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Universal Health Insurance System in Japan

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

Überblick

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.

Verwandte Themen in Japan

Daten stammen von Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan Health Policy NOW, OECD Health Statistics. Letzte Aktualisierung: 2026-03-01. Diese Informationen dienen nur zu Bildungszwecken und stellen keine medizinische Beratung dar.