It is 9 pm, your child’s forehead is hot, and the pediatrician you trust is 9,000 km away. This is the moment a Disney trip stops being about ride strategies — and the moment almost no English-language Disney guide can help you.

We live in Urayasu, the city where Tokyo Disney Resort sits, and this is the same information we use for our own kids: where the night clinic is, which numbers to call, and how to get it all done in English. Information is based on our 2025–2026 research (sources: Urayasu City official pages); always confirm current hours before visiting.

If your child is unconscious, struggling to breathe, or badly injured, call 119 (ambulance) immediately. This guide helps you find care — it is not medical advice.

The numbers, in order of urgency

Situation Number Language / hours
Life-threatening emergency — ambulance 119 24/7. Speak slowly; say your location (“Urayasu, [hotel name]”)
Tourist helpline (medical help in English) Japan Visitor Hotline 050-3816-2787 24/7, English / Chinese / Korean (JNTO)
Should we call an ambulance? (consultation) #7119 (043-216-3668) 24/7, Japanese
Child-specific medical phone consultation #8000 (043-242-9939) Evenings & holidays, Japanese
Urayasu health helpline (for visitors staying in the city too) 0120-24-9250 24/7, free, Japanese

The practical reality: most local consultation lines are Japanese-only. Your two best tools as a visitor are the Japan Visitor Hotline (English, 24/7) and your hotel’s front desk — Maihama-area hotels handle sick-child situations regularly and can call clinics, explain symptoms and arrange a taxi. Do not hesitate to wake them up; this is normal in Japan.


Inside the parks: go to First Aid first

If your child feels unwell inside Tokyo Disneyland or DisneySea, go to the First Aid room (marked on the park map; cast members will guide you). It is staffed by nurses, free of charge, and they will help you judge whether you need a clinic or can rest and continue. Park staff can also call an ambulance if needed.


At night: the Urayasu Emergency Clinic

For fevers, stomach bugs and other sudden illness outside park hours, Urayasu City runs an Emergency Clinic (急病診療所, Kyubyo Shinryojo) — internal medicine and pediatrics, walk-in urgent care.

Night hours Every day 20:00–23:00
Daytime holidays Sundays, national holidays & year-end/New Year 10:00–17:00 (pediatrics on designated days)
Phone 047-381-9999 (answered during clinic hours only, Japanese — ask hotel staff to call first)
Address 1-2-5 Nekozane, Urayasu — Health Center 1F (Google Maps)
Getting there About 10–15 minutes by taxi from Maihama-area hotels — see our taxi guide
Payment Cash only. Prescriptions are limited to about one day’s medicine

Three things to know before you go:

  1. Call ahead (or have your hotel call) and describe the symptoms.
  2. This clinic handles first-response care — cuts, fractures, burns and eye injuries are referred to emergency hospitals instead. When in doubt about severity, use 119 or the Japan Visitor Hotline.
  3. Bring: cash, passport, any medicine your child is taking, and note the time symptoms started (a translation app screenshot works well).

Sudden toothache on a Sunday or holiday? The Holiday Emergency Dental Clinic in the same building (047-381-4749) does first-aid dental care 9:00–12:00 on Sundays, holidays and year-end/New Year.


What locals actually do: the prevention layer

  • Choose a hotel with a convenience store in or next to the building — night-time fever cooling sheets, drinks, and children’s supplies without leaving the property. Our family hotel guide lists them (Hilton Tokyo Bay’s 24-hour store, Hotel Dream Gate Maihama’s in-building NewDays, and more).
  • Drugstores (look for 薬局 / ドラッグストア signs) near Maihama, Shin-Urayasu and Urayasu stations stock children’s fever relief, oral rehydration drinks and thermometers. Pharmacists can help if you show a translation app.
  • Photograph your travel insurance certificate before the trip, and keep every clinic receipt — Japanese clinics issue itemized receipts suitable for claims.
  • A packed evening + a tired child = the classic fever setup. Building one slow morning into a multi-day itinerary is the cheapest medicine there is.

Summary

  1. Life-threatening → 119, immediately.
  2. Not sure what to do, need English → Japan Visitor Hotline 050-3816-2787 (24/7) or your hotel front desk.
  3. Fever or stomach bug at night → Urayasu Emergency Clinic, 20:00–23:00 nightly, cash only, call first.
  4. Inside the park → First Aid room.
  5. Prevention → a hotel with an in-house convenience store and a realistic schedule.

About this information: Clinic hours, phone services and conditions change. Confirm the latest information on Urayasu City's official website or via your hotel before visiting. This article is a guide to finding care, not a substitute for medical diagnosis or treatment.