Should you take JLPT N4 or skip straight to N3? Many learners face this decision after reaching intermediate beginner level. The answer depends on your current ability, your timeline, and your purpose. This guide compares N3 and N4 directly to help you choose.
| Level | N4 | N3 |
| Vocabulary | ~1,500 words | ~3,750 words |
| Kanji | ~300 kanji | ~650 kanji |
| Grammar | Basic compound sentences | Complex compound sentences, more nuance |
| Study time from zero | ~600 hours | ~1,200 hours |
| Difficulty jump | — | Significantly harder than N4 |
| Career relevance | Low (some tourism roles) | Medium (international companies) |
What Is Tested at N4 and N3?
JLPT N4 — What you need to know
N4 tests basic Japanese: hiragana, katakana, ~300 kanji, ~1,500 vocabulary words, and fundamental grammar patterns. You should be able to understand slow, clear Japanese on familiar topics.
Key N4 grammar: て-form uses, と/ば/たら conditionals, potential form, ~てもいい (permission), ~なければならない (obligation), ~ので/~から (reasons), ~ながら (while doing)
JLPT N3 — The real jump
N3 is where many learners underestimate the difficulty. The vocabulary jumps from 1,500 to ~3,750 words. Reading passages become longer and more complex. Listening speed increases. Grammar patterns become more nuanced and numerous.
Key N3 grammar: ~ようになる, ~ために, ~はずだ, ~らしい, ~によって, ~ばかり, ~さえ, ~も~も, ~に対して — these require context-sensitivity that N4 does not.
I went straight for N3 without taking N4 first. The grammar was fine, but the vocabulary killed me. I had about 2,000 words solid, but N3 assumes 3,750. The gap felt like a wall. Looking back, I wish I had done a proper N4-level vocabulary consolidation phase before jumping to N3 preparation.
(Skipping N4 means skipping the vocabulary foundation that N3 demands — do not underestimate the gap.)


From a career perspective in Japan, N4 is generally not sufficient for corporate roles. Most Japanese employers see N4 as basic language literacy — enough to survive daily life, not enough for the workplace. If you are studying for a job goal, N3 is the realistic minimum, and N2 is the actual target. Plan your study path accordingly.
(N4 is a milestone; N2 is the career destination — set your horizon correctly.)
N3 vs N4: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Vocabulary | ~1,500 words | ~3,750 words |
| Kanji | ~300 | ~650 |
| Reading | Short simple texts | Longer, more complex passages |
| Listening | Slow, clear, familiar topics | Moderate speed, some unfamiliar topics |
| Pass rate (official) | ~55% | ~35-40% |
| Preparation time from N5 | 3-6 months | 6-12 months |
| Prep time from N4 | — | 6-9 months |
| Textbook series | Minna no Nihongo I-II, Genki I-II | Kanzen Master N3, Try N3 |
| Anki deck size | ~1,500 cards | ~3,750 cards |
When to Take N4 vs N3
Take N4 if:
✔️ You completed Genki I and II (or equivalent) and want certification of that progress
✔️ You are a beginner-intermediate and need a motivational milestone
✔️ Your workplace requires basic Japanese certification for a non-language role
✔️ You want to test your skills before committing to N3 prep
Skip N4, go straight to N3 if:
✔️ You are confident in N4-level grammar and have 1,500+ vocabulary
✔️ Your goal is career or academic Japanese (N4 will not help much)
✔️ You have 8-12 months before your target exam date
✔️ You are self-motivated and do not need milestone certificates


My study group had a rule: if you can score 80% or higher on a full N4 practice test, skip N4 and go straight for N3. Below 80% on N4 practice means your foundation needs more work before you tackle N3. Simple but very practical benchmark.
(80% on N4 practice test = ready to start N3 prep.)


One thing I tell people aiming for work in Japan: JLPT N4 on your resume signals ‘I started learning Japanese.’ N3 signals ‘I can function at a basic work level.’ N2 signals ‘I can work in Japanese.’ Know which signal you want to send before choosing your exam level.
(Each JLPT level sends a different signal to Japanese employers — choose the right one for your goal.)
Study Resources by Level
| Grammar | Genki I-II, みんなの日本語 I-II | Kanzen Master N3 Grammar, Try! N3 |
| Vocabulary | Takoboto app, basic Anki decks | N3 specific Anki decks, Jisho with N3 filter |
| Kanji | WaniKani levels 1-10, RTK basic | WaniKani levels 10-25, Kanzen Master N3 Kanji |
| Practice tests | JLPT Official Workbook N4 | JLPT Official Workbook N3, Nihongo So-matome |
| Listening | NHK Web Easy (N4-N3 bridge) | NHK World Radio, JLPT N3 listening drills |
Quick Quiz
1. How many vocabulary words does N3 require compared to N4?
→ N3: ~3,750 words vs N4: ~1,500 words
2. What benchmark score on an N4 practice test suggests you are ready to start N3 prep?
→ 80% or higher on a full N4 practice test
3. What is the approximate pass rate for N3?
→ ~35-40%
4. For a career goal in Japan, which level is typically the minimum?
→ N3 (minimum) — N2 is the realistic career standard
5. Which textbook series is commonly used for N3 preparation?
→ Kanzen Master N3 series or Try! N3
Are you deciding between N4 and N3 right now? What is your current level and your goal? Share in the comments — we love helping learners map their path!
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