Introduction
The reading section (่ชญ่งฃ, dokkai) is where many JLPT test-takers run out of time. You've studied the grammar. You've memorized the vocabulary. But when you're staring at a wall of text with the clock ticking, everything feels different.
The good news? Reading speed and accuracy aren't just about knowing more words โ they're about strategy. With the right approach, you can work through passages faster, answer questions more confidently, and still have time left over.
Quick Answer
Quick Answer: To improve your JLPT reading score, focus on reading the questions first, identifying question types, and practicing timed reading daily. Strategy matters as much as vocabulary.
Understanding JLPT Reading Question Types
Before you can build a strategy, you need to know what you're up against. The JLPT reading section has several distinct question types:
Short passages (็ญๆ): These are 200-300 character texts followed by 1-2 questions. They test whether you can quickly grasp the main point.
Medium passages (ไธญๆ): Around 500-700 characters with 2-3 questions. These often involve opinions, comparisons, or cause-and-effect relationships.
Long passages (้ทๆ): 800+ characters with 3-4 questions. You'll need to track the author's argument across multiple paragraphs.
Information retrieval (ๆ ๅ ฑๆค็ดข): Charts, notices, or schedules where you find specific details. These are actually the easiest to improve on โ more on that below.
Integrated comprehension (็ตฑๅ็่งฃ, N1/N2 only): Two texts on the same topic where you compare viewpoints.
Knowing these types lets you allocate your time wisely. Don't spend 10 minutes on a short passage question worth the same points as an information retrieval question you could answer in 2 minutes.
Read the Questions First
This is the single most important strategy for JLPT reading. Before you read the passage, read the questions.
Why? Because when you know what you're looking for, your brain filters information automatically. Instead of trying to understand every sentence equally, you can focus on what matters.
Here's how to do it:
- Read all questions for the passage (ignore answer choices for now)
- Note the keywords โ names, numbers, opinions, reasons
- Now read the passage with those keywords in mind
- Go back to the questions and select your answers
This approach is especially powerful for information retrieval questions. If the question asks "What time does the event start on weekdays?", you can scan the notice for time-related information without reading every word.
Time Management Strategies
Time pressure is the biggest enemy on the JLPT reading section. Here's how to manage it:
Set time limits per section. For N2, you might allocate:
- Short passages: 3-4 minutes each
- Medium passages: 6-7 minutes each
- Long passages: 10-12 minutes each
- Information retrieval: 3-4 minutes each
Don't get stuck. If a question is confusing you, pick your best guess, mark it, and move on. One difficult question isn't worth sacrificing three easier ones.
Save information retrieval for confidence. Many test-takers find these questions straightforward. If you're running low on time, skip to these โ they're quick wins.
Practice with a timer from day one. It's tempting to take your time during practice, but that builds the wrong habits. Always simulate test conditions. If you're preparing for the JLPT, our JLPT study materials include practice passages with suggested time limits.
Skimming and Scanning Techniques
You don't need to read every word. Here's what to focus on:
First and last sentences of each paragraph. Japanese writing often follows a structure where the main point appears at the beginning or end of a paragraph.
Conjunctions and connectors. Words like ใใใ (but), ใใฎใใ (therefore), ใคใพใ (in other words), and ไธๆนใง (on the other hand) signal the logical structure. Pay special attention to ใใใ โ whatever comes after it is usually the author's real point.
The conclusion. In opinion-based passages, the final paragraph often contains the author's main argument. If a question asks "What does the author think?", start there.
Skip details on first read. Specific examples, dates, and statistics support the main point โ you can come back for them when a question asks about them.
Building Reading Speed Through Daily Practice
There's no shortcut for reading speed โ you have to build it through consistent practice. But you can practice smart.
Read Japanese every day for at least 15 minutes. It doesn't have to be JLPT practice material. News articles (NHK Web Easy is great for intermediate learners), blog posts, or even manga work. The point is getting comfortable with reading Japanese text.
Don't look up every word. When you're reading for speed, try to understand the overall meaning without stopping for every unknown word. If you can't figure out a sentence from context, mark it and look it up afterward.
Practice timed reading. Set a timer and try to read a passage faster each time. Track your progress โ you'll be surprised how quickly your speed improves.
Read about varied topics. JLPT passages cover everything from technology to social issues to nature. The more topics you've read about in Japanese, the more background knowledge you'll bring to the test.
For structured JLPT reading practice, check out our JLPT N2 book or JLPT N3 book โ they include reading passages organized by difficulty with detailed explanations.
Example Sentences
Here are key phrases and connectors you'll see in JLPT reading passages:
| Japanese | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| ็ญ่ ใฏไฝใ่จใใใใฎใใ | Hissha wa nani o iitai no ka. | What does the author want to say? |
| ใใใใๅฎ้ใซใฏใใใงใฏใชใใ | Shikashi, jissai ni wa sou de wa nai. | However, that's not actually the case. |
| ใคใพใใ้่ฆใชใฎใฏๆ้็ฎก็ใ ใ | Tsumari, juuyou na no wa jikan kanri da. | In other words, time management is what matters. |
| ใใฎๆ็ซ ใฎๅ ๅฎนใจๅใฃใฆใใใใฎใฏใฉใใใ | Kono bunshou no naiyou to atte iru mono wa dore ka. | Which matches the content of this passage? |
| ไธๆนใงใๅๅฏพใฎๆ่ฆใใใใ | Ippou de, hantai no iken mo aru. | On the other hand, there are opposing views too. |
| ใใฎใใใซ็ทด็ฟใๅฟ ่ฆใ ใ | Sono tame ni renshuu ga hitsuyou da. | That's why practice is necessary. |
Common Mistakes
- Reading every word equally. Not all sentences are important. Focus on topic sentences and connectors.
- Spending too long on one question. If you're stuck for more than a minute, move on and come back later.
- Ignoring conjunctions. Words like ใใใ and ใคใพใ are signposts โ they tell you what the author really means.
- Not practicing under timed conditions. Reading without time pressure feels different from reading during the test.
- Translating to English in your head. Try to understand Japanese directly. Mental translation slows you down significantly.
Practice Tips
- Start a "reading log." Each day, read one short Japanese article and write a one-sentence summary in Japanese. This builds comprehension and speed simultaneously.
- Do one timed practice passage per day. Even 10 minutes of timed practice adds up over weeks.
- Study conjunctions as a group. Make flashcards for ใใใ, ใใใใฃใฆ, ใคใพใ, ไธๆนใง, ใใฎใใ, etc. Knowing these instantly saves time during the test.
- Practice the "questions first" technique on every reading exercise, even when studying casually. Make it a habit.
- Review wrong answers carefully. When you get a practice question wrong, figure out why. Was it vocabulary? Misreading the question? Time pressure? Each type needs a different fix.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How long should I study reading before taking the JLPT? Start dedicated reading practice at least 3 months before the test. Daily 15-minute sessions are more effective than weekend cramming. The key is consistency, not long study sessions.
Q: Should I read the passage or the questions first? Read the questions first, always. This gives your brain a filter for what to focus on. You'll read the passage faster and more accurately when you know what information you're looking for.
Q: What's the best way to handle unknown vocabulary in the reading section? Don't panic. Use context clues โ surrounding sentences, kanji radicals, and the overall topic โ to guess the meaning. Often you don't need to know every word to answer the question correctly.
Q: How is the N2 reading section different from N3? N2 passages are longer, more abstract, and often deal with opinions or social commentary. N3 passages tend to be more concrete and descriptive. N2 also adds integrated comprehension (comparing two passages), which N3 doesn't have.
Q: Is information retrieval the easiest section? For most test-takers, yes. The information is right there in the chart or notice โ you just need to find it. Practice reading Japanese schedules, menus, and announcements to build this skill quickly.
Related Resources
- Watch our JLPT N3 efficient study strategies on YouTube
- JLPT N2 study book with reading practice
- JLPT N3 study book with reading passages
- Get your writing corrected by a native Japanese speaker
- Browse all JLPT study materials




