What N5 study material do I need first?
Start with one structured textbook or guide, one kanji/vocabulary routine, and one practice-test source. Add specialized books only after you know your weak section.
Use this JLPT N5 study material hub to choose a complete resource stack instead of collecting disconnected books and tools.
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.
Choose one main N5 textbook or structured course instead of jumping between too many sources.
Add one focused grammar resource, one kanji/vocabulary routine, and one weekly practice test rhythm.
Use the 150-300 hours study-hour range to set a realistic exam date and weekly target.
Every two weeks, remove materials that are not producing measurable quiz, reading, or listening gains.
These links route search traffic into the most useful tool or book page instead of leaving learners on a thin keyword page.
Choose a primary textbook, review book, and focused practice material.
Open resourceUse the pillar guide to sequence grammar, kanji, vocabulary, and tests.
Open resourceAdd focused grammar support when textbook explanations are not enough.
Open resourceValidate the material stack with a timed exam and score review.
Open resourceStart with one structured textbook or guide, one kanji/vocabulary routine, and one practice-test source. Add specialized books only after you know your weak section.
N5 learners commonly plan around 150-300 hours. Your timeline should adjust based on starting level, consistency, and practice-test scores.
No. A small stack used consistently beats a shelf of unfinished books. Choose a primary text, a focused weak-area book, and mock exam material.