Japan Launches Nationwide 'Childcare for All' Program with Affordable Fees and Pension Benefits by 2026
December 30, 2025
Starting April 2026, Japan will roll out a nationwide Childcare for All Children system offering temporary care, group childcare, and parent-child support for infants and toddlers, with standard fees set at 300 yen per hour.
Reforms will restructure household childcare support and distribute costs more evenly across the working-age population, requiring separate reports to receive certain benefits and relying on health ministry and local government announcements for implementation details.
From October 2026, Category 1 insured self-employed and freelancers will be exempt from national pension premiums until their child turns one, with the exemption contributing toward pension eligibility.
A one-time 20,000 yen cash payment per child will be issued to those turning 18 by the end of 2025, with no guardian income restrictions; eligible households receiving child allowances will be paid automatically.
Pilot programs for universal childcare access began in 2025, with a nationwide rollout planned for 2026 and ongoing funding discussions anticipated through 2028.
A new Child and Childcare Support Allowance system will create a national funding framework for childcare, expanding contributions to public health insurance and increasing funding for child allowances and childcare programs.
Japan intends a broad expansion of childcare, education, and wage-related support starting in 2026 to counter inflation and reduce costs for working-age households.
Summary based on 1 source
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UPI • Dec 30, 2025
Japan to expand childcare support in 2026 with cash aid - UPI.com