Travel Insurance Claim Template (Japan)
Last updated: 2026-03-12
When you get sick or injured in Japan, the hardest part often isn’t the clinic visit — it’s the paperwork afterward. This page gives you a reliable, repeatable claim workflow you can follow in minutes.
Two routes exist:
A) Cashless service (your insurer pays the provider)
B) Pay upfront → get reimbursed later
If you don’t know which you have, assume you’ll need to pay upfront and collect documents accordingly.
Step 0 (Before you go): 60 seconds that saves hours later
Check these items in your policy/app:
- Does it offer cashless / direct pay for medical care?
- Do you need pre-authorization before visiting a hospital?
- Where do you submit claims: portal / app / email / mail?
- Claim deadline (often within weeks to months after the incident)
Save this now (offline):
- Policy number
- Emergency/assistance phone number (24/7 if available)
- Claim submission link / app name
- Your passport photo page (photo is enough)
Step 1 (If you need medical care): decide your route
Route A — Cashless / Direct pay (best when available)
- Contact your insurer’s assistance line first (if possible).
- Ask them to arrange a clinic/hospital or confirm they can pay directly.
- Go to the provider with:
- Passport
- Insurance card / policy details (digital is fine)
Sharp warning:
Many “cashless” services still require approval before treatment. If you skip the call, you may end up paying upfront anyway.
Route B — Pay upfront → reimbursement (most common)
You pay at the clinic/pharmacy, then claim later.
Your mission is simple: leave with the right documents (Step 2).
Step 2 (At the clinic/hospital): collect the “3-document set”
Before you leave the building, try to obtain:
- Itemized bill / statement (breakdown of services)
- Receipt (proof of payment)
- Medical record note / certificate (diagnosis + date + doctor/clinic details)
If you only get one paper, reimbursement can get messy. Ask while you’re still at the cashier.
English phrases you can use (short + realistic):
- “Could I get an itemized bill and a receipt, please?”
- “Could you include the diagnosis and the date of visit on the document?”
- “Do you have an English medical certificate (or a simple note) for insurance?”
Also keep:
- Prescription details (if any)
- Pharmacy receipt + itemized list (if available)
- Any test results you receive (photo is fine)
Step 3 (Right after the visit): capture documents properly
Do this the same day (it takes 3 minutes):
A) Take clear photos (no shadows, no blur)
- Full page visible
- One file per page
B) Name your files so claims don’t get rejected
Use a simple naming rule:YYYY-MM-DD_provider_documenttype_amount_page#
Example:2026-03-05_ABC-Clinic_itemizedbill_JPY12800_p1.jpg
C) Track it once, not in your head
Create a single timeline:
- Date/time
- Provider name
- Symptoms/diagnosis (as written)
- Amount paid + currency
- Documents you have vs missing
(If you don’t track it, you’ll later lose an hour reconstructing it — guaranteed.)
Step 4 (Submit the claim): a clean package wins
Most insurers ask you to:
- Start a claim in a portal/app (or email a claim form)
- Describe what happened (short and factual)
- Upload supporting documents (receipts, bills, medical note, travel itinerary)
Keep your claim story boring:
- “I developed symptoms on [date]. I visited [provider] on [date]. I paid [amount]. Please find attached documents.”
Typical attachments checklist:
- Itemized bill + receipt
- Medical note/certificate (or visit summary)
- Proof of travel dates (itinerary / booking confirmation)
- Payment proof (receipt usually enough; sometimes card statement)
Step 5 (Follow-up): respond fast, keep it tidy
After submission, insurers often request “one more document.”
Don’t panic — just reply with:
- Your claim number
- The missing document (or an explanation if unavailable)
- A clear question: “Is anything else required to finalize the assessment?”
Sharp warning:
The major silent killer is “I thought I submitted it.”
Always keep a single folder (cloud + offline) with everything.
Common reasons claims get delayed or rejected (avoid these)
- No itemized bill (only a basic receipt)
- No medical note/certificate (diagnosis/date missing)
- Blurry photos / cropped pages
- No proof of travel dates
- Submitting too late
- Expecting cashless payment without pre-authorization
Want a faster workflow?
If you want a ready-to-use toolkit (tracking sheet + email templates + checklists), use my Japan Claim Kit (Standard).
It’s designed for the real world: less theory, more “get reimbursed without back-and-forth.”
Use the claim kit (beta)
→ Organize your own records for your own travel insurance claim submission. (No signup. Browser-based. Keep your own records organized).
Disclaimer
This page provides general information and is not medical, legal, or insurance advice. Always follow your insurer’s policy terms and instructions.