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ガイド · APRIL 2026

Cash, cards, and ATMs in Japan: practical guide (2026)

A practical payment guide for Japan covering where cards work, when cash is still useful, and how to avoid ATM friction.

BY NANS GIRARDIN2026年4月20日約2分で読めます
Cash, cards, and ATMs in Japan: practical guide (2026)

As of April 22, 2026, the best payment setup in Japan is hybrid: primary card + reliable ATM fallback + small working cash.

Step 1: set your default payment stack

Use this order:

  1. Card/contactless where accepted
  2. ATM cash withdrawal backup plan
  3. Small reserve cash for edge cases

This minimizes both fee drag and payment failure risk.

Step 2: pre-verify ATM compatibility

Japan Post Bank’s international ATM service states support for major networks such as:

  • VISA / PLUS
  • Mastercard / Maestro / Cirrus
  • JCB
  • UnionPay
  • Discover

If your card is outside supported networks, fix this before departure.

Step 3: know practical ATM constraints

Published Japan Post Bank guidance includes operational details travelers often miss:

  • Overseas-issued card cash withdrawal is capped per transaction (e.g., 50,000 JPY at a time)
  • Some overseas cards can incur an ATM use fee (e.g., 220 JPY) in addition to issuer fees
  • ATM availability windows vary by location/device

Plan your cash flow around these realities, not ideal assumptions.

Step 4: run a low-friction cash routine

  • Withdraw during calm daytime windows, not right before critical trains.
  • Keep one day of transport/food fallback cash accessible.
  • Avoid repeated small withdrawals that multiply fixed fees.
  • Keep fee and FX confirmation screenshots for reconciliation.

Step 5: avoid common payment failures

Failure 1: single-card dependency

One blocked card can disrupt an entire day if no second path exists.

Failure 2: no ATM-network check before flight

A card that works at home may fail if network support is mismatched.

Failure 3: end-of-day low-cash risk

Late-night refill options can be narrower than daytime assumptions.

Practical rule for first-time visitors

Build payment resilience, not maximum complexity:

  • Two payment rails (card + ATM plan)
  • One backup card if possible
  • One small nightly cash buffer

That structure prevents most avoidable money friction on trip days.

— KYOTO, APRIL 2026

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