Thinking of studying in Japan? While brochures often highlight the cherry blossoms and cutting‑edge labs, one practical hurdle remains constant: demonstrating that you can survive — and thrive — in a Japanese‑medium classroom. For most applicants that proof is the Japanese‑Language Proficiency Test (JLPT). This post walks you through how the exam works, how it differs from the EJU, and which universities actually demand a certificate.
1. Understanding the JLPT – Levels, Locations & Calendar
The JLPT is a standardized test jointly administered by the Japan Foundation and JEES(Japan Educational Exchanges and Services). It is offered twice a year in Japan (first Sunday of July and first Sunday of December) and once or twice overseas depending on local demand — in 2025, test centers operate in 75 countries and over 260 cities. Registration normally opens about four months in advance and fills quickly, so mark your calendar early.
Five Proficiency Levels
- N5–N4 – basic phrase recognition; rarely accepted by universities.
- N3 – lower‑intermediate; sufficient only for preparatory language schools.
- N2 – business & daily academic life; some universities accept for humanities.
- N1 – near‑native. Required by the majority of degree programs taught in Japanese.
Format At‑a‑Glance
Section | Time | Question Types |
---|---|---|
Vocabulary & Kanji | 25‑35 min | Reading, context, formation |
Reading | 55‑75 min | Short essays, long passages, charts |
Listening | 30‑40 min | Conversations, lectures, quick response |
Unlike the TOEFL, the JLPT does not include a speaking section, which is why many universities also run in‑house interviews.
2. JLPT vs EJU – Which Score Does Admissions Really Use?
The อีเจยู was designed by จาสโซ่ to evaluate both language ability และ academic readiness (science, mathematics, Japan & the World). It is offered twice a year — June and November — with results released roughly five weeks later. While some national universities base their entire admission ranking on EJU, private universities more often request a standalone JLPT certificate and then conduct subject tests in‑house.
- JLPT only – common for graduate schools and art programs.
- EJU only – national universities that run joint scholarship schemes with JASSO.
- Both accepted – applicants may submit whichever is higher (e.g., Waseda University School of Political Science and Economics).
Because the JLPT certificate is portable and valid “forever,” many degree‑seekers take it first, then follow up with the subject‑specific EJU if required. Be sure to read each faculty’s English‑language admissions page for the exact policy.
3. Who Asks for JLPT? — 20 Sample Universities
Below is a quick reference grid. All listings refer to Japanese‑medium degrees; English‑taught tracks often waive JLPT.
มหาวิทยาลัย | Degree / School | Minimum JLPT | Source |
---|---|---|---|
มหาวิทยาลัยโตเกียว | Graduate School of Economics | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยเกียวโต | Graduate School of Management (MBA) | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยโอซาก้า | School / Graduate School of Economics | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยนาโกย่า | Japanese-medium Undergraduate Courses | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยโทโฮคุ | Direct Enrollment (School of Science) | N1 | ลิงค์ |
Tokyo Institute of Technology | Master/Doctoral Degree Programs | N1/N2 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยวาเซดะ | Graduate Schools (Japanese-track) | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยเคโอ | Graduate School of System Design & Management | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยฮอกไกโด | Modern Japanese Studies (Bachelor) | N2 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยสึคุบะ | Business Sciences (Master) | N1 | ลิงค์ |
Kobe University | All Undergraduate & Graduate Programs | N1 (recommended) | ลิงค์ |
Chiba University | Japanese-medium Bachelor (J-PAC track) | N2 | ลิงค์ |
Hiroshima University | Engineering Research / Degree Students | N2+ | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยแห่งชาติโยโกฮาม่า | JOY Program → Degree Courses | N2 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยคิวชู | Undergraduate/Graduate Regular Courses | N1 (目安) | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยริตสึเมคัง | Japanese-based Degree Tracks | N1 | ลิงค์ |
Meiji University | Graduate School of Professional Accountancy | N1 | ลิงค์ |
มหาวิทยาลัยโซเฟีย | Japanese-taught Undergraduate Programs | N1 | ลิงค์ |
Nihon University | Graduate Schools (Multiple) | N2+ | ลิงค์ |
Kansai University | Graduate School of Letters | N2 | ลิงค์ |
Always double‑check if a faculty offers an English‑medium alternative; you might not need JLPT at all.
4. Roadmap to N1/N2 in 12 Months
If you are starting from upper‑intermediate (≈ JLPT N3), the following year‑long plan has helped many of our coaching students hit N1 on the first try:
- Months 1‑3 — Grammar Sprint: Finish Shin Kanzen Master N2 Bunpō; shadow each example aloud.
- Months 4‑6 — Kanji & Vocab: 30 new kanji a day with the KanjiMemoryHint app; target 2,500 total.
- Months 7‑9 — Reading Drills: Weekly timed practice on past papers from JLPT 2020‑2024; keep accuracy ≥ 80%.
- Months 10‑11 — Listening Immersion: Watch NHK 高校講座 lectures and answer comprehension questions.
- Month 12 — Mock Tests & Review: Sit two full mock exams under test conditions; identify weak points and plug gaps.
Pairing the above with a structured EJU science module (if required) ensures you clear both hurdles before scholarship deadlines in the spring. Good luck, and remember: language proficiency is evidence, not the end goal — your future lab work or seminar debate is.