Japanese Expressions for Making and Declining Invitations

TOC

Inviting and Declining — Gracefully

Making plans is central to social life, and the phrases for inviting, accepting, and declining are among the most-used conversational patterns. Japanese has graceful ways to say no without being rude, and enthusiastic ways to say yes that build relationships.

Making an Invitation

PatternExampleMeaning
〜ませんかいっしょにたべませんかWon’t you ~? (polite invitation)
〜ましょういっしょにいきましょうLet’s ~ (suggesting together)
〜ない?のみにいかない?Want to ~? (casual)
〜どうですかこんどのどようびはどうですかHow about ~? (suggesting a time)
〜よかったらよかったらいっしょにどうですかIf you’d like, how about ~ together?

Accepting an Invitation

  • 「ぜひ!」— Definitely! / By all means!
  • 「いいですね!」— Sounds great!
  • 「よろこんで。」— With pleasure.
  • 「もちろんです!」— Of course!
  • 「たのしみにしています。」— I’m looking forward to it.

Declining an Invitation (Gracefully)

JapaneseMeaningLevel of softness
ちょっと…It’s a bit… (trails off = soft no)Very indirect — most common
すみません、ちょっとよていがあって…Sorry, I have something planned…Indirect + reason
こんどはぜひNext time for sureSoftens the “no” with future commitment
またさそってくださいPlease invite me againShows willingness for future
ごめんなさい、いけませんI’m sorry, I can’t make itClearer decline, still polite

Sample Dialogue: Declining and Suggesting Another Time

A: こんしゅうの きんようび、のみにいきませんか。
(This Friday, would you like to go for drinks?)

B: きんようびは ちょっと… らいしゅうは どうですか?
(Friday is a bit… How about next week?)

A: らいしゅうの もくようびは どうですか。
(How about next Thursday?)

B: もくようびは だいじょうぶです!たのしみにしています。
(Thursday is fine! I’m looking forward to it.)

Yuka & Rei Make — and Politely Decline — Plans

Here is how these phrases sound in a real exchange. Notice how naturally the expressions flow — and how the conversation stays polite even when things get complicated.

Yuka

Rei, how do I invite a Japanese friend to see a movie? Just いきましょう?

Rei

That works! いきましょう is casual and friendly. But if you want to frame it as a question — giving them an easy out — try いっしょにえいがをみませんか? — ‘Shall we watch a movie together?’ The ませんか form is warmer and less pushy.

Yuka

And if I want to say yes enthusiastically?

Rei

ぜひ! — ‘By all means!’ — is perfect. Or いいですね、ぜひいきましょう! — ‘That sounds great, let’s definitely go!’ Full of energy without being over the top.

Yuka

What if I have to say no? I don’t want to hurt their feelings.

Rei

The classic soft decline is ちょっと… with a trailing voice — ‘It’s a little…’ Japanese people understand immediately that’s a ‘no.’ For more clarity: その日はちょっと…またこんどさそってください — ‘That day is a bit difficult… please invite me again next time.’

5 Practice Sentences — Read These Aloud

Reading aloud forces your brain to process the phrase as sound, not just text. Do it five times for each sentence.

  1. こんどいっしょにしょくじをしませんか?
    Would you like to have a meal together sometime?
  2. ぜひ!たのしみにしています!
    By all means! I’m looking forward to it!
  3. その日はちょっとよていがあって…またこんど!
    I have plans that day… next time for sure!
  4. なんじがごつごうがよいですか?
    What time works best for you?
  5. よかったら、こんしゅうのどようびはいかがですか?
    If you’re free, how about this Saturday?

Your Turn! Leave Your Example in the Comments

The fastest way to make new phrases stick is to use them yourself. Pick one or two expressions from this article and write a sentence — or even a short conversation — based on your own life.

Drop your answer in the comments below. Other learners will read it, and seeing real examples from fellow students is one of the most motivating parts of learning a language. If you log in, your past comments stay on your profile — and our most active commenters appear in the Top Commenters list in the sidebar!

Keep Learning: Conversation Phrases Hub | Grammar | All Phrase Articles | Start Learning Japanese

Let's share this post !

Comments

To comment

TOC