JLPT N3 means “able to understand Japanese used in everyday situations to a certain degree.”
This is a major turning point. N5 and N4 were “basics” — N3 enters the “practical” world. It’s the level where you can manage living in Japan.
The wall from N4 to N3 is higher than N5 to N4. Grammar increases dramatically, and reading and listening become serious.
This guide covers what you need to pass N3, how it differs from N4, study methods, and test strategies.
Planning to take the JLPT in the UK? See our JLPT UK 2026 Complete Guide for test dates, all UK test centres (SOAS, KCL, Leicester, Edinburgh), and registration deadlines.
What N3 Level Means
N3 means “able to understand Japanese used in everyday situations to a certain degree.”
Specifically:
- Can read and understand texts on everyday topics
- Can grasp the gist from newspaper headlines
- Can understand conversations at near-natural speed in everyday situations
Living in Japan, having conversations with Japanese friends, mostly understanding Japanese TV shows. That’s the level.
What You Need to Pass N3
| Item | Target |
|---|---|
| Kanji | About 650 characters (more than 2x N4) |
| Vocabulary | About 3,500 words (more than 2x N4) |
| Grammar | About 250 points (more than 2x N4) |
| Study time | 550-700 hours (cumulative) |
If you’ve passed N4, you need an additional 200-300 hours of study. With twice-weekly lessons plus self-study, expect 6 months to 1 year from N4.
Not sure if you’re at N3 level yet? Take our free N3 mock test to benchmark your current level.
What Changes from N4 to N3?
1. Grammar Explodes
From about 110 points in N4 to about 250 in N3. Nearly double.
Examples of new N3 grammar:
- 〜ようにする / 〜ようになる
- 〜ことにする / 〜ことになる
- 〜わけだ / 〜わけではない
- 〜はずだ / 〜はずがない
- 〜ために / 〜ように (purpose)
- 〜として / 〜にとって
- 〜ついでに / 〜たびに
- 〜っぽい / 〜らしい / 〜みたいだ
Distinguishing similar grammar increases. What’s the difference between 〜わけだ and 〜はずだ? Can you answer immediately?
For detailed N3 grammar explanations with examples, see our free N3 grammar materials with six-language translations.
2. Kanji and Vocabulary Get Serious
From about 300 characters in N4 to about 650 in N3. Vocabulary jumps from 1,500 to 3,500 words.
Abstract words, emotion words, and adverbs increase. Words like 確かに, 実は, むしろ, せっかく.
3. Reading Gets Longer and More Complex
N4 had short emails and notices, but N3 has essays and opinion pieces. You need the ability to understand the author’s intent. See our JLPT test-taking tips for time management strategies.
4. Listening Approaches Natural Speed
Up to N4 was “slow,” but N3 is “somewhat natural speed.” Close to real daily conversation.
Test Structure
The N3 test has 3 sections:
| Section | Content | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Language Knowledge (Characters/Vocabulary) | Kanji readings, vocabulary | 30 min |
| Language Knowledge (Grammar) / Reading | Grammar, reading comprehension | 70 min |
| Listening | Listening comprehension | 40 min |
Total: About 140 minutes (excluding breaks)
Passing score: 95 or more out of 180 total, plus minimum scores in each section
Section-by-Section Strategies
Characters and Vocabulary
What’s tested:
- Kanji readings
- Kanji writing
- Vocabulary meanings
- How to use vocabulary
- Synonyms and antonyms
- Collocations
Strategies:
- Pay attention to kanji with multiple readings
- Focus on adverbs (differences between やっと, ついに, とうとう, etc.)
- Be aware of verb + noun collocations
Grammar
What’s tested:
- Sentence grammar
- Sentence construction (reordering)
- Grammar in context
Strategies:
- Clarify differences between similar grammar
- Master 〜わけだ, 〜はずだ, 〜ようだ, 〜らしい distinctions
- Learn how to use conjunctions and adverbs
Reading
What’s tested:
- Short passage comprehension
- Medium passage comprehension
- Long passage comprehension
- Information retrieval
Strategies:
- Practice distinguishing author’s opinions from facts
- Accurately identify what demonstratives refer to
- Predict text flow from conjunctions
Listening
What’s tested:
- Task comprehension
- Point comprehension
- Summary comprehension
- Verbal expressions
- Quick response
Strategies:
- Get used to natural-speed Japanese
- Practice reading speaker’s intent and feelings
- Don’t miss signal words like でも, やっぱり, 結局
Recommended Materials
Textbooks
- Quartet I – Standard intermediate textbook, perfect for N3 level
- Chuukyuu e Ikou – Bridge from N4 to N3
Grammar
- Nihongo So-matome N3 Grammar – 1 page per day, complete in 6 weeks
- Shin Kanzen Master N3 Grammar – Detailed explanations and abundant practice
- Nihon GO! N3 Grammar Materials – Free, with six-language translations
Vocabulary and Kanji
- Nihongo So-matome N3 Kanji – Learn kanji efficiently
- Nihongo So-matome N3 Vocabulary – Easy to remember by category
Practice Tests
- Official JLPT Practice Test N3 – Same format as the real test
- Shin Kanzen Master N3 series – Section-by-section preparation
- Nihon GO! N3 Mock Test – Free, same format as the real test
Listening
- Nihongo no Mori (YouTube) – Free N3 grammar explanations
- NHK News Web Easy – News in simple Japanese
Sample Study Schedule (6 Months After Passing N4)
Months 1-2: Grammar Foundation
- Quartet I Chapters 1-5
- 10 new N3 kanji daily
- 20 new words daily
- Create a grammar notebook
Months 3-4: Applied Grammar and Reading
- Quartet I Chapters 6-10
- Compare and organise similar grammar
- 1-2 reading problems daily
- Start listening practice
Months 5-6: Practice and Review
- Quartet I remaining chapters
- Take practice tests
- Intensively review weak points
- Practice with time management in mind
Prepare for N3 with Nihon GO!
Nihon GO! offers study materials and mock tests to help you prepare for N3.
Free materials:
- N3 grammar explanations
- N3 vocabulary lists
- Practice questions
JLPT Mock Tests:
- Same format as the real test
- 3 free tests per level
- 90-day unlimited access for £9.99
Fill the gaps that self-study can’t cover with private lessons. All our teachers hold government-certified qualifications, have lived in Japan, and have professional work experience there.
Take the free N3 mock test → Book a lesson →
Common Mistakes at N3
1. Leaving similar grammar vague Can you explain the differences between 〜わけだ, 〜はずだ, 〜ようだ, and 〜らしい? N3 tests exactly this.
2. Running out of time on reading N3 reading is long. Practice reading fast and make it a habit to read questions first.
3. Trying to proceed with self-study alone From N3, cultural background and nuance become important. Self-study alone has limits.
4. Putting off listening N3 listening is fast. If you don’t listen daily, your ears won’t keep up.
5. Not reviewing N4 N3 builds on N4. If your N4 grammar is shaky, N3 will crumble. Review with our N4 study guide if needed.
Beyond N3
After passing N3, next is N2. N2 is the entry to “business level.” The wall from N3 to N2 is even higher.
From N2 onwards, you need not just Japanese ability but understanding of Japanese society and culture. Build a habit of reading newspapers and news regularly.
Taking the JLPT N3 in the UK?
If you’re planning to take the JLPT N3 in the UK in 2026, here’s what you need:
- Test dates: Sunday 5 July 2026 and Sunday 6 December 2026
- UK test centres: SOAS London, King’s College London, University of Leicester (December only at Edinburgh)
- Test fee: £100
- Registration: Opens early March, fills within hours at London centres
For the complete UK guide with all centres, registration deadlines, and what to bring on test day, see our JLPT UK 2026 Complete Guide.
Need in-person N3 preparation? Our government-certified teachers offer JLPT N3 lessons in London (Fitzrovia) and Manchester (city centre), plus online lessons UK-wide.
Related Articles
- JLPT UK 2026 Complete Guide
- JLPT N4 Complete Guide
- JLPT N2 Complete Guide
- JLPT Test-Taking Strategies
- Can You Pass JLPT Through Self-Study?
- Should You Get a Japanese Tutor in the UK?
Written by Ayaka Uchida – CEO of A-Digital Works, founder of Nihon GO! World. All teachers hold government-certified qualifications, have lived in Japan, and have professional work experience there.