OEDONIHONBASHI KYUJITU OUKYU SIKA Clinic

Total reviews: 345
Nihonbashi Station (Asakusa Line) — 2 min walk
  • Open holidays and weekends
  • Near central Tokyo
  • This is not your typical dental clinic — it’s an emergency dental clinic that runs specifically on holidays and weekends in Nihonbashi, Chuo Ward. When you crack a tooth on a Sunday or wake up with a throbbing abscess on New Year’s Day and every other dentist is closed, this is the place. It handles urgent cases only: acute pain, broken teeth, lost fillings, that kind of thing. Don’t show up expecting a cleaning or Invisalign consultation.

    The clinic sits in the Hisagocho area of Nihonbashi, close to Hamacho and Ningyocho stations. It’s a public service operation run under Tokyo’s emergency dental system, so the vibe is functional and no-frills.

    English capability is a real question mark here. The website has some basic information but it’s mostly in Japanese. Reception staff are likely Japanese-only. If you’re coming in pain on a holiday, bring a translation app, write down your symptoms in Japanese if you can, and keep expectations realistic. They’ll treat the emergency — communication might just take some extra effort.

    Patient Feedback

    Patient experiences here tend to reflect what this clinic actually is: a relief valve for dental emergencies on days when nothing else is open. People are generally glad it exists. Wait times can be unpredictable depending on how many emergencies roll in that day. Treatment is focused and functional — they stabilize the problem, not solve it permanently. Most patients are advised to follow up with their regular dentist afterward. The atmosphere is clinical and efficient rather than warm or patient-focused.

    English Language Proficiency

    Assume Japanese-only unless you get lucky. The website is almost entirely in Japanese, and this is a public emergency facility staffed by rotating dentists — there's no consistent English-speaking doctor you can count on. Google Translate or a medical translation app is essential. Write your symptoms down before you arrive. Pain is a universal language and they will treat you, but navigating intake forms, instructions, and follow-up advice will be significantly harder without some Japanese or a translation tool ready to go.

    Contact & Location

    • http://www.418.co.jp/nihonbashi/
    • 東京都中央区日本橋久松町1-2
    • Nihonbashi Station (Asakusa Line) — 2 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.
    OEDONIHONBASHI KYUJITU OUKYU SIKA Clinic

    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.