Hjem Procedurer Ældrepleje Terapi Fødsel Lande

Vælg Sprog

Universal Health Insurance System in Japan

Universal Health Insurance (NHI + Shakai Hoken) · Valuta: ¥ (JPY)

Standard Copayment Rate

30%

Children (Under 6) Copay

20%

Elderly (70-74) Copay

20%

Elderly (75+) Copay

10%

Shakai Hoken Contribution

~10% of salary

Monthly Out-of-Pocket Cap

~¥80,100

Oversigt

Japan's universal health insurance system covers all residents through two main programmes: Shakai Hoken (employee health insurance) for company employees and their dependents, and Kokumin Kenko Hoken (National Health Insurance, NHI) for self-employed individuals, retirees, and others not covered by employer plans. The standard copayment rate is 30% for most working-age adults aged 6-69, with the remaining 70% covered by insurance.

Insurance premiums vary by programme and income. Shakai Hoken contributions are approximately 10% of salary (split equally between employer and employee), while NHI premiums are set by each municipality based on income, household size, and property ownership, typically ranging from ¥15,000-¥50,000 per month. High earners in NHI face a premium cap of approximately ¥1,060,000 annually. The system achieves near-universal coverage with 98.3% of the population insured.

The high-cost medical care system (kogaku ryoyo-hi seido) provides crucial financial protection by capping monthly out-of-pocket costs based on income level. For an average-income household, the monthly cap is approximately ¥80,100 plus 1% of costs exceeding ¥267,000. Households that exceed the cap multiple times in a 12-month period benefit from further reduced caps. This system ensures that even serious illnesses and extended hospitalizations do not result in catastrophic financial burden.

Relaterede Emner i Japan

Data fra Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan Health Policy NOW, OECD Health Statistics. Sidst opdateret: 2026-03-01. Denne information er kun til uddannelsesmæssige formål og udgør ikke medicinsk rådgivning.