You open your first hiragana workbook and immediately find an arrow diagram showing you how to draw あ in three precise strokes. You wonder: is this really necessary? You just want to read Japanese — do you actually need to follow a specific stroke order to do that? The short answer is: it depends entirely on what you want to do with Japanese. The longer answer is what this article is about.
Stroke order is one of those beginner topics that quietly eats hours of study time. Some learners obsess over it from day one. Others ignore it completely. Neither extreme serves you well. What serves you is knowing exactly how much stroke order matters for your specific goal — whether that’s passing JLPT N5, surviving a trip to Japan, reading manga, or eventually writing in a way that looks natural to native readers.
This article covers all three Japanese scripts — hiragana(ひらがな), katakana(カタカナ), and kanji(漢字)— and gives you a clear framework for deciding how much to invest in stroke order at each stage of learning. You will not find endless drills here. You will find a decision guide that helps you spend your study time where it actually counts.
| Goal | How Much Stroke Order You Need | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| JLPT N5 / N4 exam (reading focus) | Basic rules only — enough so your handwriting is legible on paper | Low |
| Reading manga, websites, or novels | None — stroke order does not affect reading at all | None |
| Typing Japanese on a phone or keyboard | None — input method handles everything | None |
| Living or working in Japan (daily writing) | Moderate — standard stroke order makes handwriting faster and more readable | Medium |
| Handwriting notes in class or at work | Moderate — same as above; speed matters here | Medium |
| Passing a Japanese handwriting or calligraphy course | High — correct stroke order is evaluated directly | High |
| Studying kanji to pass N3 and above | Medium — stroke order aids memory and writing speed at higher character counts | Medium |
What Stroke Order Actually Is (and What It Isn’t)
Stroke order refers to the sequence in which you draw the individual lines and curves that make up a Japanese character. Each stroke has a defined direction — you move from a specific starting point to a specific endpoint — and the strokes themselves are drawn in a particular sequence.
For example, the hiragana character き(ki)has four strokes. The “correct” order draws the two horizontal lines first, then the left curve, then the right curve with the hook. If you draw them in a different order, the finished character looks identical — but the physical process of writing it feels awkward, and at speed your characters can begin to look untidy or distorted.
Here is what stroke order is not: it is not a secret code that affects whether a character is recognized. It is not something native Japanese readers consciously evaluate when they read. It is not a prerequisite for learning to read Japanese. It is a handwriting convention — one that makes writing smoother, faster, and more consistent, especially when you are writing quickly by hand. Its value scales directly with how much you actually write by hand.
Stroke order exists for three practical reasons. First, it creates a consistent movement pattern that becomes automatic with practice, increasing writing speed. Second, the “natural” flow of strokes (mostly top-to-bottom, left-to-right, with specific exceptions) keeps characters balanced and proportional. Third, correct stroke order is the foundation of Japanese cursive writing styles, where strokes visibly connect — if your stroke order is wrong, your connected handwriting looks broken or unreadable.
Hiragana Stroke Order: How Much Does a Beginner Need?
Hiragana(ひらがな)is where most beginners encounter stroke order for the first time, usually in the form of worksheet arrows. The question at this stage is simple: should you follow those arrows carefully, or just get the shapes roughly right and move on?
The honest answer is that for pure reading ability, stroke order for hiragana does not matter at all. Reading hiragana is about recognizing shapes visually. How the shape was drawn has no bearing on whether you can recognize it later. If your goal is to read Japanese as fast as possible, you could learn hiragana shapes without ever touching a stroke order guide and lose nothing.
However, there is a good reason to learn basic hiragana stroke order even if your main goal is reading: writing aids memory. Research on language learning consistently shows that writing characters by hand — especially with correct stroke direction — strengthens visual memory for those characters. If you use stroke order worksheets in your first week of hiragana study, you are likely to remember the characters faster and confuse look-alike pairs (like ぬ and め, or は and ほ) less often.
The practical recommendation: spend two to three days practicing hiragana with correct stroke order, focusing on getting the direction of each stroke right (not perfecting speed or beauty). After that, shift your energy to reading practice. Do not spend a week on stroke order drills when you could be reading actual words.
The hiragana characters that most beginners find confusing for stroke order are き(ki), さ(sa), and な(na), each of which has a non-obvious stroke sequence. For these three, it is worth checking the correct order once and practicing it a handful of times. For the rest of hiragana, following the general rules — top to bottom, left to right — gets you close enough for early-stage handwriting.
ひらがなの書き順って、全部覚えないといけないの? (Do I really have to memorize the stroke order for every hiragana character?)


読むだけなら書き順は関係ないよ。でも、書いて練習すると文字を早く覚えられるから、最初の数日間だけやっておくといいと思う。 (If you only want to read, stroke order doesn’t matter. But writing by hand helps you remember the characters faster, so it’s worth doing for the first few days at least.)
Katakana Stroke Order: Even Less Critical Than Hiragana
Katakana(カタカナ)are the angular, geometric characters used primarily for loanwords (words borrowed from other languages), foreign names, and emphasis. Because katakana shapes are composed mostly of straight lines, their stroke order is simpler and more intuitive than hiragana.
For most beginners, katakana stroke order deserves even less attention than hiragana stroke order. The straight-line strokes of characters like ア, ナ, or テ tend to follow the top-to-bottom, left-to-right pattern naturally. If you apply those two principles, your katakana handwriting will be legible without consulting a stroke order guide for each character.
The characters that deserve a quick stroke order check are: ク(ku, two strokes in a non-obvious sequence), ヲ(wo, rarely written but non-intuitive), and ソ(so)vs. ン(n), which are visually similar but drawn differently. For the rest, follow your instincts guided by the general rules.
One additional point about katakana: because it is used heavily for loanwords, many early-stage learners interact with katakana primarily through reading menus, signs, and product labels rather than handwriting. If that is your main context, stroke order matters essentially zero for your immediate goals. Learn the shapes, focus on recognition speed, and come back to stroke order only if you start writing by hand regularly.
Kanji Stroke Order: The One Script Where the Rules Really Do Matter More
Kanji(漢字)are the meaning-based characters that form the backbone of written Japanese. There are around 2,136 kanji in the official “jōyō kanji” list used in everyday life, and each has a defined stroke order. Here, the calculation changes compared to hiragana and katakana.
The reason stroke order matters more for kanji than for kana has to do with complexity. A simple kanji like 一(one, 1 stroke)or 日(sun/day, 4 strokes)is easy to write naturally without a guide. But a kanji like 薬(medicine, 16 strokes)or 議(deliberation, 20 strokes)involves enough strokes that without a consistent order your character becomes visually chaotic and physically slow to write. Stroke order rules were developed specifically to make complex multi-stroke characters manageable.
That said, the investment in kanji stroke order should still scale with your goals. If you are studying kanji primarily for reading (which most learners below N3 are), stroke order is a “nice to know” rather than a “must know”. If you are writing kanji by hand regularly — in flashcard study, in a language class that requires handwriting, or in daily life in Japan — stroke order becomes genuinely important.
The most effective approach for beginners: learn the eight core stroke order rules (like “horizontal before vertical when they cross,” “left-to-right for parallel strokes,” “outside before inside before closing”) and apply them as heuristics. These rules cover the vast majority of kanji correctly, even when you have not specifically looked up a character’s stroke order. You will be correct about 80–90 percent of the time using rules alone, which is sufficient for most learning contexts below the N2 level.


漢字の書き順って、全部調べないといけないの?時間がかかりすぎる気がして…。 (Do I have to look up stroke order for every single kanji? That feels like it would take forever…)


全部は調べなくていいよ。基本ルール — たとえば「横から縦」「外から内」 — を覚えておけば、ほとんどの漢字に応用できる。書き順が特殊な字だけ確認すれば十分。 (You don’t need to look up every single one. If you learn the basic rules — like “horizontal before vertical” and “outside before inside” — you can apply them to most kanji. Just check the ones that are exceptions.)
The Core Stroke Order Rules That Cover Most Characters
Rather than looking up every character individually, learn these eight rules. They apply across hiragana, katakana, and kanji and will give you correct or near-correct stroke order for the majority of characters you encounter.
| Rule | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Top before bottom | When strokes are stacked vertically, draw the upper ones first | 三(three): first line, second line, third line, top to bottom |
| Left before right | When strokes are side by side, draw the left-side ones first | 川(river): left stroke, middle stroke, right stroke |
| Horizontal before vertical (when they cross) | Draw horizontal strokes before the vertical stroke that crosses them | 十(ten): horizontal bar first, then the vertical stroke through it |
| Diagonal strokes: left-falling before right-falling | A left-falling slash is drawn before a right-falling slash | 文(letter/writing): left diagonal before right diagonal |
| Centre before outer sides (for vertically symmetric shapes) | The central vertical stroke comes before the left and right flanking strokes | 小(small): centre stroke first, then left, then right |
| Enclosing frame before contents | Draw the surrounding box first (minus the closing bottom stroke), then fill in the inside | 国(country): outer frame without bottom closing → inside strokes → close the bottom |
| Left-falling stroke before the body of the character it cuts through | A left-falling diagonal that slices through the rest of the character is drawn first | 父(father): the two crossing diagonals come before the two dots |
| Bottom-left sweeping stroke last | A sweeping stroke that goes out to the lower left is drawn last | 道(road): the radical components are drawn before the outer left sweep |
These eight rules cover the most frequently appearing stroke patterns in Japanese. They will not be correct 100 percent of the time — there are exceptions for individual characters — but using them as defaults puts your stroke order in the correct range for most everyday writing.
How Your Learning Goal Changes the Calculation
The table below gives you a direct comparison of how stroke order investment should differ depending on what you are actually trying to achieve with Japanese.
| Learning Goal | Hiragana Stroke Order | Katakana Stroke Order | Kanji Stroke Order | Overall Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JLPT N5 / N4 (exam preparation) | Basics only (first week) | Basics only (first week) | Core 8 rules only | Low |
| Reading: manga, novels, websites | Not needed | Not needed | Not needed | None |
| Typing / mobile input | Not needed | Not needed | Not needed | None |
| Travel / daily conversations in Japan | Basics only | Basics only | Core 8 rules for common kanji | Low to medium |
| Living in Japan (handwriting daily) | Standard order fluency | Standard order fluency | Standard order for jōyō kanji | Medium |
| Japanese language class (graded writing) | Standard order fluency | Standard order fluency | Standard order — may be assessed | Medium to high |
| Calligraphy / shodo(書道) | Correct order essential | Correct order essential | Correct order essential | High |
| Teaching Japanese | Correct order essential | Correct order essential | Correct order essential | High |
Should You Prioritize Stroke Order? A Decision Flowchart
Use this flowchart before you decide how much time to invest in stroke order study at your current stage.
START: Are you learning Japanese right now?
|
+-- YES
|
v
Do you ever write Japanese by hand?
|
+-- NO (you type only, or you only read)
| |
| v
| Stroke order: NOT needed
| --> Focus on reading, recognition, and vocabulary
|
+-- YES (flashcards, worksheets, notes)
|
v
What is your main goal?
|
+-- JLPT exam (reading/listening focus)
| |
| v
| Stroke order: BASICS ONLY
| --> Learn top-to-bottom, left-to-right rules
| --> Spend max 2-3 days on this, then move on
|
+-- Living/working in Japan (write daily)
| |
| v
| Stroke order: MODERATE INVESTMENT
| --> Learn the 8 core rules
| --> Practice frequently-used kanji with correct order
| --> Revisit as your writing vocabulary grows
|
+-- Calligraphy / formal courses / teaching
|
v
Stroke order: HIGH INVESTMENT
--> Learn correct order for all characters you write
--> Use stroke order dictionaries and animated references
--> Prioritize from day oneWhat Happens If You Skip Stroke Order Completely?
This is the question most beginners really want answered, and the honest answer is: in most cases, not much happens.
If you are a reading-focused learner who types all your Japanese and never handwrites anything, ignoring stroke order has essentially zero cost. Your reading will not be affected. Your typing will not be affected. Your listening will not be affected. You can reach JLPT N3 or N2 without ever consciously studying stroke order.
If you do write by hand, even casually, skipping stroke order has three eventual costs. First, your handwriting will be slower, because you will not have an efficient, automatic stroke sequence for each character. Second, your characters may start to look slightly off-balance at speed, because stroke order shapes the proportion of each character as you draw it. Third, if you later try to learn Japanese cursive or calligraphy, you will need to unlearn your informal stroke habits before you can develop correct ones — which takes longer than learning correctly from the start.
None of these costs are catastrophic for a beginner. They are real, but they are fixable at a later stage if your priorities change. The main risk of skipping stroke order is not that your Japanese will be “wrong” — it is that you may create habits that slow your handwriting development down the road. For learners who plan to write by hand, this is worth knowing in advance.
Quick Quiz: Do You Need More Stroke Order Practice?
Answer these five questions honestly. They will help you decide where stroke order fits in your current study plan.
Question 1: True or false: stroke order affects whether a Japanese person can read your handwritten characters.
Answer: Mostly false. Stroke order affects how natural and fast your writing is, but a character drawn in the wrong stroke order is still readable in most cases. The shape is what matters for legibility, not the order in which strokes were drawn.
Question 2: Fill in the blank: The two most important general stroke order rules are “_____ before _____” and “_____ before _____.”
Answer: “Top before bottom” and “left before right.” These two rules cover the majority of stroke sequences in Japanese characters.
Question 3: True or false: A learner whose only goal is to pass JLPT N5 needs to spend significant time on stroke order.
Answer: False. JLPT N5 tests reading, listening, and vocabulary — not handwriting. Stroke order study is largely irrelevant for JLPT preparation at any level.
Question 4: Fill in the blank: For kanji with an enclosing box shape (like 国 or 目), the correct stroke order is: draw the _____ frame first (minus the closing stroke), then the _____ contents, then close the _____ stroke.
Answer: outer frame first (minus the closing bottom stroke), then the inside contents, then close the bottom stroke.
Question 5: True or false: Katakana stroke order is generally more complex and harder to learn than hiragana stroke order.
Answer: False. Katakana characters are composed mostly of straight lines, which makes their stroke order simpler and more intuitive than hiragana’s curved and mixed strokes.
How to Fit Stroke Order Into Your Study Plan (Without Overdoing It)
Here is a practical timeline for integrating stroke order into a typical beginner study plan without letting it crowd out higher-priority skills like reading, vocabulary, and listening.
| Stage | What to Do With Stroke Order | Time Investment |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1: Learning hiragana | Follow stroke order on worksheets for the first 2 days; after that, focus on recognition not drawing | 20–30 min total |
| Week 2–3: Learning katakana | Apply top-to-bottom / left-to-right rules by default; check the 3 tricky characters (ク, ソ, ン) | 10–15 min total |
| Month 1–2: Learning basic kanji | Learn the 8 core rules once; apply as default; look up only exception characters | 1–2 hours total (one-time) |
| Ongoing: Intermediate stage (N4–N3) | Revisit stroke order for complex kanji you are actively writing; use dictionary lookups as needed | As needed, per character |
| Advanced (N2+) or calligraphy interest | Invest meaningfully in correct order; start using stroke order reference tools regularly | Ongoing, integrated with writing practice |
The key principle throughout: treat stroke order as a handwriting tool, not a reading or comprehension tool. Allocate your time accordingly. A beginner who spends three days on stroke order and then shifts entirely to reading practice will outperform a beginner who spends two weeks on stroke order and falls behind on vocabulary and grammar.
How do you approach stroke order in your own Japanese study? Are you a learner who dives into the details, or someone who prefers to prioritise reading and typing first? Share your approach in the comments — it helps other beginners see what works in practice.
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