LO-PAL
Living GuideTravel Guide
Ask for Free
Living GuideTravel Guide
🇯🇵 日本語🇺🇸 English🇨🇳 中文🇻🇳 Tiếng Việt🇧🇷 Português🇰🇷 한국어🇳🇵 नेपाली🇵🇭 Tagalog🇮🇩 Bahasa Indonesia🇪🇸 Español🇹🇭 ไทย🇲🇲 မြန်မာ
Guide/Earthquake in Japan? What Tourists Should Do Now (2026)
4 min read
April 10, 2026(Updated: April 11, 2026)

Earthquake in Japan? What Tourists Should Do Now (2026)

Japan averages over 1,500 felt earthquakes per year. If the ground starts shaking: do NOT run outside. Drop under a table, cover your head, hold on. This guide covers what to do during and after an earthquake, tsunami warnings, evacuation shelters, and how to contact family.

Earthquake in Japan? What Tourists Should Do Now (2026)
Back to Complete Guide:Japan Travel Safety Guide (2026): When Things Go Wrong

Table of Contents

  1. 1During the earthquake: what to do in the first 30 seconds
  2. 2After the earthquake: the first 10 minutes
  3. 3Understanding Japan's earthquake intensity scale
  4. 4Aftershocks: they keep coming
  5. 5The Nankai Trough: Japan's biggest concern
  6. 6Communicating with family back home
  7. 7Quick Japanese for earthquake emergencies

If the ground starts shaking right now: Do NOT run outside. Drop under the nearest table, cover your head, hold on. Shaking usually lasts 10-30 seconds. After it stops: check your phone for tsunami warnings (your phone will blast an alarm if one is issued), move away from the coast if you're near it, and head to the nearest evacuation shelter if the building is damaged. Japan's buildings are designed for earthquakes — you're safer inside than running through falling debris.

Information current as of April 2026 based on the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA), Cabinet Office disaster prevention, and the Fire and Disaster Management Agency (FDMA). I'm Kanaya, founder of LO-PAL. I was in Osaka during the 2018 earthquake — the first thing I noticed was that the foreigners I knew had no idea what the alarm on their phone meant or what to do next. That's why this guide exists.

During the earthquake: what to do in the first 30 seconds

If you're inside a building

  1. Drop, Cover, Hold On. Get under a sturdy table or desk. Cover your head and neck. Hold on until shaking stops.
  2. Stay away from windows, mirrors, and heavy furniture that could fall or shatter.
  3. Do NOT use elevators. If you're in one when shaking starts, press all floor buttons — get out at the first floor that opens.
  4. Do NOT run outside. Falling glass, signs, and tiles are the biggest danger. Modern Japanese buildings (built after 1981) are designed to withstand major earthquakes.

If you're outside

  1. Move to an open area away from buildings, power lines, and vending machines.
  2. Protect your head with your bag or hands — falling objects are the primary cause of earthquake injuries.
  3. Watch for block walls (ブロック塀). Older concrete block walls are one of the most dangerous structures in an earthquake — they collapse without warning. The 2018 Osaka earthquake killed a child when a school's block wall collapsed.

If you're on a train

Japan's rail system has seismic sensors that automatically stop all trains when an earthquake is detected. You may feel a sudden hard brake before you feel the shaking itself. Hold the handrails tightly and follow crew instructions. Do NOT try to exit the train unless directed by staff — the tracks may be damaged or electrified.

If you're driving

  1. Slow down gradually and pull to the left side of the road.
  2. Stay in the car until shaking stops — the car's suspension absorbs a lot of the shaking.
  3. Leave your keys in the ignition if you need to abandon the car — emergency vehicles may need to move it.

After the earthquake: the first 10 minutes

Check for tsunami warnings immediately

This is the most important step. Japan's Earthquake Early Warning (緊急地震速報) and tsunami warning system will send an alert directly to your phone — a loud, unmistakable alarm sound that overrides silent mode. The alert arrives in Japanese, but the word 津波 (tsunami) and the alarm tone are unmistakable.

If you're near the coast and a tsunami warning is issued: Move to high ground immediately. Don't wait. Don't go to the beach to watch. Tsunami waves arrive within minutes of an offshore earthquake. Head for terrain at least 10 meters above sea level or go to the 3rd floor or higher of a reinforced concrete building.

Tsunami evacuation buildings (津波避難ビル) are marked with a blue sign showing a wave and an upward arrow. Many coastal cities in Japan have them on every block near the shore.

Download these apps if you haven't already

AppLanguagesBest for
Safety Tips (Japan Tourism Agency)15 languagesEarthquake, tsunami, weather alerts with English push notifications
NHK WorldEnglish + 17 languagesLive earthquake coverage, news updates
Google MapsAllFinding nearby evacuation shelters ("避難所" in search)

Find an evacuation shelter if needed

Evacuation shelters (避難所, hinanjo) are located at schools, community centers, and parks throughout Japan. They're open to everyone — including tourists. Look for the green signs with a running figure and an arrow. You can also:

  • Search Google Maps for 避難所 (hinanjo)
  • Ask at any convenience store — staff will know the nearest shelter
  • Check the Safety Tips app, which shows nearby shelters on a map

What to bring if you evacuate: passport, phone, charger, water, medications, cash (ATMs may be down). Shelters provide basic supplies but you may wait hours before food is distributed.

Understanding Japan's earthquake intensity scale

Japan uses its own seismic intensity scale (震度, shindo), which measures what you actually feel at your location — not the earthquake's magnitude. This is what local warnings use:

ShindoWhat you feelWhat to do
1-2Slight shaking, like a truck passingNothing — this happens daily in Japan
3Noticeable swaying, hanging objects moveStay alert, no action needed
4Strong shaking, unstable objects fallGet under a table, hold on
5 LowerDifficult to walk, furniture slidesDrop, cover, hold on. Check tsunami warnings after.
5 UpperImpossible to stand without holding somethingSerious. Prepare to evacuate if building is damaged.
6 LowerThrown off your feet, doors jamEvacuate after shaking stops if safe. Expect aftershocks.
6 Upper - 7Buildings may collapse, impossible to moveMajor earthquake. Follow all evacuation orders.

Aftershocks: they keep coming

After a significant earthquake, expect aftershocks for hours or days. Some aftershocks can be nearly as strong as the original quake. The 2024 Noto Peninsula earthquake (M7.6) in Ishikawa Prefecture was followed by hundreds of aftershocks over the following weeks, some above shindo 5.

Do NOT re-enter a damaged building even if shaking has stopped. Aftershocks can cause weakened structures to collapse.

The Nankai Trough: Japan's biggest concern

The Japanese government estimates approximately an 80% probability of a magnitude 8-9 earthquake along the Nankai Trough (南海トラフ) within the next 30 years. This would affect the Pacific coast from Shizuoka to Kyushu — including Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe. In August 2024, the JMA issued the first-ever "Nankai Trough Earthquake Extra Information" advisory after a M7.1 earthquake off Miyazaki, urging heightened preparedness for one week.

For tourists: this doesn't mean you shouldn't visit Japan. It means you should know the drill. The 30 seconds of knowledge in the first section of this guide could be the difference that matters.

Communicating with family back home

After a major earthquake, phone networks get jammed. Here's the priority order for contacting family:

  1. Messaging apps (LINE, WhatsApp, iMessage) — use much less bandwidth than voice calls
  2. Social media — post a status update on Facebook/X/Instagram so multiple people see it at once
  3. Google/Apple emergency contact features — "mark yourself safe" features activate after major disasters
  4. Phone calls — try these last, as voice networks are the first to jam

Register with your country's embassy in Japan before your trip. The U.S. has the STEP program, the UK has FCDO registration, and most countries have similar services. This lets your government contact you and send evacuation information if needed.

Quick Japanese for earthquake emergencies

JapaneseRomanizationMeaning
地震 (じしん)jishinearthquake
津波tsunamitsunami
避難所hinanjoevacuation shelter
高台に逃げてtakadai ni nigeterun to high ground
大丈夫ですかdaijoubu desu kaare you okay?
助けてくださいtasukete kudasaiplease help me
余震yoshinaftershock

Caught in an earthquake in Japan and need help communicating? Post on LO-PAL for free — a local helper can check on you, help you navigate evacuation shelters, or translate with emergency services.

This guide is part of our Japan Travel Safety Guide.

Written by

Taku Kanaya
Taku Kanaya

Founder, LO-PAL

Former Medical Coordinator for Foreign Patients (Ministry of Health programme) and legal affairs professional. Built LO-PAL from firsthand experience navigating life abroad.

Written with partial AI assistance

Read full bio →

Table of Contents

  1. During the earthquake: what to do in the first 30 seconds
  2. After the earthquake: the first 10 minutes
  3. Understanding Japan's earthquake intensity scale
  4. Aftershocks: they keep coming
  5. The Nankai Trough: Japan's biggest concern
  6. Communicating with family back home
  7. Quick Japanese for earthquake emergencies

Related Articles

How to File a Police Report in Japan as a Foreigner (2026)

How to File a Police Report in Japan as a Foreigner (2026)

Step-by-step guide to filing a police report at a koban or police station in Japan: lost property, theft, accidents. What to bring, what to say, and how to get the certificate your insurance needs.

3 months ago
Japan Travel Safety Guide (2026): When Things Go Wrong

Japan Travel Safety Guide (2026): When Things Go Wrong

Complete guide to handling emergencies in Japan as a foreigner: lost passport, stolen phone, car accidents, earthquakes, typhoons, police reports, and more.

3 months ago

Post your question for free. Local Japanese people in your area will answer. You only pay if you request a task

Ask a Local — It's Free

Ask for Free
← Back to articles
LP
LO-PAL

Ask a local in Japan. Get help with daily life, travel, and more.

Guides

  • Living Guide
  • Travel Guide
  • About the Founder

Languages

  • 🇯🇵 日本語
  • 🇺🇸 English
  • 🇨🇳 中文
  • 🇻🇳 Tiếng Việt
  • 🇧🇷 Português
  • 🇰🇷 한국어
  • Content Terms & Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2026 INNIT LLC (LO-PAL). All rights reserved.

Struggling with this?

Ask a local for free

Ask a local for free

Ask for Free