Hiragana Stroke Order: How to Write Every Character Correctly

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Why Stroke Order Matters in Japanese

You might wonder — does the order you draw strokes really matter? For hiragana, the answer is yes. Correct stroke order makes your handwriting look natural, helps you write faster, and is expected in formal settings like school or business. Most importantly, the “flow” of a character makes sense when strokes go in the correct direction.

Japanese children learn hiragana in school with strict stroke-order drills. As a learner, following the same rules will build muscle memory that makes writing feel smooth rather than awkward.

The Two Golden Rules of Stroke Order

Before drilling individual characters, memorise these two rules — they apply to almost every hiragana character:

  • Top to bottom — upper strokes come before lower strokes.
  • Left to right — left strokes come before right strokes.

When a character has a single flowing curve (like or ), the curve usually starts from the top-left and moves clockwise or sweeps right.

Vowel Row (あいうえお) Stroke Order

The five vowels are the foundation of hiragana. Here is how to write each one:

CharacterStrokesKey tip
3Horizontal line → vertical with curve → final enclosing loop, clockwise.
2Left short stroke down → right longer stroke curving left at bottom.
2Small top dot → main curved body opening downward.
2Horizontal bar → vertical stroke crossing it, flaring right at bottom.
3Horizontal → vertical drop → third curving stroke crossing the vertical.

K, S, T, N Rows — Stroke Counts and Tips

These rows contain the most common consonants. Pay attention to characters that beginners often write backwards:

CharacterStrokesTip
3Two left-angled strokes → final curving stroke going right.
4Two horizontals → vertical crossing → curving bottom stroke.
2Horizontal bar → a long stroke that curves right and under.
1Single stroke: start top, drop straight, then curve right like a fishhook.
4Horizontal → vertical crossing → two bottom strokes completing the form.
2Short angled stroke → a big clockwise loop.
1One quick rightward then downward sweep — like a comma.
4Horizontal → angled stroke → loop stroke → final rightward hook.
3Vertical → horizontal extending right → separate bottom horizontal.

H, M, Y, R, W Rows — Often Tricky for Beginners

These rows have some of the trickier characters. Focus on は, ほ, も, る, れ — beginners often get the direction wrong.

CharacterStrokesTip
3Vertical → short horizontal angled → final curve going right.
1One stroke: loop opening to the right.
4Top stroke → then three separate strokes making the open bottom.
4Like は but with an extra enclosed stroke at bottom right.
3Horizontal → another horizontal → a long sweeping vertical-right curve.
3Diagonal left stroke → vertical-right hook → final horizontal stroke.
2Left loop → right vertical stroke.
1One stroke: loop that spirals inward — do NOT lift the pen.
2Vertical → main curving stroke that crosses, then loops right.
2Vertical → curving stroke going right like れ but no cross.
3Horizontal → horizontal → curved body. Only used as a particle.
1One stroke: a small rightward hook then a sweeping left-down curve.

Practice Routine: How to Drill Stroke Order

Knowing the rules is one thing — building muscle memory takes repetition. Use this simple routine:

  1. Watch first — look up a stroke-order animation (many free sites and apps show these). Apps like Kanji Study and Obenkyo include hiragana stroke-order animations.
  2. Trace then copy — trace on paper 3 times, then write from memory 5 times.
  3. One row per day — don’t try to memorise all 46 characters at once.
  4. Self-test — write the row without looking, then check against the correct order.

Focus on getting the direction correct, not on making it look beautiful at first. Speed and beauty come naturally after the correct muscle memory is set.

Yuka & Rei Practise Stroke Order

Learning kana feels abstract until you see how real learners talk about it. Here is Yuka working through the tricky parts — and Rei making the explanations click. Their questions are probably the same ones you have.

Yuka

Rei, does stroke order actually matter for hiragana? I just draw the shapes however feels natural.

Rei

It matters more than you’d think! Correct stroke order makes your handwriting more natural and legible — the same reason Japanese calligraphers follow strict rules. Also, when writing quickly, correct order produces the right shape automatically. Wrong order creates awkward angles that look ‘foreign.’

Yuka

Any general rules for stroke order?

Rei

Three main principles: 1. Top to bottom — upper strokes before lower. 2. Left to right — left strokes before right. 3. Horizontal before vertical when they cross. Most hiragana follow these rules. Exceptions exist, but these rules get you 80% of the way there.

5 Practice Examples — Read These Aloud

These examples use the characters from this article in real words. Say each one aloud and try to recall the article’s rules as you read.

  1. — 4 strokes: top horizontal, second horizontal, left diagonal, vertical with sweep
  2. — 3 strokes: horizontal, then the cross-shaped bottom part
  3. — 4 strokes: left stroke, cross structure, loop at right
  4. — 3 strokes: horizontal, horizontal, then the sweeping vertical
  5. Practice tip: Use the NHK World kana writing tool or a hiragana writing worksheet to see animated stroke order.

Your Turn! Write Your Own Example in the Comments

The fastest way to remember kana is to write words you already know in Japanese script. Try writing your name, your hometown, or your favourite food using the characters from this article.

Share what you wrote in the comments — other learners will see it, and writing for an audience makes the learning stick twice as fast. Log in to save your comment history and join the Top Commenters ranking!

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