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Japan just made childbirth completely free as the country fights a birth rate crisis that refuses to slow down.
The government says another generation should not give up on having children because of hospital costs.
And now, one of the biggest financial fears around starting a family is being removed entirely.
Under the new reform backed by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government, childbirth costs will reportedly be fully covered.
No more partial support.
No more families paying huge delivery bills out of pocket.
• Delivery costs fully covered
• No direct childbirth hospital fees
• Expanded support from pregnancy through birth
• Final approval expected soon with cross-party backing
The old system already offered a ¥500,000 lump-sum payment.
But many families still ended up paying more.
Now Japan is trying something much bigger.
Not because it wants to.
Because the numbers are getting impossible to ignore.
Record-low births.
Delayed marriages.
Young couples exhausted by work, housing costs, and economic pressure.
The government believes removing the financial burden could help families say yes to children again.
But many people are asking a harder question now:
If people still do not have time, stability, or hope for the future, will free childbirth alone really change anything?
The government says another generation should not give up on having children because of hospital costs.
And now, one of the biggest financial fears around starting a family is being removed entirely.
Under the new reform backed by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government, childbirth costs will reportedly be fully covered.
No more partial support.
No more families paying huge delivery bills out of pocket.
• Delivery costs fully covered
• No direct childbirth hospital fees
• Expanded support from pregnancy through birth
• Final approval expected soon with cross-party backing
The old system already offered a ¥500,000 lump-sum payment.
But many families still ended up paying more.
Now Japan is trying something much bigger.
Not because it wants to.
Because the numbers are getting impossible to ignore.
Record-low births.
Delayed marriages.
Young couples exhausted by work, housing costs, and economic pressure.
The government believes removing the financial burden could help families say yes to children again.
But many people are asking a harder question now:
If people still do not have time, stability, or hope for the future, will free childbirth alone really change anything?