Introduction
One of the most stressful parts of JLPT prep is grammar. Unlike vocabulary, where you can just memorize more words, grammar points build on each other. Miss a foundation at N5, and N3 grammar becomes a nightmare.
The problem? There's no official grammar list from JLPT. The test makers don't publish one. So learners are left piecing together information from textbooks, websites, and word of mouth.
This guide fixes that. Here's a consolidated list of the most important grammar points at each JLPT level, with example sentences and study tips.
Quick Answer
Quick Answer: JLPT grammar ranges from about 80 points at N5 to 200+ at N1. Study them in order (N5 โ N4 โ N3 โ N2 โ N1) because higher levels assume you've mastered everything below. Focus on understanding the nuance and usage context, not just memorizing patterns.
How Many Grammar Points Per Level?
These numbers are approximate โ remember, there's no official list:
| Level | Grammar Points | Difficulty | Study Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| N5 | ~80 | Basic sentence patterns | 2โ3 months |
| N4 | ~130 | Expanded basics + compound sentences | 3โ4 months |
| N3 | ~180 | Intermediate expressions + nuance | 4โ6 months |
| N2 | ~200 | Advanced formal + written patterns | 6โ9 months |
| N1 | ~220 | Literary + highly formal + idiomatic | 9โ12 months |
Total across all levels: roughly 800+ grammar points. But don't panic โ many at higher levels are variations or extensions of patterns you already know.
N5 Grammar: The Foundation
N5 is where everything starts. These patterns are the building blocks for all Japanese sentences.
Must-know N5 grammar points:
| Grammar | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ใงใ/ใพใ | Polite sentence endings | ๅญฆ็ใงใใ(I'm a student.) |
| ใฏ (topic) | Topic marker | ็งใฏๆฅๆฌไบบใงใใ(I am Japanese.) |
| ใ (subject) | Subject marker | ็ซใใใพใใ(There is a cat.) |
| ใ (object) | Object marker | ๆฐดใ้ฃฒใฟใพใใ(I drink water.) |
| ใซ (location/time) | Location/time marker | ๅญฆๆ กใซ่กใใพใใ(I go to school.) |
| ใง (means/place) | Means/location of action | ใในใง่กใใพใใ(I go by bus.) |
| ใ | Also/too | ็งใๅญฆ็ใงใใ(I'm also a student.) |
| ใฎ | Possession/connection | ็งใฎๆฌใ(My book.) |
| ๏ฝใใ | Want to (do) | ้ฃในใใใงใใ(I want to eat.) |
| ๏ฝใฆใใ ใใ | Please (do) | ่ฆใฆใใ ใใใ(Please look.) |
| ๏ฝใฆใใใ | May/can (permission) | ๅธฐใฃใฆใใใใงใใ๏ผ(May I go home?) |
| ๏ฝใฆใฏใใใชใ | Must not | ใใใง่ตฐใฃใฆใฏใใใชใใ(You must not run here.) |
| ๏ฝใชใใงใใ ใใ | Please don't | ่งฆใใชใใงใใ ใใใ(Please don't touch.) |
| ใใ/ใพใง | From/until | 9ๆใใ5ๆใพใงใ(From 9 to 5.) |
Our JLPT N5 Study Workbook covers all ~80 grammar points with detailed explanations and practice exercises.
N4 Grammar: Building Complexity
N4 adds compound sentences, conditional forms, and more verb conjugations.
Key N4 grammar points:
| Grammar | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ๏ฝใใ | If/when (conditional) | ้จใ้ใฃใใใ่กใใพใใใ(If it rains, I won't go.) |
| ๏ฝใฐ | If (conditional) | ๅฎใใใฐ่ฒทใใพใใ(If it's cheap, I'll buy it.) |
| ๏ฝใชใ | If (topic conditional) | ๆฅๆฌใชใใไบฌ้ฝใใใใงใใ(If Japan, Kyoto is good.) |
| ๏ฝใจ | When/if (automatic result) | ๆฅใซใชใใจใๆกใๅฒใใพใใ(When spring comes, cherry blossoms bloom.) |
| ๏ฝใใใงใ (ๆงๆ ) | Looks like | ใใใใใใงใใ(It looks delicious.) |
| ๏ฝใใใงใ (ไผ่) | I heard that | ๆๆฅใฏ้จใ ใใใงใใ(I heard it'll rain tomorrow.) |
| ๏ฝใใใซใใ | Try to/make sure to | ๆฏๆฅ้ๅใใใใใซใใใ(I try to exercise daily.) |
| ๏ฝใใจใใใ | Have experienced | ๆฅๆฌใซ่กใฃใใใจใใใใ(I've been to Japan.) |
| ๏ฝใฆใใพใ | Completely/unfortunately | ้ฃในใฆใใพใฃใใ(I ate it all up.) |
| ๏ฝใฆใใ (state) | Ongoing state | ็ชใ้ใใฆใใใ(The window is open.) |
| ใใใ/ใใใ/ใใใ | Giving/receiving | ๅ้ใซๆฌใใใใฃใใ(I received a book from a friend.) |
| ๅ่บซๅฝข (passive) | Passive voice | ๅ ็ใซ่คใใใใใ(I was praised by my teacher.) |
The JLPT N4 Study Workbook walks you through these patterns with plenty of context and practice.
N3 Grammar: The Intermediate Jump
N3 is where many learners hit a wall. Grammar points become more nuanced, and there are often multiple patterns with similar meanings but different usage contexts.
Key N3 grammar points:
| Grammar | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ๏ฝใใใซ | In order to / because of | ๅๆ ผใใใใใซๅๅผทใใใ(I study to pass.) |
| ๏ฝใใใซ | So that | ่ใใใใใใซๅคงใใๅฃฐใง่ฉฑใใใ(I spoke loudly so they could hear.) |
| ๏ฝใใจใซใใ | Decide to | ๆฅๆฌใซ่กใใใจใซใใใ(I decided to go to Japan.) |
| ๏ฝใใจใซใชใ | It's been decided | ๆฅๆ่ปขๅคใใใใจใซใชใฃใใ(It's been decided I'll transfer next month.) |
| ๏ฝใใใงใฏใชใ | It doesn't mean that | ๅซใใชใใใงใฏใชใใ(It doesn't mean I dislike it.) |
| ๏ฝใฏใใงใ | Should be / expected | ใใๅฑใใใฏใใงใใ(It should have arrived already.) |
| ๏ฝใใใซใใ | Make an effort to | ้่ใ้ฃในใใใใซใใฆใใใ(I make an effort to eat vegetables.) |
| ๏ฝใฐใใ | Just did / only | ๆฅใใฐใใใงใใ(I just arrived.) |
| ๏ฝใฃใฝใ | -ish / seems like | ๅญไพใฃใฝใใ(Childish.) |
| ๏ฝใจใใฆ | As (in the role of) | ๅ ็ใจใใฆๅใใฆใใใ(I work as a teacher.) |
Check out our JLPT N3 Study Workbook for the full N3 grammar list with nuance explanations.
N2 Grammar: Formal and Written Japanese
N2 grammar shifts heavily toward written and formal Japanese. You'll encounter these in news articles, business emails, and academic texts.
Key N2 grammar points:
| Grammar | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ๏ฝใซๅฏพใใฆ | Toward / in contrast to | ใใฎๅ้กใซๅฏพใใฆๆ่ฆใ่ฟฐในใใ(State an opinion on this issue.) |
| ๏ฝใซ้ขใใฆ | Regarding / about | ็ฐๅขๅ้กใซ้ขใใฆ่ฉฑใๅใใ(Discuss regarding environmental issues.) |
| ๏ฝใซใจใฃใฆ | For (someone) | ็งใซใจใฃใฆๅคงๅใชไบบใ(A person important to me.) |
| ๏ฝใใใใชใ | There's no way | ใใใชใใใใชใใ(There's no way that's true.) |
| ๏ฝใใฎใฎ | Although | ่ฒทใฃใใใฎใฎใไฝฟใฃใฆใใชใใ(I bought it, but I haven't used it.) |
| ๏ฝไธๆนใง | On the other hand | ไพฟๅฉใชไธๆนใงใๅฑ้บใใใใ(It's convenient, but also dangerous.) |
| ๏ฝไปฅไธ | Since / now that | ็ดๆใใไปฅไธใๅฎใในใใ ใ(Since I promised, I should keep it.) |
| ๏ฝใซ้ใใชใ | Must be / no doubt | ๅฝผใฏๆฅๆฌไบบใซ้ใใชใใ(He must be Japanese.) |
| ๏ฝใใใๅพใชใ | Can't help but / have to | ่กใใใใๅพใชใใ(I have no choice but to go.) |
| ๏ฝใฉใใใ | Far from / let alone | ๆฅๆฌ่ชใฉใใใใ่ฑ่ชใใงใใชใใ(Far from Japanese, I can't even do English.) |
N1 Grammar: The Final Boss
N1 grammar includes literary expressions, classical patterns, and highly formal language you'll find in novels, academic papers, and formal speeches.
Key N1 grammar points:
| Grammar | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ๏ฝใจใใชใใจ | When it comes to (high level) | ็คพ้ทใจใใชใใจๅฟใใใ(When you're a CEO, you're busy.) |
| ๏ฝใใใฎใจใใใใซ | Without worrying about | ๅๅฏพใใใฎใจใใใใซ้ฒใใ ใ(Pressed on despite opposition.) |
| ๏ฝใใใจใ๏ฝใชใ | Not even (one) | ไธ็งใใใจใ็ก้งใซใใชใใ(Won't waste even one second.) |
| ๏ฝใชใใใฎใงใใชใ | It's not that it can't | ใงใใชใใใฎใงใใชใใ(It's not impossible.) |
| ๏ฝใใซใฏใใใใชใ | Can't help but | ็ฌใใใซใฏใใใใชใใ(I can't help but laugh.) |
| ๏ฝใซ่ณใ | Lead to / reach | ๅๆใซ่ณใฃใใ(We reached an agreement.) |
| ๏ฝใใใฃใฆ | With / by means of | ๆฌๆฅใใใฃใฆ้ๅบใใพใใ(We close as of today.) |
| ๏ฝๆฅตใพใใชใ | Extremely | ๅคฑ็คผๆฅตใพใใชใใ(Extremely rude.) |
Our JLPT N1 Study Workbook covers these advanced patterns in detail.
Best Study Order for JLPT Grammar
Don't skip levels. Here's why the order matters:
- N5 first, always โ Particles, basic verb forms, and sentence structure. Everything else builds on this.
- N4 next โ Conditionals, passive/causative, and compound sentences. You can't do N3 without these.
- N3 is the bridge โ This is where "textbook Japanese" becomes "real Japanese." Many grammar points here add nuance rather than new structures.
- N2 adds formality โ Written Japanese, business language, and formal expressions. If you're working in Japan, this is your target.
- N1 is specialization โ Literary and classical patterns. Essential for academia, translation, or advanced reading.
Pro tip: When studying a new grammar point, always learn it with 3 example sentences minimum. One example isn't enough to understand the usage range.
Example Sentences
| Japanese | Romaji | English |
|---|---|---|
| ๆฏๆฅๆผขๅญใๅๅผทใใใใใซใใฆใใพใใ | Mainichi kanji o benkyล suru yล ni shite imasu. | I make an effort to study kanji every day. |
| ๆฅๆฌใซ่กใฃใใใจใใใใพใใ | Nihon ni itta koto ga arimasu. | I've been to Japan before. |
| ๅๆ ผใใใใใซๆฏๆฅๅๅผทใใฆใใพใใ | Gลkaku suru tame ni mainichi benkyล shite imasu. | I study every day in order to pass. |
| ็ดๆใใไปฅไธใๅฎใใชใใใฐใชใใพใใใ | Yakusoku shita ijล, mamoranakereba narimasen. | Since I promised, I must keep it. |
| ็ฌใใใซใฏใใใใชใใฃใใ | Warawazu ni wa irarenakatta. | I couldn't help but laugh. |
| ๅฎใใใฐ่ฒทใใใใงใใ | Yasukereba kaitai desu. | If it's cheap, I want to buy it. |
Common Mistakes
- Studying N2 grammar before mastering N4 โ Higher-level grammar assumes you know lower levels perfectly. Gaps at N5/N4 cause confusion at every level above.
- Memorizing grammar without context โ Knowing "๏ฝใใใซ means 'in order to'" isn't enough. You need to understand when to use ใใใซ vs ใใใซ vs ใใใซ. Study with full sentences.
- Ignoring the difference between similar patterns โ N3+ has many "near-synonym" grammar patterns (ใใจใซใใ vs ใใจใซใชใ, ใฏใ vs ในใ). The nuance matters on the test.
- Only studying grammar in isolation โ Grammar points appear in reading passages and listening sections too. Practice recognizing them in context, not just in grammar drills.
Practice Tips
- Use the "3 sentence rule" โ For every new grammar point, write 3 original sentences. This forces you to understand the pattern, not just recognize it. Submit them to our correction service for native feedback.
- Study in level order โ Finish all N5 grammar before starting N4. Finish N4 before N3. No skipping.
- Make comparison charts โ When you encounter similar grammar points, create a side-by-side comparison chart with examples showing the difference.
- Read at your level โ NHK News Web Easy for N3, regular NHK News for N2โN1. Real Japanese text reinforces grammar naturally.
- Watch our study tips video โ Our YouTube lesson on efficient study methods covers how to organize grammar review sessions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Does JLPT publish an official grammar list? No. The Japan Foundation publishes vocabulary and kanji lists for each level, but grammar points are not officially listed. The lists in this article and in textbooks are based on analysis of past exams and widely used study materials.
Q: How many grammar points do I need to memorize for N3? About 180 grammar points, plus all N5 and N4 grammar (another ~210 combined). That's roughly 390 total patterns you should know by N3. Focus on understanding usage rather than raw memorization.
Q: Can I skip N4 grammar and go straight to N3? Strongly not recommended. N3 grammar builds directly on N4 patterns. Conditionals (ใใใใฐใใชใใใจ), passive/causative forms, and giving/receiving verbs from N4 are prerequisites for understanding N3 nuances.
Q: What's the best textbook for JLPT grammar? Popular choices include Shin Kanzen Master for N3โN1, and Genki I/II for N5โN4 foundations. Our JLPT study workbooks complement any textbook with structured practice and example sentences.
Q: How should I review grammar I've already studied? Spaced repetition works well. Create flashcards with the grammar pattern on one side and an example sentence (not just the English meaning) on the other. Review weekly, and try to produce sentences, not just recognize patterns.
Related Resources
- JLPT N5 Study Workbook โ All N5 grammar with exercises
- JLPT N4 Study Workbook โ N4 grammar patterns and practice
- JLPT N3 Study Workbook โ Intermediate grammar with nuance notes
- JLPT N2 Study Workbook โ Formal and written grammar patterns
- JLPT N1 Study Workbook โ Advanced literary grammar




