Want to learn Japanese in Manchester? There aren’t as many options as London, but you can still find decent places to learn in person.
Where to Learn In Person
University of Manchester (LEAP Courses)
The University of Manchester offers Japanese through their Language Experience for All Programme (LEAP). It’s open to the public, not just students.
- 2 semesters, 3 hours per week
- Beginner to intermediate levels
- Focus on conversation and culture
- Runs October to June (academic year)
Good if you want a structured classroom environment with other learners. The downside is you’re locked into the university schedule — you can’t join mid-term, and if you miss a semester, you’re waiting until next year.
Manchester Japanese Society
A student-run society at the University of Manchester. They offer casual Japanese lessons alongside events like sushi workshops and pub socials.
- £2.50 per session, or £15 for a semester (7 lessons)
- Relaxed, social atmosphere
- Great for meeting other Japan enthusiasts
Nice if you want to dip your toes in or learn in a fun, low-pressure way. But it’s not structured teaching — you’re not going to pass the JLPT from these sessions alone.
Private Lessons
If you’re serious about improving, private lessons are the fastest route.
Why?
- Speed. In a group, you’re waiting for other students. In a private lesson, the full 55 minutes is yours. You can pause when you don’t understand something and skip what you already know.
- Customisation. “I want to focus on keigo for work.” “I want to pass JLPT N2 in six months.” “I just need travel conversation.” In a group class, you follow the curriculum. In private lessons, you set the agenda.
- JLPT, business Japanese, whatever you need. Find a teacher with experience in your specific goal, and every lesson moves you closer.
How to choose a teacher:
- Are they a native speaker? For pronunciation and natural phrasing, learning from a native is best.
- Do they have proper qualifications? In Japan, professional Japanese teachers need a national qualification called “Registered Japanese Language Teacher” (登録日本語教員). It requires specialised training and exams. Many teachers in the UK don’t have this — they teach simply because they’re native speakers, without any training in how to actually teach.
- Do they have relevant experience? JLPT prep and business Japanese are completely different. Make sure they’ve done what you need.
Which Option Is Right for You?
| If you want to… | Try… |
|---|---|
| Learn casually, have fun | Japanese Society, university course |
| Study in a structured way | University course |
| Pass JLPT, learn business Japanese, get serious | Private lessons |
Nihon GO! Manchester
Nihon GO! Manchester offers in-person lessons in Manchester city centre.
Every teacher holds a government-recognised teaching qualification from Japan. Not “I’m a native speaker so I can teach” — actual professional training in how to teach Japanese.
What we offer:
- In-person lessons (Manchester city centre)
- Online lessons
- JLPT preparation (N5–N1)
- Business Japanese
Pricing:
- In-person: £45/lesson
- Online: £30/lesson
Whether you’re a complete beginner or aiming for N1, we’ll build a plan around your goals.
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Written by Ayaka Uchida – CEO of A-Digital Works, founder of Nihon GO! World.