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Understanding how to make an insurance claim in Japan is essential for any corporate policyholder, claims manager or broker facing a loss event that triggers coverage under a commercial property‑and‑casualty, specialty or reinsurance policy. Japan’s insurance claim procedure is governed by the Insurance Business Act (保険業法), supplemented by supervisory guidance issued by the Financial Services Agency (FSA), and following the April–May 2026 FSA supervisory guidance and proposed reinsurance supervisory amendments, both the documentation standards and conduct expectations applied to insurers have changed materially. This guide sets out every stage of the process, from emergency evidence preservation through to final settlement and dispute escalation, with the documents, timelines, costs and pitfalls that commercial claimants need to manage in 2026.
The commercial insurance claim procedure in Japan follows four broad stages, regardless of whether the policy is a domestic non‑life contract, a specialty line (such as directors‑and‑officers liability or marine cargo) or a reinsurance recovery. These stages are: (1) loss notification and evidence preservation; (2) formal claim submission; (3) insurer investigation and adjustment; and (4) settlement, denial or escalation.
The statutory framework sits in the Insurance Business Act, which sets out insurer obligations including the duty to handle claims promptly and fairly. The FSA supervises compliance with these obligations and, through periodic supervisory guidance, sets expectations for documentation, timeliness and policyholder communication. For motor and compulsory‑liability claims specifically, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) administers the Compulsory Automobile Liability Insurance (CALI / 自賠責保険) claims flow.
This guide is designed for commercial and complex claims. It covers standard commercial property‑and‑casualty policies, specialty lines, business interruption, product liability, and the reinsurance recovery process where the cedant must coordinate insurer‑to‑reinsurer documentation chains. Consumer claims (household, travel, individual motor) follow a simpler version of the same framework, but the documentation burden and escalation options differ.
Readers should note that every claim is subject to the specific terms of the policy wording, including the notification clause, the claims‑cooperation clause and any arbitration or jurisdiction agreement. The steps below describe typical market practice, cross‑referenced against regulatory expectations as of June 2026.
Before filing a commercial insurance claim, the claimant must confirm that the prerequisites for a valid claim are met. Failing to check these before submission is one of the most common causes of delay and partial denial.
A practical first step is to pull out the policy schedule, the wording and any endorsements, and prepare a brief coverage analysis before notifying the insurer. This analysis should map the loss event against each relevant insuring clause and exclusion.
The following numbered steps represent the standard procedure for filing and progressing a commercial insurance claim in Japan. Each step identifies who acts, the typical timeframe and the key documents required. All timeframes are typical market practice, verify against the specific policy and any insurer claims‑handling guide.
Take immediate steps to mitigate loss and preserve all evidence. This means activating business continuity plans, instructing loss‑mitigation contractors and, where relevant, filing a police report (for theft, arson, motor accidents or suspected fraud). Under Japanese law, police reports (jiko shōmei‑sho) are essential for any casualty or criminal‑loss claim.
Photograph and video‑record the damage, secure documentary records (invoices, delivery notes, contracts) and isolate any physical evidence. For property damage or business interruption, engage a qualified loss adjuster or surveyor within the first 24 hours where the scale of loss warrants it. The evidence gathered in this step forms the backbone of the formal claim package.
Issue a written initial loss notice to the insurer’s designated claims contact. Most commercial policies specify the notice method (email, registered post or insurer portal) and require notification “as soon as practicable” after discovery. For large commercial claims, best practice is to notify within 24–72 hours of discovery.
The initial notice should include: the policy number, the date and location of the loss, a brief description of the event, an initial estimate of the quantum (even if preliminary) and the name of the claims‑handler or broker coordinating the claim. A template initial notice is typically available from the insurer or broker; major Japanese insurers such as AIG Japan and Sompo publish claim notification forms and contact details on their claims portals.
After initial notice, prepare and submit a formal claim package within the deadline stated in the policy, typically 30–60 days after the loss event, though some policies allow longer. This package should include a completed proof‑of‑loss form, all supporting documents (see the required documents table in the next section) and a detailed quantum calculation.
For business interruption claims, the quantum calculation must include a forecast of lost revenue, incremental costs of working and any savings. For casualty claims, include medical records, repair estimates and third‑party correspondence. Ensure every document is dated and, where required, certified or notarised.
Once the formal claim is lodged, the insurer will acknowledge receipt, typically within 3–7 business days, and appoint an internal adjuster or an independent loss‑adjusting firm. The policyholder is under a contractual duty to cooperate with the investigation: provide access to premises, personnel and records, attend interviews and respond to information requests promptly.
The investigation phase varies widely in duration. For straightforward property claims, expect an initial coverage position within 30–60 days. For complex liability, product‑recall or business‑interruption claims, the investigation may extend to 90–180 days or longer. During this phase, maintain a log of all communications and document every information request and response.
Where the loss is large and the policyholder faces cashflow pressure, request an interim (partial) payment from the insurer. Japanese market practice permits interim payments where liability is not disputed and a reasonable minimum quantum is established. Frame the request in writing, referencing the policy clause (if any) that provides for interim payments and attaching supporting quantum evidence for the undisputed portion.
Insurers regulated under the Insurance Business Act are expected to handle claims without unreasonable delay. The FSA’s April 2026 supervisory guidance reinforces this expectation. Industry observers expect that unreasonable refusal of interim payments will attract closer supervisory scrutiny under the updated guidance framework.
The insurer will issue a final settlement offer, a partial payment with reservation, or a denial. The settlement offer should be in writing and state: the amount payable, the basis of calculation, any deductions (excess, co‑insurance, salvage) and the release or discharge wording. Review the offer carefully against the original quantum submission.
If the claim is denied or underpaid, the insurer must provide written reasons. Under the Insurance Business Act and FSA supervisory expectations, the denial must reference the specific policy clause relied upon. If you disagree, respond in writing with a detailed rebuttal, this preserves your position for any subsequent escalation to ADR, arbitration or litigation.
For commercial claims where the insurer expects to recover from a reinsurer, the reinsurance recovery process runs in parallel. The cedant must issue a reinsurance claim notice under the treaty or facultative certificate, provide the reinsurer with a complete claims file (including the original policyholder claim package, adjuster reports and settlement documentation) and maintain a clear audit trail from policyholder through to reinsurer.
Subrogation rights, the insurer’s right to recover from a responsible third party, must be preserved from the outset. The policyholder should not sign any waiver, release or settlement with a third party that could extinguish the insurer’s subrogation rights without the insurer’s prior written consent.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Emergency response & evidence preservation | Policyholder / loss‑mitigation contractors | Within 24 hours of discovery |
| 2. Initial loss notice to insurer | Policyholder or broker | 24–72 hours after discovery (verify policy clause) |
| 3. Formal claim package submission | Policyholder or broker | 30–60 days after loss event (verify policy deadline) |
| 4. Insurer acknowledges receipt | Insurer claims department | 3–7 business days after receipt of claim |
| 4a. Insurer investigation & adjustment | Insurer / independent loss adjuster | 30–180 days (complexity‑dependent) |
| 5. Interim payment (if requested) | Insurer | 14–30 days from request (where undisputed) |
| 6. Final settlement offer or denial | Insurer | 30–90 days for standard claims; longer for complex |
| 7. Reinsurance notice & recovery | Cedant insurer | Per reinsurance treaty; typically within 30 days of settlement |
All timeframes above are typical market practice. Verify against the specific policy wording, insurer claims guide and prevailing FSA supervisory guidance.
The documents needed for a claim will vary by policy type, loss category and insurer requirements. The table below lists the core documents typically required for commercial property, casualty, business interruption and reinsurance claims. Prepare all documents in the language specified by the policy, most commercial policies in Japan accept Japanese, with some international programmes requiring English translations.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Initial loss notice (written) | Issued by policyholder or broker; email or registered post per policy clause; retain proof of delivery. |
| Proof‑of‑loss form | Insurer‑specific form; complete all fields; sign and date. Obtain from insurer claims portal. |
| Police report (jiko shōmei‑sho) | Issued by prefectural police; required for theft, arson, motor accidents, suspected fraud. Obtain within days of the event. |
| Photographs / video evidence | Taken by policyholder or loss adjuster; time‑stamped; digital format acceptable. |
| Loss‑adjuster or surveyor report | Issued by independent licensed adjuster; typically commissioned by insurer or policyholder. |
| Repair / replacement estimates | Issued by contractors or manufacturers; itemised; in JPY. |
| Financial records (business interruption) | Audited accounts, management accounts, revenue forecasts; issued by company / external accountant. |
| Medical records and certificates | Issued by treating hospital or physician; required for casualty / personal‑injury claims. |
| Third‑party correspondence | Letters of demand, settlement proposals, court documents from or to third parties. |
| Subrogation assignment / waiver | Issued by policyholder to insurer; signed; confirms insurer’s right to pursue third‑party recovery. |
| Reinsurance claim notice | Issued by cedant to reinsurer; per treaty notification clause; include full underlying claims file. |
| Certificate of insurance / policy schedule | Issued by insurer or broker; confirms cover in force at date of loss. |
| Corporate registration certificate (tōki jikō shōmei‑sho) | Issued by Legal Affairs Bureau; confirms corporate identity; valid within 3 months of issue. |
For complex claims, additional documents may include expert forensic reports (fire investigation, engineering failure analysis, IT forensics), contractual documents (supply agreements, construction contracts) and government permits or licences relevant to the insured activity. The 2026 FSA supervisory guidance signals that insurers are expected to specify required documents clearly and early in the process, the likely practical effect is that claimants will receive more detailed initial document‑request lists from adjusters.
Where the policy requires sworn statements or notarised attestations, use a Japanese notary public (kōshō‑nin). For cross‑border claims, documents issued abroad may need consular legalisation or apostille certification under the Hague Apostille Convention, to which Japan is a party.
Managing the claim timeline in Japan requires attention to three categories of deadline: statutory time limits, contractual policy deadlines and recommended internal deadlines to avoid estoppel or prejudice.
Statutory time limits. Under Japan’s Civil Code, the general limitation period for insurance claims is three years from the date the insured becomes aware of the event giving rise to the claim. For life insurance claims, the period is also three years. These are hard deadlines, once expired, the right to claim is extinguished. For compulsory automobile liability insurance (CALI), MLIT administers a claims procedure with its own notification and filing requirements; claimants should consult the MLIT guidance for motor‑specific timelines.
Contractual deadlines. Policy wordings typically impose tighter deadlines than the statutory limitation. Notification clauses may require notice within 24 hours, 7 days or 30 days of discovery (depending on the class of insurance). Formal claim submission deadlines typically range from 30 to 60 days. Late notification can result in denial if the insurer demonstrates prejudice, though Japanese courts have historically required the insurer to show actual prejudice before denying claims solely on notice grounds.
Recommended internal deadlines. As a matter of best practice, commercial claimants should set internal milestones that are tighter than the contractual deadlines: notify within 24 hours, submit formal claim within 21 days, respond to adjuster requests within 7 business days, and escalate non‑response from the insurer after 30 days. These internal deadlines help preserve the policyholder’s position and demonstrate good faith.
For trade credit and export insurance claims filed through NEXI (Nippon Export and Investment Insurance), separate procedural rules and filing deadlines apply; claimants should refer to NEXI’s published claims and recovery procedures.
Filing a commercial insurance claim in Japan does not typically attract fees payable to the insurer. However, claimants should budget for the following ancillary costs, which can be significant in complex cases.
| Item | Typical Amount (Range) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Insurer administrative fee | Nil to claimant | No fee charged by the insurer for processing a claim. |
| Independent loss adjuster | ¥500,000–¥5,000,000+ | Depends on loss complexity and duration; may be appointed by insurer or policyholder. Subject to 10% consumption tax. |
| Legal fees (solicitor / bengoshi) | ¥300,000–¥10,000,000+ | Hourly rates typically ¥30,000–¥70,000/hour for senior practitioners. Contingency / success fees possible but uncommon in Japan. Subject to 10% consumption tax. |
| Expert / forensic reports | ¥200,000–¥3,000,000+ | Fire investigation, engineering, IT forensics. Subject to 10% consumption tax. |
| Translation / apostille | ¥50,000–¥500,000 | Cross‑border claims; certified translation and legalisation costs. |
| Court filing fees (if litigated) | Based on claim value | Calculated as a percentage of the amount claimed; prescribed by court fee schedule. |
All amounts are indicative ranges for 2026. Verify with service providers. Consumption tax (currently 10%) applies to professional fees and services. Corporate claimants may deduct claim‑related professional fees as business expenses for corporate tax purposes, confirm with a tax adviser.
The April–May 2026 FSA supervisory guidance represents the most significant shift in insurer conduct expectations in recent years and directly affects how to make an insurance claim in Japan for commercial and complex losses. The guidance, published in the FSA’s April 2026 news releases and elaborated in the FSA’s weekly review and draft guidance notices from March–April 2026, targets insurer claims‑handling practices across several dimensions.
Enhanced documentation and disclosure. The guidance reinforces the FSA’s expectation that insurers maintain comprehensive, auditable claims files and provide policyholders with clear, written explanations of coverage decisions. Industry observers expect that, in practice, insurers will issue more detailed initial document‑request lists and require claimants to submit structured evidence packages earlier in the process.
Faster supervisory escalation. The FSA has signalled a lower tolerance for delayed or opaque claims handling. Early indications suggest that supervisory intervention, including on‑site inspections and administrative action, will be triggered more readily where policyholders or brokers escalate complaints about insurer conduct.
Reinsurance supervisory amendments. The proposed amendments to reinsurance supervisory rules tighten the documentation chain from policyholder through cedant to reinsurer. The likely practical effect for commercial claimants is that cedant insurers will require more granular supporting documentation at the point of initial claim submission to satisfy their own reinsurance recovery obligations. Claimants engaged in the reinsurance recovery process should prepare claims packages with the reinsurer’s eventual requirements in mind from the outset.
These 2026 changes mean commercial claimants should review and update their internal claims‑handling procedures, notice templates and document‑retention protocols to align with the heightened expectations.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hironori Nishikino at Chuo Sogo LPC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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