JLPT Prep โ
The JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test) is the standard measure of Japanese ability for non-native speakers. Five levels: N5 (easiest) to N1 (hardest). Held twice a year (July and December) in Japan, once or twice a year overseas.
Official Sites โ
- JLPT Official (Japan) - Official global JLPT site with test info, dates, and sample questions.
- JEES JLPT (Japan) - Japan Educational Exchanges and Services. Handles registration in Japan.
- JLPT United States - U.S. registration via the American Association of Teachers of Japanese.
Free Online Resources โ
- Tofugu JLPT Resources - Long-running blog with the best curated JLPT guides for every level.
- Tae Kim's Guide to Japanese Grammar - Free, comprehensive Japanese grammar guide. Great foundation for any JLPT level.
- Bunpro - Grammar SRS tool organized by JLPT level. Free trial, paid subscription.
- Wanikani - Kanji and vocabulary SRS, covers all JLPT levels. Three free levels then paid.
- Anki - Flashcard app with shared decks for every JLPT level.
- Kanji Garden - Free kanji learning with built-in JLPT decks.
- JLPT Sensei - Free grammar, vocab, and kanji lists by level.
- Nihongo no Mori (YouTube) - Free JLPT lectures in Japanese, recommended for N3 and up.
Practice Tests โ
- JLPT Practice Tests (Official) - Free official sample questions for all levels.
- JLPT Bootcamp - Practice tests and prep advice for all levels.
- Try N4-N1 - Popular grammar workbook series by level.
Textbooks (Most Recommended) โ
- Genki I & II - Standard beginner Japanese textbook used by universities worldwide. Roughly N5 to N4.
- Tobira - Intermediate textbook, roughly N3.
- Shin Kanzen Master - The de facto JLPT prep series, available for every level (grammar, reading, listening, kanji, vocab).
- Sou Matome - Lighter and faster JLPT series with daily lessons. Available for every level.
- Nihongo So-matome - Same as Sou Matome above.
Apps โ
- Renshuu - Free comprehensive Japanese learning app with JLPT decks.
- Kanji Study (Android) - Highly rated kanji app organized by JLPT level.
- Drops - Vocabulary app with Japanese support.
- Migii JLPT - Mobile JLPT practice test app.
Pitch Accent & Pronunciation โ
- Kotu.io - Free pitch accent training tool.
- Dogen (YouTube) - Famous pronunciation and pitch accent teacher.
Level-by-Level Guide โ
N5 โ
Basic survival Japanese. ~100 kanji, ~800 vocab. Start with Genki I or a beginner app like Renshuu.
N4 โ
Comfortable with basic conversations. ~300 kanji, ~1500 vocab. Finish Genki II.
N3 โ
Intermediate. Can read manga, watch easy anime. ~650 kanji, ~3700 vocab. Tobira or Shin Kanzen N3.
N2 โ
Business-functional. Required for many jobs that aren't strictly bilingual. ~1000 kanji, ~6000 vocab.
N1 โ
Near-fluent. Required for some advanced/professional jobs and Japanese university programs. ~2000 kanji, ~10000 vocab.
TIP
N2 is often the practical career threshold. N1 is impressive but not required for most jobs. Choose your target based on goals, not pride.
