If you are curious about Japanese school life, you have probably heard the word 部活 (bukatsu) — but what is the difference between 部活, クラブ (kurabu), and サークル (sākuru)? Each one describes a different type of group activity in Japan, and understanding the distinction tells you a lot about Japanese school and university culture.
Yuka: What’s the difference between 部活, クラブ, and サークル?


Rei: 部活 and クラブ are the same — serious school clubs with a teacher advisor, often practicing daily. サークル is a casual hobby group, mostly at university level, with much more flexibility.
At a Glance: 部活 vs クラブ vs サークル
| Term | Level | Commitment | Advisor | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 部活 / クラブ | Junior/Senior high school | Official, serious, daily practice | Teacher advisor required | 野球部, テニス部 |
| サークル | University / College | Casual hobby group, flexible schedule | No advisor needed | 英語サークル, 写真サークル |
部活 and クラブ — Serious School Clubs
部活 is short for 部活動 (club activity). 部活 and クラブ mean exactly the same thing — both refer to official extracurricular clubs at junior high or high school. They require a faculty advisor, often meet five days a week, and can be intensely competitive. Joining is described naturally as 部活/クラブに入る (join a club) rather than the stiffer 所属する.


たつやってさぁ、中学時代は何の部活してたの? (Hey Tatsuya, what club did you do in junior high?)


3年間、野球部だったよ! (I was on the baseball team for three years!)


ゆかちゃん、高校時代って何のクラブに入ってたの? (Yuka, what club did you join in high school?)


高校のバレーボール部に入ってたよ! (I was in the volleyball club!)
サークル — Casual University Hobby Groups
サークル (from the English “circle”) refers to informal hobby groups at the university level. Unlike 部活, there is no required faculty advisor, no daily practice, and much lower pressure. サークル might meet once a week and are purely for fun. They are a major part of Japanese university social life.


大学時代は英語サークルだったよ! (I was in an English conversation group in college!)


写真サークルに入らない? (Why don’t you join the photography group?)
運動部 — Sports Clubs
Sports clubs (運動部) are some of the most popular at Japanese schools. Here is a selection of common ones:
- 野球部 — baseball team
- 水泳部 — swim team
- サッカー部 — soccer team
- バレーボール部 — volleyball team
- バスケットボール部 — basketball team
- テニス部 — tennis team
- 剣道部 — kendo team
- 柔道部 — judo team
- 陸上部 — track and field team
- ダンス部 — dance team
文化部 — Culture Clubs
Culture clubs (文化部) cover arts, crafts, and academic interests. Popular ones include:
- 美術部 — art club
- 吹奏楽部 — school band
- 茶道部 — tea ceremony club
- 演劇部 — drama club
- 英語部 — English club
- 漫画研究部 — manga club
- 写真部 — photography club
- アニメ部 — anime club
- 将棋部 — shogi (Japanese chess) club
- 合唱部 — choir
Quick Quiz
True or False?
1. 部活 and クラブ mean the same thing at school level. → True
2. サークル is a serious, teacher-supervised club. → False — it’s a casual hobby group with no required advisor.
3. The natural way to say “join a club” is 部活に入る. → True
部活 and クラブ are the serious school clubs that shape many Japanese students’ daily lives; サークル is the laid-back university alternative. Both are central to Japanese social culture at their respective stages.
📖 Want to take your Japanese further? Practice speaking with a professional Japanese tutor on italki — affordable 1-on-1 online lessons at your own pace.
\ Learn more! /





Comments