Buying OTC medicine in Japan can be confusing if you do not read Japanese. Drugstores are easy to find, but medicine labels, active ingredients, sales rules, and pharmacist availability may be different from your home country.
This guide explains how travelers and foreign residents can buy OTC medicine more safely in Japan: where to go, what to check on the label, when to ask pharmacy staff, and when medical care may be a better choice.
This article is for general information only. It does not replace medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If your symptoms are severe, unusual, getting worse, or not improving, please seek medical care.
- Quick Answer: How to Buy OTC Medicine in Japan
- At a Glance: 3 Steps Before Buying Medicine
- Quick Checklist: Before You Buy or Take Medicine
- Drugstore, Pharmacy, or Clinic: Where Should You Go?
- What You Can Usually Buy at a Japanese Drugstore
- Prescription Medicines Are Different
- Why Some Medicines Require Pharmacist or Staff Confirmation
- Japanese Medicine Categories You May See
- What to Check on the Label
- Be Careful With Combination Medicines
- When to Ask a Pharmacist or Registered Seller
- Useful Phrases at a Japanese Drugstore
- When OTC Medicine Is Not Enough
- FAQ: Buying OTC Medicine in Japan
- Related Guides
- References
Quick Answer: How to Buy OTC Medicine in Japan
If you need OTC medicine in Japan, start with a drugstore or pharmacy. Before buying or taking medicine, check who will use it, the active ingredient, age limit, dose, warnings, and whether pharmacist or registered seller support is needed.
Do not choose medicine only by product name, package design, or a quick translation app result. Many Japanese OTC products contain multiple ingredients, and different products can overlap.
If symptoms are severe, unusual, getting worse, or related to heat illness, allergic reaction, chest pain, breathing trouble, severe abdominal pain, severe rash, repeated vomiting, dehydration, or serious injury, do not rely only on OTC medicine. Consider medical care or call 119 in an emergency.
At a Glance: 3 Steps Before Buying Medicine
| Step | What to Do | Why It Matters |
| 1 | Choose the right place | A drugstore or pharmacy can help with OTC medicine. Severe symptoms may need a clinic or hospital. |
| 2 | Check who will use it | Age, pregnancy, breastfeeding, chronic illness, allergies, and current medicines can change what is safe. |
| 3 | Check the label | Look for the active ingredient, symptom target, dose, age limit, warnings, and duplicate ingredients. |
Quick Checklist: Before You Buy or Take Medicine
Before buying or taking OTC medicine in Japan, check:
- Who will use this medicine?
- What symptom are you trying to treat?
- What is the active ingredient?
- Is it suitable for the user’s age?
- What is the dose and maximum daily dose?
- Are there warnings for pregnancy, breastfeeding, chronic illness, allergies, or other medicines?
- Has the user already taken another medicine with the same or similar ingredient?
- Does this product require pharmacist or registered seller confirmation?
- Would medical care be safer than self-care?
Drugstore, Pharmacy, or Clinic: Where Should You Go?
In Japan, a drugstore usually sells OTC medicines, health products, cosmetics, and daily goods. Many are located near train stations, shopping streets, tourist areas, and large commercial facilities.
A dispensing pharmacy mainly handles prescription medicines. Some drugstores also have a dispensing pharmacy counter. If a Japanese doctor gives you a prescription, you usually take it to a dispensing pharmacy.
| Situation | Where to Start |
| Mild symptoms and you want OTC medicine | Drugstore or pharmacy |
| You have a Japanese prescription | Dispensing pharmacy |
| You need a medicine that requires pharmacist involvement | Drugstore or pharmacy with a pharmacist available |
| Symptoms are severe, unusual, worsening, or unclear | Clinic or hospital |
| Emergency symptoms | Call 119 |
Do not rely on convenience stores for medicine. Some convenience stores may sell limited OTC medicines if qualified staff and the required sales system are available, but many do not. If you need medicine, a drugstore or pharmacy is usually the better place to start.
What You Can Usually Buy at a Japanese Drugstore
Japanese drugstores often sell OTC medicines and health products for common mild symptoms. The exact products vary by store, location, time, and staff availability.
| Symptom or Need | Where to Read More |
| Fever or pain | Fever in Japan / Headache Medicine in Japan |
| Cold-like symptoms | Cold Medicine in Japan |
| Cough or phlegm | Cough Medicine in Japan |
| Sore throat | Sore Throat Medicine in Japan |
| Runny nose, sneezing, allergy-like symptoms | Runny Nose and Allergy Medicine in Japan |
| Stomach pain, diarrhea, nausea, constipation | Stomach and Digestive Problems in Japan |
| Eye symptoms | Eye Drops in Japan |
| Skin rash, itching, insect bites, athlete’s foot | Skin Rash and Itching Medicine in Japan / Athlete’s Foot Medicine in Japan |
| Motion sickness | Motion Sickness Medicine in Japan |
| Foot pain, blisters, minor first-aid needs | Foot Pain and Blisters in Japan |
This website does not recommend a specific product for every person. It is safer to use active ingredients and label warnings as clues, then ask pharmacy staff when you are unsure.
Also remember that not every product in a Japanese drugstore is an OTC medicine. Some products are quasi-drugs, supplements, cosmetics, sanitary goods, or daily goods. If you need medicine for symptoms, check the product category and ask staff.
Prescription Medicines Are Different
OTC medicine means medicine that can be purchased without a prescription under Japanese rules. Prescription medicines are different. You usually need a prescription from a doctor in Japan to receive prescription medicine at a dispensing pharmacy.
If you forgot your regular medicine from home, do not assume the same medicine can be bought at a Japanese drugstore. Many regular medicines, such as blood pressure medicine, diabetes medicine, asthma inhalers, psychiatric medicines, anticoagulants, and some eye drops or skin medicines, may require a doctor’s prescription in Japan.
If you need help finding medical care in Japan, see our guide: How to See a Doctor in Japan as a Traveler.
Why Some Medicines Require Pharmacist or Staff Confirmation
In Japan, non-prescription medicines are not all treated the same way. Some products require pharmacist guidance or pharmacist information at purchase. Others can be sold by a pharmacist or a registered seller.
A registered seller is a qualified medicine sales professional in Japan. Registered sellers can sell many OTC medicines, but they are not the same as pharmacists. If you specifically need a pharmacist, ask whether one is available.
A store may be open even when certain medicines cannot be sold. For example, if a product requires pharmacist involvement and the pharmacist counter is closed, you may not be able to buy that product at that time.
Japanese Medicine Categories You May See
You do not need to memorize every category. The important point is that some OTC medicines require more confirmation than others, and staff questions are part of Japan’s medicine safety system.
| Label You May See | Simple Meaning |
| Guidance-required medicine / 要指導医薬品 | Requires pharmacist guidance. Ask the pharmacist before buying. |
| Class 1 OTC medicine / 第1類医薬品 | Requires pharmacist information at purchase. |
| Designated Class 2 OTC medicine / 指定第2類医薬品 | A Class 2 medicine that needs extra caution. Ask qualified staff if unsure. |
| Class 2 OTC medicine / 第2類医薬品 | Can be sold by a pharmacist or registered seller. Check warnings carefully. |
| Class 3 OTC medicine / 第3類医薬品 | Can be sold by a pharmacist or registered seller. Generally a lower-risk OTC category, but label checks are still important. |
If you see these labels and do not understand them, ask pharmacy staff before buying the medicine.
Useful phrase: Is a pharmacist available now?
What to Check on the Label
Before you buy or take OTC medicine in Japan, check the package carefully. If you cannot read the label, ask a pharmacist or registered seller.
Start with one question:
Who will use this medicine?
Then check whether the medicine is for yourself, another adult, a child, an elderly person, someone who is pregnant or breastfeeding, someone with a chronic condition, or someone who takes other medicines.
On the label, look for:
- active ingredient
- symptoms the medicine is for
- age limit
- dose per use
- dosing interval
- maximum daily dose
- do-not-use warnings
- ask-before-use warnings
- pregnancy or breastfeeding warnings
- chronic illness warnings
- allergy warnings
- possible overlap with medicines already taken
Translation apps can help, but do not rely only on automatic translation for safety-critical information such as dose, age limits, warnings, contraindications, or duplicate ingredients.
Be Careful With Combination Medicines
Many Japanese cold medicines and symptom-relief products contain several ingredients in one product. A cold medicine may include ingredients for fever, pain, cough, runny nose, sleepiness, or other symptoms.
For this reason, do not combine OTC medicines on your own. Fever medicine, pain medicine, cold medicine, allergy medicine, motion sickness medicine, and sleep aid products may overlap in ways that are not obvious from the package design.
If you already took a medicine and want to take another one, show the package, photo, or ingredient list to pharmacy staff.
When to Ask a Pharmacist or Registered Seller
Ask pharmacy staff before buying medicine if any of the following apply:
- the medicine is for a child
- the medicine is for an elderly person
- you are pregnant or breastfeeding
- you have stomach or duodenal ulcers
- you have kidney, liver, heart, thyroid, prostate, or urinary problems
- you have asthma, glaucoma, or medicine allergies
- you take prescription medicines or regular medicines
- you take blood thinners, steroids, sleeping pills, antidepressants, other pain relievers, allergy medicine, motion sickness medicine, or cold medicine
- you already took another medicine today
- you are not sure what ingredient is in the product
- symptoms are not improving
Many adult OTC medicines in Japan are not for children. Do not guess a child’s dose from an adult product.
You do not need perfect Japanese. Short phrases, medicine photos, allergy information, and a medication list are often enough to start the conversation.
Useful Phrases at a Japanese Drugstore
These are example phrases you can show to staff. For a ready-to-show bilingual card with Japanese text, see: Show This at a Japanese Pharmacy: OTC Medicine Questions in English and Japanese.
| What You Want to Ask | Example Phrase |
| Pharmacist availability | Is a pharmacist available now? |
| Symptoms | I am looking for OTC medicine for this symptom. |
| User | Who can use this medicine? |
| Age | Is this medicine OK for an adult / a child / an elderly person? |
| Pregnancy or breastfeeding | Is this medicine OK during pregnancy or breastfeeding? |
| Other medicines | Can I take this medicine with my current medicine? |
| Duplicate ingredients | Does this medicine contain any ingredient I already took? |
| Allergies or illness | I have allergies / asthma / kidney disease / liver disease / a stomach or duodenal ulcer. Is this medicine OK for me? |
When OTC Medicine Is Not Enough
OTC medicine can help with some mild symptoms, but it is not always the right answer. Do not use OTC medicine to delay medical care when symptoms may be serious.
Consider medical care if symptoms are severe, unusual, getting worse, or not improving. Be especially careful with shortness of breath, chest pain, confusion, fainting, severe allergic reaction, severe headache, stiff neck, severe abdominal pain, repeated vomiting, dehydration, severe weakness, symptoms after heat exposure, or severe skin or eye symptoms.
If you are not sure how to find medical care in Japan, read: How to See a Doctor in Japan as a Traveler.
If you may be having a medical emergency in Japan, call 119.
FAQ: Buying OTC Medicine in Japan
Can tourists buy OTC medicine in Japan?
Yes. Travelers can buy many OTC medicines at Japanese drugstores and pharmacies. However, some medicines require pharmacist support, and some products may not be available at all stores or at all times.
Do all Japanese drugstores have a pharmacist available?
No. Some drugstores have a pharmacist available only during certain hours. A store may be open even when medicines that require pharmacist involvement cannot be sold.
Can I buy medicine at a convenience store in Japan?
Some convenience stores may sell limited OTC medicines if they have qualified staff and the required sales system, but many do not. If you need medicine, a drugstore or pharmacy is usually a better place to start.
What if I cannot read the Japanese label?
Ask a pharmacist or registered seller. You can also show the package, a photo, your medication list, allergy information, or the medicine you already took. Translation apps can help, but do not rely only on automatic translation for safety-critical information.
Can I choose medicine by brand name?
Do not choose only by brand name or package design. Check the active ingredient, age limit, dose, warnings, and whether the medicine is suitable for the person who will use it.
Can I take two OTC medicines together?
Do not combine OTC medicines on your own. Many products contain overlapping ingredients. Ask pharmacy staff before taking more than one medicine.
Related Guides
You may also want to read:
- Browse all JapanMedGuide articles
- Show This at a Japanese Pharmacy: OTC Medicine Questions in English and Japanese
- How to See a Doctor in Japan as a Traveler
- Cold Medicine in Japan
- Stomach and Digestive Problems in Japan
- Eye Drops in Japan
References
- Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Information on the Japanese medicine sales system.
- Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Overview of Japan’s medicine sales system.
- Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA). Drug safety information.
- Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA). OTC medicine package insert search.
- Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO). Guide for when you are feeling ill in Japan.



