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Sahod sa industriya ng Medical, healthcare and welfare (Japan)

Karaniwang taunang kita sa industriya ng Medical, healthcare and welfare sa Japan, ayon sa edad at kasarian. Pinagmulan: Basic Survey on Wage Structure (e-Stat).

Avg. annual income
¥4,553,000
4,546,730 workers in survey
vs national average
-10.3%
National: ¥5,078,000
JSIC
P
Japanese Standard Industrial Classification

Medical, healthcare and welfare earnings curve by age

Axis: ¥10k
Estimated annual income by age band
Age bandTotal annualMale annualFemale annual
~19¥2,472,000¥2,296,000¥2,585,000
20-24¥3,378,000¥3,401,000¥3,372,000
25-29¥4,065,000¥4,267,000¥3,980,000
30-34¥4,257,000¥4,695,000¥4,008,000
35-39¥4,536,000¥5,162,000¥4,160,000
40-44¥4,817,000¥5,698,000¥4,326,000
45-49¥4,888,000¥5,886,000¥4,463,000
50-54¥4,979,000¥6,466,000¥4,502,000
55-59¥5,063,000¥6,748,000¥4,573,000
60-64¥4,633,000¥6,282,000¥4,007,000
65~¥4,541,000¥6,488,000¥3,492,000

How to read the Medical, healthcare and welfare sector data

Overview

The weighted-average annual income for Medical, healthcare and welfare sector is ¥4,553,000 (sample: 4,546,730 workers). That is −10.3% below the national average. The figure is computed across age bands from the official wage census, capturing real working conditions across gender, industry, and company size.

Age-band peak

Medical, healthcare and welfare sector earnings peak in the 55-59 age band at ¥5,063,000. The steepest jump occurs in the 20-24 band — typically a milestone where compensation accelerates. A peak that arrives early signals performance-driven pay; a later peak suggests stronger seniority weighting.

Gender gap (30s)

In the 30-34 age band for Medical, healthcare and welfare sector, the female-to-male income ratio is 85.4% — a gap of 14.6 pp. Japan's overall norm in this band is 75–80%; values below indicate a wider gap, values above indicate parity. Occupational mix (field vs. office), employment-type imbalance, and post-maternity career paths all contribute.

Earnings curve

Medical, healthcare and welfare sector age-band curve is classified as inverted-U (mid-career peak). The inverted-U is the Japanese baseline (peak just before retirement, then re-employment dip). A rising curve means specialization compounds with experience; a flat curve means experience has limited compensation impact.

Source: Basic Survey on Wage Structure (Japan, MHLW). Computed as a workerCount-weighted average across 5-year age bands. Cells suppressed for insufficient sample are excluded — no fallback is applied here.

Medical, healthcare and welfare vs nationwide

Annual income difference between Medical, healthcare and welfare and the national average.
AgeMedical, healthcare and welfareAll industriesDiff%
~19¥247万¥262万¥-15万-5.7%
20-24¥338万¥335万+¥3万+0.7%
25-29¥407万¥415万¥-8万-1.9%
30-34¥426万¥465万¥-39万-8.4%
35-39¥454万¥514万¥-60万-11.7%
40-44¥482万¥548万¥-67万-12.2%
45-49¥489万¥576万¥-87万-15.1%
50-54¥498万¥600万¥-102万-17.0%
55-59¥506万¥607万¥-100万-16.5%
60-64¥463万¥462万+¥1万+0.2%
65~¥454万¥367万+¥87万+23.8%

Run your own calculation (preset to Medical, healthcare and welfare)

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