Introduction
The JLPT happens twice a year โ in July and December. That means if you fail, you're waiting 6 months for another shot. No pressure, right?
Here's the good news: most people who fail the JLPT don't fail because the test is impossibly hard. They fail because they didn't have a plan. They studied randomly, crammed in the last two weeks, or focused on the wrong sections.
You're not going to make those mistakes. This guide gives you a clear study schedule, daily routine, and section-by-section strategy to pass the JLPT on your first try โ whether you're aiming for N5 or N1.
Quick Answer
Quick Answer: To pass the JLPT on your first try, start studying 3โ6 months before the test, follow a daily routine of 60โ90 minutes split across vocabulary, grammar, reading, and listening, and take practice tests monthly starting 2 months before the exam. Focus extra time on your weakest section โ that's usually what determines pass or fail.
How Much Time Do You Actually Need?
Be honest with yourself about your starting level. Here are realistic timelines:
| Target Level | From Zero | From Previous Level | Daily Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| N5 | 3โ4 months | โ | 60 min |
| N4 | 6โ8 months | 3โ4 months | 60 min |
| N3 | 12โ18 months | 4โ6 months | 60โ90 min |
| N2 | 18โ24 months | 6โ9 months | 90 min |
| N1 | 24โ36 months | 9โ12 months | 90โ120 min |
These assume consistent daily study, not weekend-only marathons. 60 minutes every day beats 7 hours on Sunday.
Your Daily Study Schedule
Here's a template that works for any JLPT level. Adjust the time based on your target:
60-Minute Daily Routine (N5/N4):
| Time | Activity | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 0โ15 min | Vocabulary review | Anki or flashcards, spaced repetition |
| 15โ30 min | Grammar study | 1โ2 new grammar points + review |
| 30โ45 min | Reading practice | Level-appropriate texts |
| 45โ60 min | Listening practice | Audio with transcripts |
90-Minute Daily Routine (N3/N2/N1):
| Time | Activity | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 0โ20 min | Vocabulary + Kanji | New words + kanji writing/reading |
| 20โ40 min | Grammar study | 2โ3 new points + review old ones |
| 40โ60 min | Reading practice | Timed reading comprehension |
| 60โ80 min | Listening practice | Shadow + comprehension questions |
| 80โ90 min | Weak point focus | Extra time on your lowest section |
Key principle: Don't skip sections. Even if you hate listening practice, do it every day. The JLPT requires a minimum score in each section to pass โ you can't make up for a weak section with a strong one.
The 3-Phase Study Plan
Break your preparation into three phases. This works whether you have 3 months or 12 months.
Phase 1: Foundation (First 40% of your time)
This is where you build your base knowledge.
- Learn all required vocabulary for your level
- Study all grammar points systematically
- Read your main textbook cover to cover
- Start listening practice with slow, clear audio
Don't take practice tests yet. You'll just get discouraged because you haven't learned everything.
For N5 and N4, our JLPT N5 Study Workbook and N4 Study Workbook are designed for this phase โ they cover vocabulary, grammar, and reading in a structured sequence.
Phase 2: Reinforcement (Next 40% of your time)
Now you solidify what you've learned and fill gaps.
- Review all vocabulary with spaced repetition
- Do grammar exercises (not just reading explanations)
- Read authentic materials at your level
- Take your first practice test at the midpoint
- Identify your weakest section and add 15 extra minutes daily for it
Phase 3: Test Preparation (Final 20% of your time)
This is pure exam prep.
- Take a full practice test every 1โ2 weeks
- Simulate real test conditions (timed, no breaks, no dictionary)
- Review every wrong answer โ understand why you got it wrong
- Focus 70% of study time on your weakest section
- Do rapid vocabulary review (skim, don't deep-study)
Section-by-Section Strategy
The JLPT has three scored sections. Here's how to tackle each one.
Language Knowledge (Vocabulary + Grammar)
This section tests recognition, not production. You don't need to write โ you need to choose the correct answer from options.
- Vocabulary: Flashcard drilling works. Use Anki with example sentences, not just English translations. Aim to recognize words within 3 seconds.
- Grammar: Focus on grammar points that look similar. The test loves asking you to choose between ใใใซ/ใใใซ or ใใจใซใใ/ใใจใซใชใ. Know the differences cold.
- Tip: When stuck between two answers, read the full sentence with each option inserted. The wrong one will usually sound unnatural.
Reading Comprehension
This is where most people run out of time. Speed matters as much as accuracy.
- Read the questions first, then the passage. You'll know what to look for.
- Don't read every word. Scan for key information.
- Practice timed reading daily. Set a timer and don't go over.
- For long passages, read the first and last sentence of each paragraph first.
Listening
You only hear each audio clip once. There are no replays.
- Shadow daily. Listen to Japanese audio and repeat what you hear, slightly behind. This trains your ear and processing speed.
- Practice with real JLPT listening audio (past tests or practice books).
- Learn to take quick notes during listening. Key words only โ not full sentences.
- Listen without subtitles. Reading along defeats the purpose.
Watch our YouTube lesson on efficient study methods for more specific techniques.
Common Study Mistakes to Avoid
Knowing what NOT to do is just as important as knowing what to do.
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Only studying vocabulary โ Vocabulary alone won't save you. If your grammar is weak, you can't understand reading passages. If your listening is weak, you'll fail that section regardless of vocabulary.
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Studying without a schedule โ "I'll study when I have time" means you won't study. Block out the same time every day.
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Never taking practice tests โ Practice tests reveal your real level. Without them, you're guessing whether you're ready.
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Cramming the week before โ The JLPT tests deep understanding, not short-term memory. Last-minute cramming barely helps. Start early, study consistently.
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Ignoring the time limits โ The JLPT is a timed test. Knowing the answer doesn't help if you can't find it fast enough. Always practice under timed conditions.
What to Do on Test Day
- Arrive early. Find your room, settle in, calm down.
- Bring essentials: Test voucher, ID, pencils (not pens), eraser, watch (not smart watch).
- Don't change answers unless you're sure. Your first instinct is usually right.
- Manage time strictly. If a question is taking too long, mark your best guess and move on. Come back if time allows.
- Don't panic during listening. If you miss a question, let it go. Focus on the next one. Dwelling on missed questions makes you miss more.
Example Sentences
| Japanese | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| JLPTใซๅๆ ผใใใใงใใ | JLPT ni gลkaku shitai desu. | I want to pass the JLPT. |
| ๆฏๆฅ1ๆ้ๅๅผทใใฆใใพใใ | Mainichi ichijikan benkyล shite imasu. | I study one hour every day. |
| ้ๅปๅใ่งฃใใฆใฟใพใใใ | Kakomon o toite mimashita. | I tried solving past exam questions. |
| ่ด่งฃใไธ็ช่ฆๆใงใใ | Chลkai ga ichiban nigate desu. | Listening is my weakest section. |
| ่ฉฆ้จใพใงใใจ3ใๆใใใชใใงใใ | Shiken made ato sankagetsu shika nai desu. | There are only 3 months until the exam. |
| ๆจกๆฌ่ฉฆ้จใง70็นๅใใพใใใ | Mogi shiken de nanajutten torimashita. | I got 70 points on the practice test. |
Common Mistakes
- Starting too late โ "I'll start next month" becomes "I'll start next week" becomes "the test is in 2 weeks." Start now, even if it's just 30 minutes a day.
- Studying only what you enjoy โ If you love kanji but hate listening, you'll naturally avoid listening practice. Force yourself to spend equal time on all sections.
- Using only one resource โ No single textbook covers everything perfectly. Combine a main textbook, flashcard app, listening materials, and practice tests.
- Not simulating test conditions โ Taking practice tests at home with breaks, music, and a dictionary doesn't prepare you for the real test. Practice in silence, timed, without help.
Practice Tips
- Set a test date NOW โ Register for the next JLPT. Having a deadline creates urgency. Without a date, there's no pressure to stick to your schedule.
- Track your progress weekly โ Keep a simple log: what you studied, how long, and how you felt. This helps you spot patterns and adjust.
- Join a study group โ Even an online one. Accountability makes a huge difference. Explain grammar points to others โ teaching is the best way to learn.
- Use our workbooks for structure โ The JLPT N3 Study Workbook and other level-specific books give you a clear path through the material, so you don't waste time deciding what to study.
- Practice writing too โ Even though JLPT doesn't test writing, writing Japanese activates deeper memory. Try our correction service for native speaker feedback on your sentences.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What score do I need to pass the JLPT? The passing score varies by level: N5 needs 80/180, N4 needs 90/180, N3 needs 95/180, N2 needs 90/180, and N1 needs 100/180. But here's the catch โ you also need to meet the minimum score for each section (usually 19/60). A perfect score on two sections won't help if you fail one.
Q: Is the July or December test easier? Neither is officially easier. Some students feel the December test is slightly harder because more people take it after summer study, but there's no evidence of different difficulty levels. Choose whichever gives you more preparation time.
Q: Can I pass N3 with 3 months of study? If you're starting from N4 level, yes โ with intense daily study (90+ minutes). If you're starting from zero, 3 months is not realistic for N3. Be honest about your current level and choose the right target.
Q: Should I use English or Japanese study materials? For N5โN4, English explanations are fine and often clearer. For N3 and above, start mixing in Japanese-language study materials. By N2, you should be comfortable studying grammar explanations written in Japanese.
Q: How many practice tests should I take before the real exam? At minimum, 3โ4 full practice tests. Ideally, one every two weeks during the last two months. Always review your mistakes thoroughly โ taking tests without reviewing is wasted effort.
Related Resources
- JLPT N5 Study Workbook โ Start your JLPT journey with structured N5 prep
- JLPT N4 Study Workbook โ Build on N5 with expanded grammar and vocabulary
- JLPT N3 Study Workbook โ Bridge to intermediate with nuanced grammar
- Watch study tips on YouTube โ Free lessons on efficient study methods
- Get writing feedback โ Strengthen your Japanese with native corrections





