I’m an American who got a full medical checkup in Japan. In 4 hours, I learned more about my health than I would in years at home.

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author Ingrid Yang smiling outside of sign for healthcare building In Japan
I got a full medical checkup during my trip to Japan. This preventive care taught me a lot about my health in an efficient way.

Ingrid Yang

  • While in Japan, I got a comprehensive preventive medical checkup that took just four hours.
  • A translator helped me navigate the process, and I completed several tests and screenings.
  • The $1,800 exam showed me how Japan's emphasis on preventive care can help with longevity.

I arrived at the hospital in Tokyo on a clear December morning aware of two things: how far I was from home and how little Japanese I speak.

Like many visitors to Japan, my vocabulary consists of pleasantries, menu items, and apologies, which is hardly the skill you need when checking in for a full medical workup.

As a physician practicing in the United States, I know how medical visits usually unfold, yet that knowledge does not make the experience easier once you become the patient.

Although I'd been to Japan many times before, the country has long fascinated me with its longevity. It consistently ranks among places where people live the longest, and although many factors contribute, its cultural embrace of preventive medicine stands out.

On this trip, I was determined to experience that system from the inside.

A huge goal of these checkup is to catch small issues before they become big problems

Lobby of hospital in Tokyo
NTT Tokyo hospital lobby

Ingrid Yang

Despite my worries about the language barrier, booking the appointment through the Nippon Health website turned out to be easier than expected.

I chose NTT Tokyo in Shinagawa, one of many medical centers that accommodates international patients. The website was in English, the intake forms were straightforward, and the email responses arrived quickly. Within two days, I had a confirmed appointment.

The type of checkup I scheduled costs about $1,800 and is known in Japan as a "ningen dock."

The phrase loosely translates to "human dock," borrowing the nautical image of pulling a ship from the water so its structure can be inspected before it returns to sea.

The goal is not to wait for problems, but to periodically examine the vessel. After all, preventive screening in Japan is simply part of the routine maintenance of adulthood.

With the help of a translator, my tests and exams moved smoothly and quickly

NTT medical center entrance
NTT medical center entrance

Ingrid Yang

When I arrived at the clinic, I searched for English signs while the antiseptic air stirred a subtle flicker of nerves.

My nerves faded when the elevator doors opened. A supervising nurse greeted me with a bow and introduced me to the Japanese-to-English translator, who would guide me through the day.

They led me down a spotless hallway to a private changing room where a neatly folded patient uniform waited: sweatpants and a brown scrub-style top that felt almost dignified compared with the backless gowns I hand my own patients.

I pulled the sleeves toward my wrists and watched them stop short, a reminder that I was an American-sized body navigating a Japanese system.

Over the next four hours, I moved through a comprehensive preventive medical checkup that, in the US, would typically require months of scheduling, referrals, and coordination.

Woman with mask on being wheeled into CT
CT

Ingrid Yang

Throughout the day, my translator did more than translate — she explained the reasoning of the sequence of tests and exams and clarified cultural details.

With her help, the visit unfolded smoothly as a clearly guided process. The pace was not rushed, yet nothing stalled.

My morning began with bloodwork and urinalysis, followed by measurements that included height, weight, vision, hearing, grip strength, lung capacity, and blood pressure.

Headphones in hearing-test booth
Hearing test set up in Japan

Ingrid Yang

From there, the testing moved to imaging and diagnostic studies: electrocardiogram, chest X-ray and CT, abdominal ultrasound, bone-density scan, and gastric screening.

Each test had its own technician, a clear flow, and a station ready before I arrived.

Small gestures, like technicians bowing before explaining each test, created a sense of ease and reflected a process refined through years of repetition.

Waiting area for lab in Japan medical centedr
lab waiting area

Ingrid Yang

At the end of the testing sequence, I immediately met with a physician to review my lab results.

This was incredibly useful and turned out to be one of the biggest differences from the American system — normally, I'd wait days or weeks to get lab results through a portal or follow-up appointment.

While reviewing the results of my exams and tests, the physician emphasized that no single checkup is definitive and that the real value lies in building a dataset over time.

Even so, a few findings gave me clear insight into habits worth adjusting, which made the experience genuinely useful.

I left the clinic with a folder of results, a few recommendations, and additional imaging reports (that required a radiologist's interpretation) arriving in the weeks ahead.

By the end, I had experienced firsthand a few things Japan's system gets right about longevity

Hallway of clinic
Hallway

Ingrid Yang

The $1,800 cost of this exam sounds a bit substantial … until you compare it with the American system. A similar collection of tests in the United States can easily cost more than $10,000, depending on insurance coverage and billing practices.

More important than the price is the simplicity and efficiency of this process — everything took place in one building over a single morning.

There were no separate referrals, no weeks of waiting for scheduling calls, and no surprise invoices months later. The experience was not dramatic or life-changing. In many ways, it was deliberately ordinary.

The most valuable aspect of the visit was its completeness. In the United States, health information trickles in over time: a lab result here, an imaging report later, maybe a conversation at the next appointment.

That morning, everything unfolded in practical succession: bloodwork, scans, consultation. I walked out with a clear sense of what was worth paying attention to and which habits were serving me well.

It reminded me that longevity is not built through dramatic medical moments. It develops through systems that help you see your health clearly and make adjustments before problems appear.

Just one morning inside a Tokyo hospital showed me how a culture can make that kind of maintenance feel routine.

Read the original article on Business Insider