Japanese Potential Form: られる vs できる (Can You…?)

‘Can you speak Japanese?’ — how do you say that in Japanese? Japanese has a dedicated potential form to express ability. But there are actually two ways to say ‘can’: the potential verb form (adding られる / れる) and the word できる. Knowing when to use each one will make your Japanese sound natural.

FormExampleMeaningUse when
Potential form (~られる/~れる)食べられるcan eatSpecific verb abilities
できる日本語ができるcan do JapaneseSkills, general ability
Negative potential泳げないcannot swimDrop い from potential form
Formal potential食べることができるbe able to eatMore formal/written
TOC

How to Make the Potential Form

Group 2 (ru-verbs): replace る with られる

DictionaryPotentialMeaning
食べる食べられるcan eat
見る見られるcan see
起きる起きられるcan wake up

Group 1 (u-verbs): replace u-sound with e-sound + る

DictionaryPotentialMeaning
書く (kak-u)書ける (kak-e-ru)can write
飲む (nom-u)飲める (nom-e-ru)can drink
話す (hanas-u)話せる (hanas-e-ru)can speak
行く (ik-u)行ける (ik-e-ru)can go
待つ (mat-su)待てる (mat-e-ru)can wait

Group 3 (Irregular)

DictionaryPotentialMeaning
する (suru)できる (dekiru)can do
来る (kuru)来られる (korareru)can come
Yuka

I used to say 日本語を話せられる which is wrong — you can’t double up potential forms! Each verb only gets ONE potential ending.
(×話せられる is a double potential — incorrect. ○話せる or ○話すことができる are both fine.)

Rei

Also watch out for the short form. Younger speakers often drop ら from られる: 食べられる → 食べれる. This is called ra-nuki (ら抜き言葉) — common in casual speech but technically incorrect in formal writing.
(ら抜き is accepted in conversation but avoid it in business writing or JLPT.)

できる vs Potential Form — When to Use Each

Both express ability, but they have different nuances.

SituationExample AExample BRule
Specific action ability泳げる日本語を話せるUse potential verb form
General skill/language日本語ができる料理ができるUse できる + が/は
Formal written style食べることができる見ることができること + できる
Something becomes possible行けるようになったPotential + ようになる

Key difference: できる works best with nouns and general skills. The potential verb form is more precise for specific verbs.

日本語ができる。(I can [do] Japanese — general skill)
日本語を話せる。(I can speak Japanese — specific verb)

Particle Shift with Potential Form

This is where English speakers get confused. When you use the potential form, the object particle を often shifts to が.

FormJapaneseEnglish
Standard魚を食べるI eat fish
Potential (を also OK)魚が食べられるI can eat fish
Potential (casual)魚を食べられるI can eat fish (を acceptable)

In modern Japanese, both が and を are used with potential forms in casual speech. However, が is more grammatically traditional.

Yuka

The particle shift surprised me. My teacher said: think of が as highlighting the object of ability — 魚が食べられる means ‘fish is something I CAN eat.’ The が puts emphasis on what the ability applies to.
(が marks what the potential applies to — it’s a subtle focus shift.)

Rei

In business emails, I always use することができる for formality. Instead of 参加できます, I write 参加することができます. It sounds more considered and professional.
(することができます is the go-to for formal business Japanese.)

Expressing ‘Used to Be Able To’ and ‘Became Able To’

Japanese has neat patterns for changing ability over time:

前は食べられなかったが、今は食べられる。
(I couldn’t eat it before, but now I can.)

日本語が話せるようになった。
(I became able to speak Japanese.)

忙しくて、行けなくなった。
(I got busy and became unable to go.)

Quick Quiz

1. Change 書く (write) to potential form: ___

書ける (kakeru)

2. Which is more formal: 食べられる or 食べることができる?

食べることができる

3. True or False: 日本語を話せられる is correct.

False — double potential. Say 日本語を話せる or 日本語が話せる.

4. Fill in: 子供の頃、牛乳が飲め___。(I could drink milk as a child.)

た (飲めた)

5. What does ~ようになる mean when used with potential form?

To become able to (a change in ability over time)

あわせて読みたい
ている vs てある: The Complete Deep-Dive Guide (With Examples) ている vs てある explained thoroughly: ongoing action vs deliberate preparation, particle differences, verb compatibility, and side-by-side comparisons. Essential N4 grammar guide.

Which potential form surprised you most? Have you made the ら抜き mistake? Tell us in the comments!

あわせて読みたい
Japanese Volitional Form: Let’s, ようとする, and Polite Invitations FormPlainPoliteMeaningU-verb (ご)飲もう飲ましょうLet’s drink / I will drinkRU-verb (よ0...

Keep Learning

あわせて読みたい
Te-Form Japanese: 10 Uses Every Learner Must Know Master the Japanese te-form: conjugation rules for all verb groups plus 10 essential uses including requests, ongoing actions, permission, and more.
あわせて読みたい
てしまう vs ておく vs てみる: Te-Form Auxiliaries Explained You know te-form. Now it's time to level up. てしまう, ておく, and てみる are three auxiliary patterns that attach to the te-form of verbs and dramatically c...
あわせて読みたい
Japanese Conditionals: と vs ば vs たら vs なら — Complete Guide 📖 At a GlanceTopicJapanese conditionals: と, ば, たら, ならLevelN4–N3Key ruleEach form encodes a different relationship between condition and resultB...
あわせて読みたい
ように vs ために: How to Express Purpose in Japanese Learn the difference between ように and ために — both mean 'in order to' but follow different verb rules. Covers volitional vs non-volitional verb distinction with clear examples.

📖 Want to take your Japanese further? Practice speaking with a professional Japanese tutor on italki — affordable 1-on-1 online lessons at your own pace.

Let's share this post !
TOC