How many kanji are on the N5 kanji list?
N5 study plans usually target about 100 kanji. The JLPT does not publish a fixed official kanji list, so treat this as a practical study target.
Use this JLPT N5 kanji list hub to understand the expected kanji range, build a review loop, and connect memorization to reading practice.
Plan around 150-300 hours, then validate progress with timed review.
Aim above 80/180; section minimums are 38/120 for Language Knowledge and Reading, plus 19/60 for Listening.
Expect about 100 kanji, about 800 words, and foundational particles, verb forms, adjectives, and simple sentence patterns.
Keep the loop small enough to repeat weekly. The goal is measurable improvement, not collecting more material.
Group the about 100 N5 kanji by theme, radical, and reading pattern instead of memorizing in random order.
Learn each character through two or three common words so recognition transfers to real reading.
Use stroke-order practice for difficult shapes, then move back to fast recognition drills.
Test kanji inside N5 reading passages every week so the list does not stay isolated.
These links route search traffic into the most useful tool or book page instead of leaving learners on a thin keyword page.
Browse the full kanji reference and filter your study toward N5.
Open resourcePractice writing order for characters that keep slowing down recognition.
Open resourceCompare kanji books that match this level and study style.
Open resourceConnect kanji expectations to vocabulary, grammar, and reading work.
Open resourceN5 study plans usually target about 100 kanji. The JLPT does not publish a fixed official kanji list, so treat this as a practical study target.
Start with meaning and one common word, then add readings through vocabulary. Readings stick better when attached to words instead of memorized in isolation.
The JLPT tests recognition rather than handwriting, but stroke-order practice can help you distinguish similar characters and remember shapes faster.