How to Use Hospitals & Clinics in Japan [Guide for Foreigners]
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
| Symptom | Department |
|---|---|
| Fever, cough, stomach ache (general) | Internal Medicine (Naika) |
| Injury, fracture, joint pain | Orthopedics (Seikeigeka) |
| Itchy skin, rash | Dermatology (Hifuka) |
| Toothache | Dentistry (Shika) |
| Children's illness | Pediatrics (Shonika) |
| Pregnancy, gynecology | Obstetrics & Gynecology (Sanfujinka) |
② How to Visit a Doctor
- Book by phone or online (clinics often take walk-ins)
- At reception, show your health insurance card (or My Number insurance card) and Residence Card. Fill in a symptom form on your first visit
- Explain your symptoms to the doctor (use the phrases below or an interpreter service)
- Tests, diagnosis and prescription
- Pay 30% of the bill and receive your prescription
- Take the prescription to a pharmacy to get your medicine
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.
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
Sources
※Rules may change. Please check the official sites for the latest information.
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