Conduire en Japan
Guide complet pour touristes et expatriés. Apprenez les règles de conduite avant de prendre la route en Japan.
Pouvez-vous Conduire en Japan?
Permis Acceptés De
Période de Validité: Valid for up to 1 year from date of entry into Japan (not from IDP issue date)
Note Importante
Japan ONLY accepts International Driving Permits issued under the 1949 Geneva Convention. IDPs from the 1968 Vienna Convention are NOT valid. Countries like Belgium, France, Germany, Switzerland, Monaco, and Taiwan have separate bilateral agreements — drivers from these countries need an official Japanese translation of their license instead of an IDP. The IDP must be in the standard booklet format.
Équipements à Avoir
Obligatoires
- Valid driving license and IDP (must be 1949 Geneva Convention format)
- Passport (carry at all times as a foreign national)
- Japanese Beginner mark (Shoshinsha) if licensed less than 1 year
- Elderly driver mark (Koreisha) if 70+ years old
Recommandés
- GPS/navigation device with English support
- ETC card for electronic toll payment on expressways
- Japanese phrasebook or translation app (road signs in rural areas may be in Japanese only)
Limitations de Vitesse
Zones Urbaines
km/h
Routes
km/h
Autoroutes
km/h
Péages
Modes de Paiement
Coût Moyen
¥500–10,000+ depending on distance; Tokyo to Osaka via expressway costs approximately ¥8,000–12,000
Japan has extensive toll expressways operated by NEXCO. The ETC (Electronic Toll Collection) system offers discounts of up to 30% compared to cash payments. Rental cars usually come with ETC card readers. Late-night discounts (midnight to 4 AM) of 30% apply on most expressways.
Stationnement
Couleurs des Lignes
Conseils
- Use coin parking lots (コインパーキング) — barriers lock your car in place and you pay at a machine when leaving
- Many convenience stores and shopping centers offer free parking for customers
- In major cities like Tokyo and Osaka, parking enforcement is very strict — illegally parked cars are ticketed within minutes
- Never double-park — strictly enforced
Coût Moyen: ¥200–600/hour in city centers; ¥1,500–3,000/day in urban parking garages; cheaper in rural areas
Erreurs Courantes des Touristes
- 1Forgetting to drive on the LEFT side of the road — Japan drives on the left, which is disorienting for visitors from right-hand traffic countries
- 2Bringing an IDP based on the 1968 Vienna Convention — Japan only accepts IDPs issued under the 1949 Geneva Convention
- 3Ignoring strict parking laws — parking on the street without a designated space can result in fines and your car being towed
- 4Running yellow/red lights — Japanese drivers are very rule-abiding and enforcement is strict
- 5Not stopping completely at railroad crossings (mandatory in Japan)
Amendes
Excès de Vitesse
¥9,000–¥35,000 for minor offenses (under 30 km/h over on regular roads); criminal prosecution for 30+ km/h over on regular roads or 40+ km/h over on expressways
Sans Ceinture
No monetary fine, but 1 demerit point on license (enforced for driver and all passengers)
Téléphone
¥18,000 for holding a phone; ¥30,000+ and possible criminal charges if it causes danger
Feu Rouge
¥9,000 (for ordinary vehicles) plus 2 demerit points
Stationnement
¥10,000–¥18,000 depending on vehicle size and zone
Prêt à Conduire en Japan?
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Contacts d'Urgence
Police
110
Ambulance
119
Pompiers
119
Dépannage
JAF (Japan Automobile Federation): #8139 from mobile phones — English support available 24/7
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