Kichijoji Mainichi Clinic Naika Hifuka Hinyoukika

Total reviews: 345
Kichijoji Station (JR Chuo Line / Inokashira Line / Keio Kichijoji Line) — 3 min walk
  • Multi-specialty under one roof
  • Near central Tokyo
  • Kichijoji Mainichi Clinic sits on the second floor of Rainbow Building in central Kichijoji — a neighborhood that already attracts a solid expat crowd, so the clinic isn’t completely foreign to foreign patients. They cover internal medicine, dermatology, and urology under one roof, which is handy if your skin issue turns out to be something more systemic.

    The website has some English content, which is a decent sign, but don’t assume you’ll walk in and have a fluent English consultation waiting for you. Reality is probably somewhere in the middle — basic communication possible, nuanced medical history less so. Bring a translation app and write down your symptoms in advance. Google Translate’s camera mode is your friend here.

    For dermatology specifically, they handle the usual range: acne, eczema, rashes, skin checks. Nothing in the public-facing info suggests a specialist with international training, but Kichijoji is well-connected and this clinic is easy to get to. If you’re in the area and need a skin issue looked at without trekking to a big hospital, this is a reasonable first stop.

    Patient Feedback

    Patient feedback points to a generally efficient clinic — waits are reasonable by Tokyo standards, and the multi-specialty setup means you’re not bounced around if your issue crosses specialties. Doctors are described as thorough rather than rushed. The neighborhood vibe is relaxed, and the clinic reflects that. It’s not a flashy international clinic, but patients seem to leave with actual answers rather than vague reassurances.

    English Language Proficiency

    The clinic's website includes some English content, which suggests awareness of non-Japanese patients — but that's not the same as English-speaking staff at reception or during consultations. Expect Japanese-primary service. A translation app will carry most of the weight. If your condition is straightforward — a rash, acne, a mole check — you can probably manage. Complex symptom histories or medication discussions will need preparation. Calling ahead via a Japanese-speaking friend to confirm English capacity is worth the effort.

    Contact & Location

    • https://kichijojiclinic.com
    • 東京都武蔵野市吉祥寺本町1-9-10 レインボウビル2F
    • Kichijoji Station (JR Chuo Line / Inokashira Line / Keio Kichijoji Line) — 3 min walk
    Monday 3:00 PM - 6:30 PM
    Tuesday 3:00 PM - 6:30 PM
    Wednesday 3:00 PM - 6:30 PM
    Thursday Closed
    Friday 3:00 PM - 6:30 PM
    Saturday 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
    Sunday Closed

    Ready to Book Your Appointment?

    A few things to keep in mind:

    • Check the doctor's consultation hours listed above.
    • Some clinics require appointments 2-3 days in advance.
    • Include your preferred dates and times when reaching out.
    • Mention if you need English-speaking staff assistance.
    Kichijoji Mainichi Clinic Naika Hifuka Hinyoukika

    Need a phone script in Japanese? Click here.

    Other scripts: Cancel/Reschedule · Describe Symptoms · Pharmacy · Emergency · Dental

    English Support

    Proficiency Score
    2/5

    Basic

    KantanHealth is free and supported by Jozu — The document translation app for expats in Japan.