BOSTON, April 14, 2016 -- Flywire, a leading provider of cross-border payment solutions, today announced its expansion into Japan. Operating as Flywire GK and based in Tokyo, the company will serve the increasing number of educational institutions in Japan attracting foreign students, as well as Japanese students studying abroad. The move builds on Flywire’s recently launched operations in Shanghai, China and broader business expansion across the Asia-Pacific region including Australia and Singapore.
International student enrollment in Japan grew nearly 10% in 2014 when over 184,000 foreign students attended schools and universities in Japan. Government agencies such as Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) are working actively with the country’s education institutions to grow that number to 300,000 by 2020, according to ICEF Monitor.
The country is an important source market for international students as well. After slow but steady declines in the number of Japanese studying abroad in recent years, Japan is seeing a renewed interest in international education among its students. The government is promoting study abroad via multiple programs with a goal of 120,000 export students by 2020.
“Japan is one of the key countries in Flywire’s APAC expansion and we are investing significantly there to help Japanese educational institutions make the payment process easy, efficient and transparent for their international students,” said Mike Massaro, CEO at Flywire. “We have an outstanding local team in place there with years of experience in the education and payments business.”
Flywire GK has signed on six schools to date. Among those, Kai and Le Cordon Bleu are already offering the payment service to students. Kudan Institute of Japanese Language & Culture and Yoshida Institute of Japanese Language Culture were recently signed and expect to be live on the platform in the coming weeks. For the schools’ international students, Flywire offers best-in-class currency conversion rates, 24/7 payment tracking, multi-lingual customer service, and the ability to pay in 70 different local currencies. The schools benefit from Flywire’s payment reconciliation tools, global account servicing, and easy-to-use digital tracking.
Flywire GK is led by Andrew Ong, managing director, Asia-Pacific region, and Hitoshi Endo, country manager, Japan.
Flywire, formerly peerTransfer, is a leading provider of high-ticket payment solutions, connecting institutions on six continents with consumers from around the world. Introduced four years ago as a way for international students to pay their tuition for studies abroad, Flywire is now welcomed by over 900 colleges and universities. The company processes payments from 220 countries and territories, in 70 local currencies. Convenient, fast and secure, Flywire’s scalable platform accepts bank transfers, online banking, and credit and debit cards − providing currency conversion at exchange rates that can offer significant savings when compared to home-market banks and credit card providers. Committed to a great end-to-end customer experience, the company offers multilingual servicing via phone, email, and chat, as well as 24/7 online payment tracking.
Flywire is headquartered in Boston, MA with international operations in London, Manchester (UK); Shanghai, China; Tokyo, Japan; and Valencia, Spain. For more information, visit www.Flywire.com.
Media Contact: Tim Walsh for Flywire [email protected] +1 617-512-1641


Chinese Brands Are Taking Over Brazil — And It's Just Getting Started
Bank of America Identifies Top Asia-Pacific Semiconductor Stocks Poised for AI-Driven Growth
Goldman Sachs, ANZ Cut Oil Forecasts Amid U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Hopes
SanDisk Joins Nasdaq-100, Replacing Atlassian on April 20
NIO ES9 SUV Launch Sends HK Shares Down 7% Despite Bold Pricing Strategy
Chinese Cars in Europe: Consumer Trust Is Shifting Fast
Lumentum Holdings Rides AI Wave With Order Book Filled Through 2028
TSMC Posts Strong Q1 2025 Revenue, Riding AI Chip Demand Wave
Alibaba Shares Slide as Jefferies Slashes Price Target Over AI Spending and Business Losses
MATCH Act: How New U.S. Chip Legislation Could Freeze China's Semiconductor Ambitions
Meta Is Building an AI Version of Mark Zuckerberg to Interact With Employees
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Posts Strong Q3 Earnings, Announces AI-Driven Job Cuts
FedEx Pilots and Union Reach Tentative Agreement on 40% Pay Increase
Bill Ackman Eyes New Fund to Bet Against Market Complacency
Disney Plans to Cut 1,000 Jobs Amid Ongoing Restructuring Efforts
Anthropic's Mythos AI Model Sparks Emergency Cybersecurity Meeting With Top U.S. Bank CEOs 



