You’ve decided to start learning Japanese — congratulations! Now someone mentions “JLPT N5” and suddenly you have a dozen questions: What is it? How hard is it? Where do you even start? If that sounds familiar, you’re in exactly the right place. This guide walks you through everything a complete beginner needs to know to pass JLPT N5, from understanding what the test actually measures to building a realistic study plan around your life.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| 🎯 Exam Level | N5 — the most beginner-friendly JLPT level |
| 📝 Vocabulary | ~800 words |
| ✒️ Kanji | ~100 characters |
| 📚 Grammar Points | ~80–100 key patterns |
| ⏱️ Study Time | 150–300 hours (3–12 months depending on pace) |
| ✅ Passing Score | 80/180 total + sub-score minimums |
| 📅 Exam Schedule | July and December each year |
| 🏆 Best For | Complete beginners, those with 3–6 months of study |
What Is JLPT N5?
The Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT / 日本語能力試験) is the world’s most widely recognized Japanese certification. It is offered twice a year — July and December — in over 60 countries, and the results are accepted by universities, employers, and immigration offices across Japan and internationally.
The test has five levels, from N5 (easiest) to N1 (hardest). N5 is your entry point. It tests whether you can understand basic Japanese in everyday situations — simple greetings, short sentences, and familiar topics like shopping, directions, and daily routines.
How Scoring Works
The N5 exam has a total of 180 points spread across three sections:
| Section | Time | Max Points | Min Pass Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Language Knowledge (Vocabulary) | 25 min | 60 | 19 |
| Language Knowledge (Grammar) + Reading | 50 min | 60 | 19 |
| Listening | 30 min | 60 | 19 |
To pass N5 you need: total score ≥ 80/180 AND each section score above its minimum (19 points). This means you cannot “max out” one section and bomb another — you must be reasonably balanced across all three.
Common English speaker pitfall: Many beginners over-invest in reading/grammar (because it feels like “real studying”) and neglect listening. Then they fail the listening section even with a strong total. Balance your practice from day one.
When I first heard about JLPT N5, I thought it would be easy because it’s the “beginner” level. But the listening section really caught me off guard! Make sure you practice listening from day one — not just at the end.


That’s a great point, Yuka! Listening and vocabulary go hand in hand. If you learn a new word, always listen to how it’s pronounced — don’t just read it on the page.
What You Need to Know for N5
Let’s break down exactly what the N5 exam tests. Understanding the scope helps you study efficiently — no wasted energy on content that won’t appear on the test.
Hiragana and Katakana (ひらがな カタカナ) — Non-Negotiable
Before anything else, you must master both phonetic alphabets completely. The N5 test is not printed in romaji. If you can’t read hiragana and katakana, you cannot attempt any question on the exam.
Good news: most learners can master both scripts in 2–4 weeks with daily practice. Use mnemonics (memory tricks) to speed this up. The app Kana Pro or the website Tofugu’s hiragana guide are excellent starting points.
Vocabulary (語彙 Goi) — ~800 Words
N5 requires roughly 800 vocabulary words. These cover everyday categories:
- Greetings & daily expressions: おはようございます (Good morning), ありがとう (Thank you), すみません (Excuse me)
- Time & dates: 今日(きょう)= today, 明日(あした)= tomorrow, 何時(なんじ)= what time
- Numbers: 一(いち), 二(に), 三(さん)… and counters like 一枚(いちまい)= one flat thing, 一本(いっぽん)= one long/cylindrical thing
- Food & shopping: 食べる(たべる)= to eat, 買う(かう)= to buy, いくら = how much
- Places & transport: 駅(えき)= station, 学校(がっこう)= school, バス = bus
- Family & people: 母(はは)= my mother, 先生(せんせい)= teacher, 友達(ともだち)= friend
Kanji (漢字) — ~100 Characters
N5 tests approximately 100 kanji. These are high-frequency characters you’ll encounter constantly in daily life:
Examples: 日(day/sun), 月(month/moon), 山(mountain), 川(river), 大(big), 小(small), 上(above), 下(below), 人(person), 口(mouth), 手(hand), 目(eye), 車(car), 水(water), 火(fire), 木(tree), 金(gold/Friday), 土(earth/Saturday)
English speaker pitfall: Don’t try to learn kanji in isolation. Learn them within vocabulary words. For example, learn 日本語(にほんご)as a unit meaning “Japanese language,” and you automatically learn three kanji (日, 本, 語) in context.
Grammar (文法 Bunpo) — ~80–100 Key Patterns
N5 grammar focuses on sentence structure fundamentals. Key patterns include:
| Pattern | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 〜は〜です | X is Y (basic copula) | これはペンです。(This is a pen.) |
| 〜は〜ます | Topic + verb (polite) | 私は食べます。(I eat.) |
| 〜て形 (te-form) | Connective / request form | 食べてください。(Please eat.) |
| 〜ない形 (nai-form) | Negative | 行かない。(I won’t go.) |
| 〜た形 (past tense) | Simple past | 食べた。(I ate.) |
| 〜に行く | Go to [place] | 学校に行く。(I go to school.) |
| 〜が好き / 嫌い | Like / dislike | 猫が好きです。(I like cats.) |
| 〜から〜まで | From…to… | 9時から5時まで。(From 9 to 5.) |
Reading (読解 Dokkai)
N5 reading passages are short (2–5 sentences) and use familiar vocabulary. Topics include notices, short messages, menus, and simple descriptions. You don’t need to read fast — the texts are brief. Focus on understanding the key information: Who? What? When? Where?
Listening (聴解 Chokai)
N5 listening includes short dialogues (2–4 exchanges) followed by multiple-choice questions. Common tasks: choosing the correct picture that matches what’s described, identifying the correct location on a map, or selecting the right answer to a simple question. Speech speed is slow and vocabulary is limited — but if you’ve never practiced listening, it still feels fast on exam day.
How Long Does It Take to Pass N5?
The honest answer: it depends on your starting point and how much time you invest each week. Here are realistic estimates for English speakers starting from zero:
| Study Hours per Week | Estimated Time to N5 | Recommended For |
|---|---|---|
| 5 hours/week | 9–12 months | Busy professionals, casual learners |
| 10 hours/week | 5–7 months | Most learners — sustainable pace |
| 15+ hours/week | 3–4 months | Full-time students, immersion learners |
Sample 12-Week Study Schedule (10 hrs/week)
| Week | Focus | Daily Goal |
|---|---|---|
| Weeks 1–2 | Hiragana + Katakana mastery | Learn 5 characters/day, review with flashcards |
| Weeks 3–4 | Core vocabulary (first 200 words) + basic grammar | 10 new words + 1 grammar pattern/day |
| Weeks 5–6 | Verb conjugation (present, past, negative) + kanji set 1 | 2 conjugation patterns + 3 kanji/day |
| Weeks 7–8 | Particles (は, が, を, に, で, と, も) + vocabulary set 2 | 1 particle deep-dive + 10 vocabulary/day |
| Weeks 9–10 | Reading practice + listening (NHK Web Easy, JLPT N5 audio) | 1 short reading passage + 15 min listening/day |
| Weeks 11–12 | Full mock exams + weak area review | 1 timed practice test per week + targeted review |
Key principle: Consistency beats intensity. 30 minutes every day is more effective than 4 hours on Sunday. Japanese requires your brain to build new neural pathways — that takes time and repetition.
Best Study Materials for JLPT N5
With hundreds of textbooks, apps, and courses available, choosing the right materials is overwhelming. Here’s an honest breakdown of the most popular options:
Textbooks
| Textbook | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genki I | Structured beginners | Clear explanations, good grammar coverage, audio included | Textbook feel, not free, needs a partner for dialogues |
| Minna no Nihongo | Those preferring immersion style | Used in many language schools, thorough grammar | Japanese-only main text (buy companion translation book) |
| Japanese From Zero! (Book 1) | Absolute beginners who want gentle pacing | Very beginner-friendly, video lessons on YouTube (free) | Slower pacing — may not cover all N5 grammar |
| Nihongo So-Matome N5 | Exam-focused practice | Organized by JLPT category, short daily lessons | Thin on explanations — best as a supplement |
Apps
- Anki — Free flashcard app with spaced repetition (SRS). Download the “Core 2000” or “JLPT N5 vocabulary” deck. Non-negotiable for vocabulary retention.
- Duolingo — Good for absolute beginners to build daily habits and learn hiragana. Not sufficient alone for N5.
- Wanikani — Excellent for kanji and vocabulary using mnemonics. Free up to level 3.
- JLPT Sensei (website) — Free N5 vocabulary lists, grammar explanations, and practice questions. Highly recommended.
Online Tutoring: italki
One of the most powerful (and underused) tools for N5 preparation is speaking practice with a real human. italki connects you with Japanese tutors and community teachers at prices from $10–25/hour.
Why italki works for N5:
- Tutors can quiz you on vocabulary and grammar in real conversation — much more memorable than flashcards alone
- Listening to a native speaker helps you calibrate your ear for the listening section
- You can ask about confusing grammar points and get instant, personalized explanations
- Many tutors specialize in JLPT exam preparation
Aim for 1–2 italki sessions per week during months 2–4 of your study plan. It doesn’t have to be expensive — community tutors (non-certified) are often excellent and cost less.
Which Materials Should You Start With?
Use this flowchart to decide:
START HERE
|
v
Can you read hiragana and katakana?
|
+-- NO --> Learn hiragana first: Tofugu guide + Kana Pro app (2-4 weeks)
| Then come back and start this flowchart again.
|
+-- YES
|
v
Do you have a budget for a textbook?
|
+-- YES --> Do you prefer structured grammar explanations in English?
| |
| +-- YES --> Start with GENKI I
| |
| +-- NO --> Start with Minna no Nihongo
| (buy the translation companion too)
|
+-- NO --> Use Japanese From Zero! Book 1 (free YouTube lessons)
+ JLPT Sensei website for grammar reference
+ Anki for vocabulary (free)
|
v
EVERYONE: Add these regardless of your main textbook
- Anki flashcards (vocabulary)
- NHK Web Easy (reading + listening)
- 1-2 italki sessions/month (speaking + grammar clarification)
- JLPT N5 practice tests (last 4-6 weeks before exam)Study Strategy by Skill
Each N5 skill area has its own optimal study approach. Here’s how to tackle each one efficiently.
Grammar Strategy
Japanese grammar is very different from English. The verb goes at the end of the sentence, particles mark the function of each noun, and politeness is built into verb endings. This feels backwards at first — embrace it.
Step-by-step approach:
- Learn the basic sentence structure: [Subject] + [Object] + [Verb]. Example: 私は(I)+ りんごを(apple)+ 食べます(eat)= “I eat an apple.”
- Master the masu-form (polite present/future): 食べます, 飲みます, 行きます
- Learn te-form for requests and connecting sentences: 食べてください (Please eat.)
- Learn nai-form for negatives: 食べない (don’t eat), 行かない (won’t go)
- Learn ta-form for simple past: 食べた (ate), 行った (went)
For a deep dive into te-form — which appears frequently in N5 — check out this guide:


Vocabulary Strategy
800 words sounds like a lot, but with spaced repetition it’s very manageable over 3–6 months.
- Use Anki daily. Set a target of 10–15 new cards per day. Review your due cards every morning before adding new ones.
- Learn vocabulary in context. Don’t just memorize isolated words. Learn 食べる (eat) in a sentence: 毎日ご飯を食べます (I eat rice every day).
- Group by theme. Study a “food” batch, then “transport,” then “time.” Themed grouping makes words stick better.
- Don’t skip katakana words. Many N5 vocabulary items are borrowed words written in katakana: テレビ (TV), コーヒー (coffee), バス (bus). These are free points if you know katakana well.
Kanji Strategy
For N5, prioritize kanji that appear in your vocabulary list. You don’t need to learn stroke order for the exam (it is not tested), but you do need to:
- Recognize the character when you see it
- Know the reading (both on-yomi / Chinese reading and kun-yomi / Japanese reading for common ones)
- Know the meaning
Example: 山 (mountain) — kun-yomi: やま (yama), on-yomi: さん (san) as in 富士山(ふじさん)(Mt. Fuji)
Use Wanikani (up to level 3 is free and covers many N5 kanji) or Anki kanji decks. Aim for 3 new kanji per day during weeks 5–10 of your study plan.
Listening Strategy
This is where most English speakers underperform on N5. Here’s how to build your listening ear:
- Start early. Begin listening practice from week 3, not week 10. Your ear needs time to adjust to Japanese phonology.
- Use NHK Web Easy. Free short news articles with audio, written at beginner level. Combines reading and listening practice.
- Shadow native speakers. Listen to a sentence, pause, repeat it out loud trying to mimic the rhythm and pronunciation exactly. This trains both your ear and your mouth.
- Use official JLPT N5 audio. Download past listening tests from the official JLPT website or buy the JLPT N5 Preparation Kit. The test audio style is specific — practice with it.
- Watch anime or drama with Japanese subtitles. Don’t rely on English subtitles — switch to Japanese. Even 20 minutes per day of passive listening builds familiarity with natural speech.
Particles — The Trickiest Part for English Speakers
Japanese particles (助詞 / じょし) are small words that show the grammatical role of each noun. English uses word order (“I see him” vs “He sees me”) — Japanese uses particles instead. This is one of the hardest conceptual shifts for English speakers.
The most commonly confused pair for beginners is は (wa) and が (ga). For a complete breakdown of how they work:


Common Mistakes N5 Beginners Make
Knowing what not to do is just as valuable as knowing what to do. Here are the most common pitfalls — and how to avoid them.
Mistake 1: Staying in Romaji Too Long
Romaji (Japanese written in Roman letters) is a useful crutch for your first week, but staying in romaji beyond that slows you down dramatically. The JLPT is not printed in romaji. Every week you delay learning hiragana is a week you’re practicing the wrong skill.
Fix: Learn hiragana in your first two weeks. Use mnemonics and drill daily. Once hiragana is solid, move straight to katakana.
Mistake 2: Learning Vocabulary Without Context
Memorizing a list of 800 words with no sentences is painfully inefficient. Without context, words don’t stick — and you won’t recognize them in the actual test passages.
Fix: Always learn vocabulary in a sentence. When you add a word to Anki, include an example sentence on the card. Better yet, make up your own sentence using the word — personalized examples are easier to remember.
Mistake 3: Ignoring the Listening Section
Many beginners spend 90% of their time on vocabulary and grammar, and only start listening practice in the final few weeks. This almost always results in failing the listening section — even if their total score would otherwise pass.
Fix: Schedule listening practice from week 3 of your study plan. Even 15 minutes per day of Japanese audio makes an enormous difference by exam day.
Mistake 4: Not Taking Practice Tests
Knowing the material is only half the battle. The JLPT has a specific format — question types, timing constraints, and instructions that look different from regular study materials. Many students fail not because they don’t know the content, but because the test format surprises them.
Fix: Take at least 2–3 full timed practice tests in the 4–6 weeks before your exam. The JLPT official website offers free sample questions. Commercial test prep books (like Nihongo So-Matome or Try! N5) include full practice tests.
Mistake 5: Confusing Conditional Forms
Japanese has multiple ways to say “if” (〜と, 〜ば, 〜たら, 〜なら) and beginners often mix them up or avoid using them entirely. N5 tests the most basic conditional patterns, and they appear in both grammar and reading sections.
For a structured guide to Japanese conditional forms:




One thing I wish someone had told me earlier: taking practice tests under real time pressure is completely different from studying at home with no clock. The stress makes you second-guess answers you actually know. Practice that feeling before the real exam!


Exactly. And remember — on the JLPT, you can’t go back to a previous section. Once the vocabulary section ends, that’s it. Practice with that constraint so it doesn’t catch you off guard on test day.
Quick Quiz: Test Your N5 Readiness
Try these questions to check your understanding. Answers are at the bottom of this section.
Question 1
Choose the correct particle: 私___日本語を勉強します。 (I study Japanese.)
A) が B) は C) を D) に
Question 2
What does 食べてください mean?
A) Please don’t eat B) I ate C) Please eat D) I want to eat
Question 3
Which of these is the correct reading of 月曜日?
A) にちようび B) もくようび C) げつようび D) きんようび
Question 4
Fill in the blank: 東京___大阪___新幹線で行きます。 (I go from Tokyo to Osaka by Shinkansen.)
A) に / で B) から / まで C) で / に D) を / が
Question 5
How do you say “I don’t understand” in Japanese? (polite negative)
A) わかります B) わかりました C) わかりません D) わかって
Answers
- Q1: B) は — は (wa) marks the topic of the sentence. 私は is “As for me” / “I (topic).”
- Q2: C) Please eat — 食べて is the te-form of 食べる (to eat); ください = please. Te-form + ください = polite request.
- Q3: C) げつようび — 月曜日 = Monday. The days of the week are: 月 (Mon), 火 (Tue), 水 (Wed), 木 (Thu), 金 (Fri), 土 (Sat), 日 (Sun).
- Q4: B) から / まで — 〜から〜まで = from…to…. 東京から大阪まで = from Tokyo to Osaka.
- Q5: C) わかりません — The polite negative ending is 〜ません. わかります (understand) → わかりません (do not understand).
Final Checklist Before the Exam
Use this checklist in the 2–4 weeks before your JLPT N5 exam date to make sure you’re fully prepared.
Content Readiness
- ☑️ I can read all hiragana and katakana without hesitation
- ☑️ I recognize all ~100 N5 kanji and know their basic readings
- ☑️ I know ~800 N5 vocabulary words (scored 80%+ on a full vocab mock)
- ☑️ I understand and can use: は/が, に/で/を, から/まで, も
- ☑️ I can conjugate verbs into masu-form, te-form, nai-form, and ta-form
- ☑️ I have taken at least 2 full N5 practice tests under timed conditions
- ☑️ My mock exam listening scores are consistently above 19/60
Logistics (Don’t Overlook These)
- ☑️ I have registered for the exam at jlpt.jp (registration closes ~2 months before the exam)
- ☑️ I know the exam venue and how to get there (do a test run if possible)
- ☑️ I have my admission ticket printed and a valid photo ID ready
- ☑️ I have 2–3 HB/No.2 pencils and a pencil eraser (pens are not allowed)
- ☑️ I know the exam schedule: Language Knowledge → Grammar/Reading → Listening (in order)
- ☑️ I know I cannot go back to a previous section once time is called
- ☑️ I plan to arrive 30+ minutes early to avoid stress
Mindset
- ☑️ On exam day, skip any last-minute cramming. Rest, eat, and trust your preparation.
- ☑️ If you blank on a question, eliminate wrong answers and make your best guess — no penalties for wrong answers.
- ☑️ Remember: even if you don’t pass this time, the test is offered twice a year. Treat it as a diagnostic and come back stronger.
How are your N5 studies going? What part of the exam are you finding most challenging? Share in the comments below — we read every comment and love hearing from fellow Japanese learners!
Keep Learning
Ready to go deeper? These JPyokoso guides cover the exact grammar and vocabulary points you’ll need to master for N5:






About the Author
Daisuke is the creator of JP YoKoSo — a Japanese learning site for English speakers. Every article is written to explain Japanese clearly, with real examples, grammar notes, and practical tips for learners at every level.
💬 Found a mistake or have a question? Contact us here — we review and update articles regularly.
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