Healthcare

How to Use Hospitals & Clinics in Japan [Guide for Foreigners]

Published 2026.06.04 ・ Updated 2026.06.05 | MRI Co., Ltd. — Zainichi Life Navi Editorial Team

If you are enrolled in National Health Insurance or employees' health insurance, you pay only 30% of medical costs in Japan (10–30% depending on age). This guide covers how to choose the right department, the visit process, costs, multilingual support, and what to do in an emergency.

① Clinic vs. Hospital & Which Department to Visit

For minor symptoms, start at a local clinic. Large hospitals may charge an extra fee at your first visit if you don't have a referral letter from a clinic.

  • Clinic (kurinikku): Colds, fever, minor injuries. Often no appointment needed and shorter waits
  • Hospital (byoin): Detailed tests, hospitalization, surgery
  • Emergency hospital: Nights, holidays and urgent cases

Which department for which symptom

SymptomDepartment
Fever, cough, stomach ache (general)Internal Medicine (Naika)
Injury, fracture, joint painOrthopedics (Seikeigeka)
Itchy skin, rashDermatology (Hifuka)
ToothacheDentistry (Shika)
Children's illnessPediatrics (Shonika)
Pregnancy, gynecologyObstetrics & Gynecology (Sanfujinka)
💡 Have a family doctorChoosing a nearby clinic as your "family doctor" (kakaritsuke-i) means they can write a referral to a specialist hospital when needed.

② How to Visit a Doctor

  1. Book by phone or online (clinics often take walk-ins)
  2. At reception, show your health insurance card (or My Number insurance card) and Residence Card. Fill in a symptom form on your first visit
  3. Explain your symptoms to the doctor (use the phrases below or an interpreter service)
  4. Tests, diagnosis and prescription
  5. Pay 30% of the bill and receive your prescription
  6. Take the prescription to a pharmacy to get your medicine
💡 What to bringHealth insurance card, Residence Card, medicine notebook (okusuri-techo), past test results if any, and cash or card.

③ Medical Costs & Insurance

With health insurance, you generally pay 30% at the counter. If your monthly out-of-pocket cost is high, the High-Cost Medical Expense Benefit (kogaku-ryoyohi) refunds the amount above a set ceiling. If you show a "Certificate of Eligibility for Ceiling Amount" in advance, your counter payment is capped at that ceiling.

⚠️ No insurance card = pay in fullIf you can't show your insurance card, you must pay 100% on the spot. You may later get the excess (above your usual share) refunded by submitting your card and receipt.

④ Getting Care in Your Language

If you are worried about the language, these services can help.

  • AMDA International Medical Information Center (Tel 03-6233-9266, weekdays 10:00–16:00): multilingual medical consultation and referrals to facilities where your language is spoken. English is available Mon–Fri, Chinese on Tue/Thu, etc. Since January 2025 a free telephone medical interpretation service during consultations is also available.
  • Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare: search for "medical institutions accepting foreign patients" by language.
  • Local governments / international associations: some areas offer medical interpreter dispatch or phone interpretation.
  • Searching Google Maps for "English hospital [area]" also works.

⑤ Picking Up Medicine at a Pharmacy

Most clinics issue an "external prescription": after your visit you take the prescription to a nearby dispensing pharmacy to get your medicine (the prescription is valid for 4 days including the issue date). Showing your medicine notebook (okusuri-techo) lets the pharmacist check for drug interactions. Over-the-counter (OTC) medicines can be bought without a prescription at drugstores.

⑥ Emergencies & After Hours

  • 119: ambulance and fire. Calls are free. In a life-threatening situation, don't hesitate to call (say "kyūkyū desu" = "it's an emergency")
  • #7119 (Emergency Consultation Center): phone advice when unsure whether to call an ambulance or go to hospital. Availability varies by region and some areas do not offer it.
  • #8000 (Pediatric medical phone consultation): advice for a child's sudden illness at night or on holidays.

Useful Japanese Phrases

  • At reception: "hoken-shō desu" (Here is my insurance card)
  • Describing symptoms: "koko ga itai desu" (It hurts here) / "netsu ga arimasu" (I have a fever)
  • Asking for an interpreter: "Eigo / Chūgokugo ga hanaseru hito wa imasu ka?" (Is there someone who speaks English / Chinese?)

FAQ

Q: Can I see a doctor without an insurance card?Yes, but you must pay 100% of the cost on the spot. If you later complete the procedure with your insurance card, the amount above your usual share (normally 30%) may be refunded.
Q: Can I go to a hospital if I don't speak Japanese?Yes. You can use AMDA International Medical Information Center (03-6233-9266) for multilingual phone consultation and interpretation, or your local government's medical interpreter service. It helps to find a multilingual facility in advance.
Q: Is calling an ambulance free?The ambulance dispatch and transport are free in principle (treatment costs are separate). Avoid using it for non-urgent cases; when unsure, consult #7119.

Sources

※Rules may change. Please check the official sites for the latest information.

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