Lost Something in Japan? How the Koban Lost-and-Found System Works

Updated:

Quick answer

Report it at the nearest koban (police box), or to the operator where you lost it, such as the train line or taxi company. Found items are commonly handed in and forwarded to a central police lost-and-found center. Report quickly and keep your case details.

Where do I start when I lose something in Japan?

Where you report depends on where you lost the item. The general principle: report to the operator of the place you lost it (train, taxi, shop) first, and use the nearest koban (police box) for items lost in public or when you are not sure. Use this quick guide.

Where you lost itReport to first (as of June 2026)
On a train or at a stationThe railway operator’s lost-and-found desk
In a taxiThe taxi company on your receipt, or the ride app
In a shop, cafe, or hotelThat business directly
On the street or unsureThe nearest koban (police box)
A passport (special case)Police, then your embassy — see the passport guide

Japan has a strong culture of handing in found property, so reporting quickly and to the right place gives you a genuine chance of recovery.

How does the koban and central lost-and-found system work?

When someone finds an item, they commonly take it to a koban. Police log it and, if it is not claimed locally, forward it to a regional central lost-and-found center. That means your item may travel through the system over a few days.

StageWhat happens (as of June 2026)
FoundA passer-by hands the item to a koban or station
LoggedPolice or staff record a description, date, and place
ForwardedUnclaimed items move to a central police lost-and-found center
ClaimedYou collect it with ID after a match is confirmed

Because items move from local to central holding, check back over several days, not just once. When you report a lost item, you create a record that staff can match against found property as it arrives.

How do I report it step by step?

  1. Note the details. Write down what you lost, plus the time, place, line or company, and direction of travel. Precise details speed up a match.
  2. Go to the right place. Use the table above. For a train, ask station staff for the lost-and-found contact; for a taxi, check your receipt for the company name and number.
  3. File the report. At a koban, describe the item and where you lost it. Staff create a record. Ask whether the item should be claimed at the koban, a station office, or a central center.
  4. Get a reference. Ask for any case or reference number and the contact details to follow up.
  5. Follow up over a few days. Items can take time to reach central holding. Check back rather than assuming it is gone after one try.
  6. Bring ID to collect. You will need identification to prove the item is yours when claiming it.

If language is a barrier, the Japan Visitor Hotline (JNTO) can help in English and guide you to the right contact.

Who do I contact for trains and taxis specifically?

The contact differs by operator, but the path to find it is consistent. As of June 2026:

Lost whereHow to find the contact
Major railway (JR, metro, private line)Ask station staff, or search the operator’s official lost-property page
Booked taxi via appUse the app’s trip history and help/support function
Street taxiRead the receipt for the company name and phone number
BusContact the bus operator named on the stop or ticket
No receipt or detailsAsk a koban or the visitor hotline to point you to the operator

Keeping receipts and using ride apps with trip history makes recovery far easier, because they identify the exact vehicle or service.

Quick reference: lost and found in Japan at a glance

TopicDetail (as of June 2026)
Public or unsureNearest koban (police box)
TrainRailway operator’s lost-and-found desk
TaxiCompany on the receipt, or the ride app
Shop/hotelThe business directly
Item routingLocal koban → central police lost-and-found
Follow-upCheck back over several days
To collectBring ID
Help in EnglishJapan Visitor Hotline (JNTO)

What should I do differently for urgent items?

Some losses need faster, parallel action:

Lost itemExtra step
PassportReport to police, then contact your embassy for travel documents
Credit/debit cardsCall your card issuer to freeze them immediately
PhoneUse remote-lock/find features; report to the operator and koban
Hotel key/room cardTell the hotel front desk at once

For a wallet, freeze any cards first, then file the lost report; the cash and the wallet itself can often still come back. Acting quickly protects you while the lost-and-found system does its work. If you are unsure where to go, a koban is always a safe first stop.

FAQ

What is a koban and how does it help with lost items?

A koban is a small neighborhood police box found near stations and busy areas across Japan. As of June 2026, people who find lost items often hand them in at a koban, and police log and forward them to a central lost-and-found center. You can both report a lost item and check for found items at a koban. Many have staff who can help with basic English or use translation.

Where do I report something lost on a train?

Contact the railway operator for the line you were on, not the police, first. As of June 2026, each major railway has a lost-and-found desk or phone line, and station staff can tell you how to reach it. Have your travel time, line, and direction ready. If it is not found on the line within a set period, it is usually passed to the police lost-and-found center.

How do I find something left in a taxi?

If you booked through a ride app, use the app's help or trip history to identify the car and contact the operator. As of June 2026, for a street taxi, look at your receipt, which shows the taxi company and a number; call that company. If you have no receipt, the regional taxi association may be able to help if you remember the company or area.

Will I really get my lost wallet back in Japan?

Often, yes. Japan is known for a high rate of returned lost property, including wallets with cash. As of June 2026, there is no guarantee, but reporting quickly at a koban or to the relevant operator gives you the best chance. Acting the same day helps, as found items move through the system over the following days.

Do I need to report a lost passport differently?

Yes. A lost passport is more urgent and involves the police and your embassy, not just the lost-and-found process. Report it to the police to get a report, then contact your embassy or consulate for emergency travel documents. See our dedicated guide on a lost passport in Japan for the full steps.