Japanese Home and Daily Routine Vocabulary: Rooms, Furniture, Chores, Morning and Night Routine, Kaji, and Daily Verbs

**Target level**: JLPT N5–N3 / Beginner–Intermediate **Topic**: A complete guide to Japanese home vocabulary — rooms, furniture, daily routine verbs, morning and evening routines, housework (家事), and common mistakes English speakers make with 家/うち, 起きる/起こす, and location particles. —

You wake up, shuffle to the kitchen, make coffee, and start your day. Simple enough — but could you describe that routine in Japanese? If you’ve been studying for a while, you probably know words like 家(いえ, house)and 寝る(ねる, to sleep). But do you know the difference between 家(いえ)and うち? Could you describe the 玄関(げんかん)and explain why you have to take your shoes off there? Could you say you need to do the laundry before leaving?

Home and daily routine vocabulary is some of the most immediately useful Japanese you can learn — it appears in textbooks, dramas, conversations with host families, and everyday messages with Japanese friends. This guide covers all of it in one place: every room, key furniture pieces, daily routine verbs (including the confusing pairs), morning and evening schedules, housework expressions, and the mistakes that trip up English speakers most often.

JapaneseReadingEnglish
玄関げんかんentryway (where shoes come off)
台所だいどころkitchen
和室わしつJapanese-style room
布団ふとんfuton (floor bedding set)
起きるおきるto wake up (intransitive)
出かけるでかけるto head out / leave home
家事かじhousework / household chores
掃除するそうじするto clean / sweep
うちうちmy home / our house (casual, personal)
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Rooms of a Japanese Home

Japanese homes — whether a compact apartment in Tokyo or a traditional house in the countryside — follow a room structure that differs from what English speakers expect. Understanding what each room is called, and what cultural rules apply to it, will serve you in conversation, travel, and daily life.

玄関(げんかん)— The Entryway

The 玄関(げんかん)is the raised entryway just inside the front door. This is where you remove your shoes — always. It is a clear physical boundary: the lower area (土間, どま) is considered “outside,” and the raised floor beyond it is the interior of the home. Entering someone’s house without removing your shoes at the 玄関 is a serious breach of etiquette. When visiting a Japanese home for the first time, wait until invited to step up before moving past the 玄関.

Example: 玄関で靴を脱いでください。 (Please take off your shoes at the entryway.)

廊下(ろうか)— Hallway / Corridor

廊下(ろうか)is the hallway or corridor connecting rooms. In older Japanese homes, hallways run along the perimeter of the house, sometimes beside a garden. Example: 廊下を渡って、右の部屋に入ってください。 (Walk down the hallway and enter the room on the right.)

台所(だいどころ)/ キッチン — Kitchen

台所(だいどころ)is the traditional Japanese word for kitchen, used in formal writing and by older speakers. キッチン is the loanword (from English “kitchen”) used in modern everyday speech. Both are correct; キッチン is far more common in daily conversation. Example: キッチンで料理しています。 (I’m cooking in the kitchen.)

リビング — Living Room

リビング (from English “living room”) is the standard modern term. You may also see リビングルーム or 居間(いま), the traditional equivalent. The living room is typically where the family gathers around the TV. Example: リビングでテレビを見ています。 (I’m watching TV in the living room.)

和室(わしつ)— Japanese-Style Room

The 和室(わしつ)is one of the most distinctively Japanese spaces in a home. It features tatami(畳, たたみ)mat flooring, a 床の間(とこのま, decorative alcove for hanging scrolls and flowers), and sliding doors called 襖(ふすま). You sit on cushions called 座布団(ざぶとん)and sleep on a 布団(ふとん)laid directly on the tatami. Many modern Japanese apartments lack a 和室, but traditional houses and ryokan(旅館, Japanese inns)always have at least one. Note: you should not walk on tatami with socks that have been worn outdoors, and furniture with hard edges can damage the woven surface.

寝室(しんしつ)— Bedroom

寝室(しんしつ)is the standard word for bedroom. In smaller apartments, this is often also the room with the television — the multipurpose nature of small Japanese living spaces means one room serves many functions. Example: 寝室のエアコンが壊れた。 (The bedroom air conditioner broke.)

洗面所(せんめんじょ)— Bathroom Sink Area / Washroom

Here is something that surprises visitors: in most Japanese homes, the toilet, the bathtub, and the sink are in separate rooms. 洗面所(せんめんじょ)is the room with the sink and mirror — used for washing your face, brushing teeth, and doing laundry (the washing machine is often here). The toilet is in a small, separate 手洗い(てあらい)or トイレ room. The bath is in the 浴室(よくしつ)or お風呂(おふろ)room.

浴室(よくしつ)/ お風呂(おふろ)— Bathroom / Bath

浴室(よくしつ)is the formal word for the bathing room; お風呂(おふろ)is the everyday, casual term you will use constantly. Japanese baths are deep soaking tubs — you wash your body outside the tub first, then soak in the hot water. Families share the same bath water, which stays warm thanks to a reheating system. Saying お風呂に入る(to take a bath / get in the tub)is the standard phrase.

ベランダ — Balcony

ベランダ (verandah/balcony) is the outdoor ledge space off the living room or bedroom, used primarily for hanging laundry to dry. Most Japanese apartments lack an indoor dryer, so the ベランダ is essential for daily life. Example: ベランダに洗濯物を干した。 (I hung the laundry out on the balcony.)

押し入れ(おしいれ)— Built-in Closet / Storage Alcove

The 押し入れ(おしいれ)is the deep, wide built-in closet found in Japanese-style rooms, used to store 布団 during the day. This is why 和室 can function as both a living space and a bedroom — you take the 布団 out at night and put it away in the 押し入れ in the morning. Modern Western-style rooms often have a クローゼット (closet) instead.

Yuka

うちには和室が一部屋あるんだけど、押し入れが広くて便利なんだよね。(We have one Japanese-style room at home — the storage closet is big and really handy.)

Rei

いいな!うちのマンションは全部洋室だから、布団をしまう場所がなくて困ってる。(Lucky! My apartment is all Western-style rooms, so I have nowhere to put the futon away and it’s a problem.)

Furniture and Household Items

Once you know the rooms, you need to fill them with vocabulary. Here are the most important furniture and appliance words, along with the cultural notes that make them stick.

JapaneseReadingEnglishNotes
つくえdeskTypically used for studying or working
椅子いすchairGeneral word; applies to any chair type
テーブルテーブルtable (dining/coffee)Western-style tables; 座卓(ざたく)= low floor table for 和室
ソファソファsofaStandard loanword
ベッドベッドbed (Western frame)Raised bed frame, as opposed to 布団
布団ふとんfuton (floor bedding)Japanese floor bedding set — very different from Western “futon”
たなshelf / shelving unit本棚(ほんだな)= bookshelf
冷蔵庫れいぞうこrefrigerator冷凍庫(れいとうこ)= freezer
洗濯機せんたくきwashing machine乾燥機(かんそうき)= dryer (less common in Japanese homes)
エアコンエアコンair conditionerEssential in Japan — both heats and cools; called an “air con”

布団(ふとん)vs ベッド — A Cultural Note

English learners know “futon” as a fold-out sofa bed, but a Japanese 布団 is something quite different: a set of floor bedding that includes a mattress pad(敷布団, しきぶとん)laid on the tatami floor, a comforter(掛け布団, かけぶとん)on top, and a pillow(枕, まくら). In the morning, you fold it up and store it in the 押し入れ, returning the room to a daytime living space.

ベッド, by contrast, is a Western-style raised bed frame with a mattress — increasingly common in modern Japanese apartments. Neither is “better”; they reflect different home styles.

布団(ふとん)ベッド
StyleTraditional Japanese floor beddingWestern raised bed frame
Room type和室 (tatami room)洋室 (Western-style room)
StorageFolded into 押し入れ each morningPermanent fixture in the room
Daily verb布団を敷く (spread out) / 布団をたたむ (fold up)ベッドに入る (get into bed)

Daily Routine Verbs

Japanese daily routine vocabulary hinges on a set of verbs — and several of them come in confusable pairs. Master these and you can describe almost any part of your day accurately.

起きる(おきる)vs 起こす(おこす)— Wake Up vs Wake Someone Up

This pair trips up nearly every beginner. The key distinction: 起きる(おきる) is intransitive — it happens to you, with no direct object. 起こす(おこす) is transitive — you do it to someone else.

  • 私は7時に起きる。(I wake up at 7 o’clock.) — intransitive; no one is doing anything to me
  • 母が私を起こした。(My mother woke me up.) — transitive; mother acts on me
  • 明日、7時に起こしてください。(Please wake me up at 7 tomorrow.) — requesting someone to wake you

Pattern: [person] に [person] を 起こす = someone wakes someone else up

寝る(ねる)vs 眠る(ねむる)— To Sleep / Go to Bed vs To Be Asleep

Both mean “sleep,” but they emphasize different things. 寝る(ねる) covers the action of going to bed and the state of sleeping — it is the verb you use for daily routine. 眠る(ねむる) emphasizes being in a state of sleep, or falling asleep; it has a slightly more literary or emotional nuance.

  • 昨日は11時に寝た。(I went to bed at 11 last night.) — routine action, very natural
  • 赤ちゃんが静かに眠っている。(The baby is sleeping peacefully.) — describing the state of sleep, emotional tone
  • 眠れない。(I can’t get to sleep / I can’t sleep.) — standard expression for insomnia-type feelings; uses 眠る

For daily conversation and expressing your routine, 寝る is almost always the right choice. Use 眠る for poetic or emotional contexts, or in the phrase 眠れない(can’t sleep).

顔を洗う(かおをあらう)— To Wash Your Face

Note the particle: 顔を洗う — the face is the direct object of the verb 洗う(あらう, to wash). This pattern appears with many grooming verbs: 歯を磨く(はをみがく, brush teeth), 手を洗う(てをあらう, wash hands), 髪を乾かす(かみをかわかす, dry hair).

歯を磨く(はをみがく)— To Brush Your Teeth

磨く(みがく)means “to polish/shine/scrub.” It is used for brushing teeth, polishing shoes(靴を磨く, くつをみがく), and shining surfaces. The direct object marker を is required here — a common mistake is to omit it.

シャワーを浴びる(シャワーをあびる)— To Take a Shower

浴びる(あびる)means “to be showered with / to bathe in.” It is used specifically for showers; for taking a bath (getting in the tub), you use お風呂に入る(おふろにはいる). Note the different verbs and particles: シャワーを浴びる (shower, を + 浴びる) vs お風呂に入る (bath, に + 入る).

出かける(でかける)— To Head Out / Leave Home

出かける(でかける)means to leave home with a purpose — to go out somewhere. It implies departure from your home base and is more specific than just 行く(いく, to go). A parent calling out いってきます! before leaving uses this same concept. Example: もう出かける時間だ。 (It’s already time to head out.)

帰る(かえる)— To Return Home

帰る(かえる)means to return to your home or base. It pairs with 出かける perfectly: you 出かける in the morning and 帰る in the evening. The standard phrase when arriving home is ただいま, to which the standard response is おかえり(なさい).

休む(やすむ)— To Rest / Take a Break / Take the Day Off

休む(やすむ)covers resting, taking a break, sleeping (in the sense of resting your body), and being absent from work or school. Context determines which: 今日は学校を休んだ(I was absent from school today)vs 少し休みましょう(Let’s rest a bit).

Morning Routine in Japanese

Now that you have the verbs, here is how a typical Japanese morning routine sounds in natural Japanese — from waking up to leaving the house. Follow the sequence and note how the verbs chain together.

Yuka

毎朝7時に起きて、すぐ洗面所で顔を洗うんだ。その後、朝ごはんを食べながらニュースを見る。(Every morning I wake up at 7 and immediately wash my face in the washroom. After that I eat breakfast while watching the news.)

Rei

私は朝シャワーを浴びてから歯を磨く。支度が終わったら「いってきます!」って言って出かける。(I take a shower in the morning and then brush my teeth. When I’m ready I say “ittekimasu!” and head out.)

Here is the full morning sequence as individual sentences you can study and adapt:

JapaneseEnglish
目覚まし時計が鳴った。(めざましどけいがなった)The alarm clock rang.
7時に起きた。(7じにおきた)I woke up at 7.
布団をたたんで、押し入れにしまった。(ふとんをたたんで、おしいれにしまった)I folded up the futon and put it away in the closet.
洗面所で顔を洗った。(せんめんじょでかおをあらった)I washed my face in the washroom.
シャワーを浴びた。(シャワーをあびた)I took a shower.
歯を磨いた。(はをみがいた)I brushed my teeth.
台所で朝ごはんを作った。(だいどころであさごはんをつくった)I made breakfast in the kitchen.
食べ終わったら着替えた。(たべおわったらきがえた)When I finished eating, I got dressed.
玄関で靴を履いた。(げんかんでくつをはいた)I put my shoes on at the entryway.
「いってきます!」と言って出かけた。I said “I’m heading out!” and left.

Cultural note: The phrase いってきます(I’ll go and come back)said on leaving and ただいま(I’m back)said on returning are fundamental social rituals in a Japanese household. These are not optional polite extras — not saying them is noticeably rude in a family home.

Evening and Night Routine

The evening routine has its own rhythm and vocabulary in Japanese. Here are the key words and phrases, followed by example sentences showing how they connect.

JapaneseReadingEnglish
晩ご飯ばんごはんdinner / evening meal
お風呂に入るおふろにはいるto take a bath
テレビを見るテレビをみるto watch TV
宿題をするしゅくだいをするto do homework
リラックスするリラックスするto relax
眠いねむいsleepy
歯を磨くはをみがくto brush teeth
布団を敷くふとんをしくto lay out the futon
寝るねるto go to sleep / go to bed
おやすみなさいおやすみなさいGood night

A natural evening sequence in Japanese:

  • 「ただいま!」 — arriving home (I’m back!)
  • 仕事が終わって、6時に帰った。 (Work finished and I got home at 6.)
  • 晩ご飯を食べながら、テレビを見た。 (I watched TV while eating dinner.)
  • 食後にお風呂に入った。 (After the meal, I took a bath.)
  • 少しリラックスしてから、宿題をした。 (After relaxing a bit, I did my homework.)
  • 眠くなってきたから、歯を磨いた。 (I was getting sleepy, so I brushed my teeth.)
  • 押し入れから布団を出して、敷いた。 (I took the futon out of the closet and laid it out.)
  • 「おやすみなさい。」と言って、11時に寝た。 (I said “Good night” and went to sleep at 11.)

Housework and Chores (家事)

家事(かじ)means “housework” or “household chores” — the daily and weekly tasks that keep a home functioning. This vocabulary is essential for talking about life in Japan, whether you live with a host family, rent your own apartment, or simply want to understand domestic conversation in dramas and textbooks.

掃除する(そうじする)— To Clean / Sweep / Tidy

掃除(そうじ)covers general cleaning — sweeping, vacuuming, wiping surfaces. 掃除機をかける(そうじきをかける)specifically means to vacuum (run the vacuum cleaner). Example: 毎週日曜日に部屋の掃除をする。 (I clean my room every Sunday.)

洗濯する(せんたくする)— To Do the Laundry

洗濯(せんたく)covers the full laundry process. Key compound expressions: 洗濯物を干す(せんたくものをほす, hang the laundry to dry)— essential vocabulary since most Japanese homes use ベランダ drying rather than machines. 洗濯物を取り込む(とりこむ, bring the laundry in)is equally important. Example: 洗濯して、ベランダに干した。 (I did the laundry and hung it out on the balcony.)

料理する(りょうりする)— To Cook

料理(りょうり)means cooking as a noun and 料理する as a verb. You can also say ご飯を作る(ごはんをつくる, make a meal)for more casual use. Example: 今日はキッチンで晩ご飯を料理した。 (Today I cooked dinner in the kitchen.)

片付ける(かたづける)— To Tidy Up / Put Things Away

片付ける(かたづける)is the verb for tidying or putting things away. It is broader than 掃除する (cleaning) — you 片付ける when you reorganize, clear a space, or put items back. Parents commonly say 部屋を片付けなさい(Clean/tidy up your room)to children. Example: 食事の後、テーブルの上を片付けた。 (After the meal, I tidied up the table.)

ゴミを出す(ゴミをだす)— To Take Out the Trash

Taking out trash in Japan involves strict sorting rules (燃えるゴミ, もえるゴミ = burnable waste; 燃えないゴミ, もえないゴミ = non-burnable waste; 資源ゴミ, しげんゴミ = recyclables) and designated pickup days set by your municipality. ゴミを出す means taking the trash to the collection point on the right day. Missing your trash day is a genuine source of household friction. Example: 明日は燃えるゴミの日だから、忘れずに出してね。 (Tomorrow is burnable trash day, so don’t forget to put it out.)

皿を洗う(さらをあらう)— To Wash the Dishes

皿(さら)means dish or plate; 洗う(あらう)means to wash. The full phrase 食器を洗う(しょっきをあらう, wash the tableware)is also common. Note the を particle — the dishes are the direct object of washing. Example: ご飯を食べた後、すぐ皿を洗う。 (After eating, I immediately wash the dishes.)

買い物に行く(かいものにいく)— To Go Shopping

買い物(かいもの)means shopping and に行く(にいく)means to go to do something. Note the particle に before 行く here — it marks the purpose of going, not a destination. Example: 夕方、スーパーに買い物に行った。 (I went shopping at the supermarket in the evening.)

Chore (家事)ReadingEnglishKey Expression
掃除するそうじするclean / sweep掃除機をかける (vacuum)
洗濯するせんたくするdo laundry洗濯物を干す (hang laundry out)
料理するりょうりするcookご飯を作る (make a meal)
片付けるかたづけるtidy up / put away部屋を片付ける (tidy the room)
ゴミを出すゴミをだすtake out trash燃えるゴミの日 (burnable trash day)
皿を洗うさらをあらうwash dishes食器を洗う (wash tableware)
買い物に行くかいものにいくgo shoppingスーパーに行く (go to the supermarket)

Do you prefer sleeping on a ベッド or a 布団? Or maybe you have a question about your own morning or evening routine in Japanese? Leave a comment below — we would love to hear what your daily schedule looks like!

家, うち, 部屋, and 住む — Common Mistakes

This section covers the errors English speakers make most often with home and daily routine vocabulary. Getting these right will immediately make your Japanese sound more natural.

家(いえ)vs うち — House vs My Place / Home

This is one of the most frequently confused pairs in Japanese and it has no clean equivalent in English. Both can translate as “house” or “home” — but they are not interchangeable.

家(いえ)うち
RegisterNeutral to formal; objectiveCasual; personal, in-group feeling
NuanceThe physical building; a house as an objectMy home, my household, us (as a family/group)
Example 1あの家は大きい。(That house is big.) — describing a buildingうちは狭い。(Our place is small.) — talking about your own home
Example 2家を買った。(I bought a house.) — property transactionうちに帰る。(I’m going home.) — natural casual speech
Group use家族(かぞく)= family (uses 家 kanji)うちの会社(our company)/ うちの子(our child)— in-group

Practically speaking: when talking about your own home in casual conversation, use うち. When describing a building as an object, or in formal/written contexts, use 家(いえ).

起きる vs 起こす — Don’t Confuse Intransitive and Transitive

A classic mistake: saying ×母が私を起きた instead of ○母が私を起こした. Because 起きる is intransitive, you cannot put a direct object (を) in front of it. If someone is acting on another person, you need the transitive 起こす.

寝る vs 眠る — Routine vs State

For daily routine, always use 寝る: ○昨日、何時に寝た? (What time did you go to sleep yesterday?) Using 眠った here sounds slightly unnatural for casual conversation. Reserve 眠る for poetic descriptions of sleep (the baby sleeping peacefully) or for the phrase 眠れない (can’t sleep).

に vs で at Home — Location vs Action

English speakers often confuse the particles に and で when talking about home locations:

  • 家にいる — I am at home (に marks the location of existence; いる = to be)
  • 家で勉強する — I study at home (で marks the location of an action)
  • 家で寝る when you mean “to sleep/be in bed” (being somewhere, not doing an action) → ○ 家にいる
  • 家で料理する (cooking is an active verb, so で is correct)

The rule: に + verbs of existence (いる, ある); で + verbs of action (勉強する, 料理する, 仕事する).

Forgetting を in Routine Phrases

Many daily routine verbs require a direct object with を, and beginners often drop it:

  • ❌ 歯磨く → ✓ 歯を磨く
  • ❌ 顔洗う → ✓ 顔を洗う
  • ❌ シャワー浴びる → ✓ シャワーを浴びる
  • ❌ 皿洗う → ✓ 皿を洗う

Treat these as fixed expressions — learn the を as part of the phrase, not as an optional extra.

部屋(へや)— Room, Not Apartment

部屋(へや)means a single room within a building. It is not a synonym for apartment or house. When English speakers say “my place” meaning their apartment, the Japanese equivalent is うち or アパート / マンション (apartment), not just 部屋. Saying 私の部屋に来て means “come to my room” — which could be your bedroom in a shared house. Saying うちに来て means “come to my place” in the broader sense.

Yuka

「家に帰る」と「うちに帰る」って同じ意味?(“Ie ni kaeru” and “uchi ni kaeru” — do they mean the same thing?)

Rei

似てるけど微妙に違う!「家に帰る」はどちらかというと物理的な建物に戻るイメージ。「うちに帰る」は自分のホームベースに戻る、って感じでより自然な日常表現だよ。(They’re similar but subtly different! “Ie ni kaeru” has more of an image of returning to a physical building. “Uchi ni kaeru” feels like returning to your home base — it’s a more natural everyday expression.)

Quick Quiz

Fill in the blank with the correct word or particle. Answers are below.

  1. You take your shoes off at the ______(げんかん)before entering a Japanese home.
  2. 「毎朝、7時に______(起きる/起こす)」 — which verb is correct if you mean “I wake up at 7 every morning”?
  3. 「洗濯物をベランダ______(に/で)干す」 — which particle is correct?
  4. 「今週末、______(家/うち)のことをゆっくり話そう」 — which word fits better if you mean “let’s talk properly about our household/family situation this weekend”?
  5. Translate into Japanese: “I took a shower, brushed my teeth, and went to sleep.”

Answers

  1. 玄関(げんかん)
  2. 起きる — intransitive; you wake up by yourself, no object needed
  3. — 干す (to hang out) is an active verb, so で marks the location of the action
  4. うち — うち carries the household/family/in-group nuance that makes this sentence natural; 家 would sound oddly objective
  5. シャワーを浴びて、歯を磨いて、寝た。

Keep Learning

Home and daily routine vocabulary connects naturally to time expressions, broader vocabulary topics, and building a sustainable study habit. Here are three articles to read next:

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