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.

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:
- Card/contactless where accepted
- ATM cash withdrawal backup plan
- 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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