Taxis in Japan: Apps, Costs, and How to Pay
Quick answer
Hail a taxi on the street, find a taxi stand, or book through an app like GO, DiDi, or Uber. Fares run on a meter, with a higher late-night rate from around 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. Most city taxis take cards and IC cards, but carry some cash as backup.
How do I actually get a taxi in Japan?
There are three reliable ways to get a cab, and the best choice depends on where you are and the time of day. Use this table to pick the right method.
| Method | When it works best | How to do it |
|---|---|---|
| Hail on the street | Busy city areas, daytime | Look for a cab with a red light in the windscreen (means available); raise your hand |
| Taxi stand | Stations, airports, hotels | Join the queue at the marked taxi stand; the next car takes you |
| Ride-hailing app | Anywhere with coverage, late night, language help | Book in the app; the car comes to your pin |
A red light in the front window means the taxi is free. A green or other-color light usually means it is taken or out of service. Doors are automatic, so wait for the driver to open the rear door rather than pulling it yourself.
Which apps should I use, and how do they handle payment?
In Japan, ride-hailing apps dispatch licensed taxis, not private cars. The main apps for visitors are GO, DiDi, and Uber. They work well in large cities and are weaker in rural areas. Their big advantage for foreign visitors is paying in-app, which avoids language and card-reader problems in the car.
| App | Coverage (as of June 2026) | Foreign card in-app | Pay in-app |
|---|---|---|---|
| GO | Strong in major cities | Often yes | Yes |
| DiDi | Many cities | Often yes | Yes |
| Uber | Major cities | Often yes | Yes |
To set up before your trip:
- Install the app and create an account.
- Add a payment card. A foreign Visa or Mastercard is usually accepted, but some cards are declined; try another if needed.
- Set your pickup pin and destination, then confirm.
- Match with a taxi and watch the car approach on the map.
- Pay in-app, so you can simply get out at the end.
All three are legitimate ways to ride. We do not rank them, as coverage and card acceptance vary by city and by your bank.
What will it cost, especially late at night?
Taxis run on a meter that starts at a base fare and climbs with distance and waiting time. A higher night rate applies in the late hours. The figures below are typical, but exact amounts differ by region and company, so check the rate card in the cab.
| Item | Typical detail (as of June 2026) |
|---|---|
| Base fare | Around 500 yen for the first short distance, varies by city |
| Distance and time | Meter rises as you travel and while stopped in traffic |
| Late-night rate | About +20%, roughly 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. |
| App booking fee | A small dispatch fee may apply on top of the meter |
| Tipping | Not expected; pay the metered amount |
Late at night, when trains have stopped, taxis are sometimes the only option, and the night surcharge plus distance can make a city-edge trip cost several thousand yen. If you have a long way to go after the last train, compare a taxi against waiting for the first morning train.
How do I pay, and what if my card fails?
Payment options have improved, but they are not universal. Knowing your backups prevents an awkward moment at the end of the ride.
| Payment method | Accepted? (as of June 2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Major foreign credit card | Usually in cities | Reader may fail or be missing in rural cabs |
| IC card (Suica, PASMO) | Often in cities | Tap the reader like at a train gate |
| QR-code payment | Sometimes | Depends on the company |
| Cash (yen) | Always | Carry enough to cover the fare |
| In-app payment | Yes, if booked via app | Most reliable for foreign cards |
If the card reader fails, you will need cash, so always keep enough yen for the full fare. Booking through an app and paying in-app is the most reliable route for foreign cards, since it avoids the in-car terminal entirely.
Quick reference: taxis in Japan at a glance
| Topic | Detail (as of June 2026) |
|---|---|
| Free taxi sign | Red light in the front window |
| Doors | Open automatically; do not pull them |
| Main apps | GO, DiDi, Uber (all dispatch licensed taxis) |
| Late-night rate | About +20%, roughly 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. |
| Card payment | Common in cities, unreliable in rural areas |
| Cash | Always carry enough yen as backup |
| Tipping | Not expected |
Fares and app coverage change over time. Check the rate card posted in the cab and the JNTO travel pages before relying on a fixed cost, and keep some cash for trips where cards are not accepted.
FAQ
Can I use foreign credit cards in Japanese taxis?
As of June 2026, most taxis in major cities accept Visa, Mastercard, and other major cards, and many take IC cards like Suica. In rural areas and with some older cabs, card readers may be missing or fail. Carry enough cash to cover the fare in case the card payment does not work.
Which taxi apps work for foreign visitors in Japan?
GO, DiDi, and Uber all operate in major Japanese cities. In Japan, Uber and these apps dispatch licensed taxis rather than private drivers. You can usually register a foreign card in the app, which lets you pay in-app and skip the in-car payment step. Coverage is strongest in large cities and weaker in rural areas.
How much more do taxis cost late at night?
A higher night fare usually applies from about 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. As of June 2026, this adds roughly 20% to the metered fare in most areas. The exact hours and surcharge vary by region and company, so check the rate card posted in the cab if you are unsure.
Do I need to tip a taxi driver in Japan?
No. Tipping is not expected in Japan, including taxis. Pay the metered fare shown, plus any booking fee if you used an app. Drivers will not expect extra and may try to return change you leave behind.
Are taxis in Japan expensive compared to trains?
Yes, taxis cost much more than trains or buses, especially over longer distances and at night. They are most useful when trains have stopped, when you have heavy luggage, or for short trips in a group. For longer journeys, trains are far cheaper.