Both ために and ように express purpose in Japanese, but they are NOT interchangeable. The JLPT N4 tests this distinction regularly. This guide explains when to use each one with clear rules and examples.
| Pattern | Meaning | Subject of Purpose Clause | Verb Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vるために | In order to do V (intentional action) | Same as main clause | Volitional (wilful action) |
| Nのために | For the sake of N | Any | Noun phrase |
| Vるように | So that V (state/ability/goal) | Can differ | Non-volitional, potential, negative |
ために: Intentional Action for a Goal
ために expresses a deliberate, intentional purpose. The subject performs a wilful action to achieve a goal.


日本語を上手になるために、毎日練習しています。
(In order to get better at Japanese, I practice every day.)




偉い!続けることが大事だよね。
(Amazing! Consistency is what matters.)
| Sentence | Translation |
|---|---|
| 試験に合格するために、頑張っています。 | I’m working hard in order to pass the exam. |
| 健康のために、野菜を食べています。 | I eat vegetables for my health. |
| 家族のために、働いています。 | I work for the sake of my family. |
ように: Non-Volitional Goals and States
ように is used when the goal is a state, ability, or result — not a deliberate action. It often appears with potential verbs, negative verbs, or verbs of state.




漢字を覚えられるように、毎日書いています。
(I write every day so that I can remember kanji.)




なるほど。「覚えられる」は可能形だね。
(I see. 覚えられる is the potential form, right.)
| Sentence | Translation | Key Signal |
|---|---|---|
| 遅刻しないように、早く起きる。 | I wake up early so that I won’t be late. | Negative verb |
| 日本語が話せるように、練習する。 | I practice so that I can speak Japanese. | Potential verb |
| 忘れないように、メモしておく。 | I’ll take notes so I don’t forget. | Negative |
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Context | ために | ように |
|---|---|---|
| Goal is an action | ✓ Natural | ✗ Unnatural |
| Goal is a state/ability | ✗ Unnatural | ✓ Natural |
| Subject can differ between clauses | ✗ Must be same | ✓ Can differ |
| With potential form (〜られる) | ✗ Not used | ✓ Common |
| With negative (〜ない) | Rare | ✓ Very common |




日本へ行くために貯金しています。
(I’m saving money in order to go to Japan.)




日本語が通じるように練習しています。
(I practice so that my Japanese will be understood.)
When Both Seem Possible
With some verbs, both patterns are grammatically possible but mean slightly different things:
| Sentence | Nuance |
|---|---|
| 日本語を話すために練習する。 | Practicing as the means; speaking is the deliberate goal |
| 日本語が話せるように練習する。 | Practicing so that the ability to speak develops (focus on outcome state) |
JLPT N4 Test Traps
| Trap | Rule |
|---|---|
| Using ために with potential form | Use ように with 〜られる |
| Using ために with negative purpose | Use ように with 〜ないように |
| Different subjects with ために | Different subjects require ように |




子供が安心できるように、そばにいます。
(I stay nearby so that my child can feel safe.)




主語が違うから「ように」だね!
(The subjects are different, so it’s ように!)
Quick Quiz
Choose ために or ように:
1. 病気にならない _____、手を洗う。(I wash my hands so I won’t get sick.)
→ ように
2. 医者になる _____、医学部に入った。(I entered medical school in order to become a doctor.)
→ ために
3. 日本語が読める _____、漢字を勉強している。(I study kanji so that I can read Japanese.)
→ ように
Have a question about JLPT N4? Drop it in the comments below — Yuka reads every one! 💬
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