Treat this article as an explanation of how to think, then verify the exact current terms on the provider's official page.
Avoid signing up for many services at once before you understand how they connect. A safer order is to begin with one clearly useful service, use it for a few weeks, then add card payments, banking, QR payment, or investing only if those steps fit your real life.
For the topic "A comparison by transport, stores, mobile carrier, and ease of use.", the practical conclusion is simple: a benefit matters only when it lowers real costs or makes your money easier to manage. If a point program pushes you to overspend, buy things you do not need, or lose track of deadlines, it is no longer otoku.