Best free resources for JLPT prep — what's actually worth your time
Compiling a list of what's actually useful for JLPT prep after going through a lot of material that wasn't. Wanted to share what worked for me and hopefully save others some time.
For japanese proficiency test n5 specifically, the free resources are surprisingly good. The jlpt kanji readings and meanings questions and answers has questions that closely match real exam difficulty — not dumbed-down versions that give you false confidence.
What I'd skip: most YouTube "pass in one week" content. The explanations are surface-level and don't prepare you for the applied questions on the actual JLPT exam. Flashcards alone also aren't enough for this one.
What actually worked: timed practice sets with immediate review of wrong answers, reading the official reference material for any concept that came up more than twice, and finding one study partner for the japanese language proficiency levels sections. The social accountability made a bigger difference than I expected.
Really helpful breakdown, thanks for sharing. I'm at week 4 of my JLPT prep and the japanese language proficiency levels section is exactly where I'm struggling too. Going to try the approach you described and see if it moves my scores.
Same experience here. The jlpt kanji readings and meanings questions and answers was what finally made it click for me — specifically the way it explains the reasoning rather than just giving answers. Took me 2 weeks of consistent practice but scores went from 67% to 83% by exam day.
Same experience here. The jlpt kanji readings and meanings questions and answers was what finally made it click for me — specifically the way it explains the reasoning rather than just giving answers. Took me 2 weeks of consistent practice but scores went from 62% to 82% by exam day.
Honestly I almost quit around the two month mark. The vocab just wasn't sticking and I kept bombing the practice tests, so I figured maybe JLPT wasn't for me. What actually turned it around was stopping the "study everything" approach and just hammering the N5 kanji readings daily until they felt automatic. It's boring but it works.
If you're in that same frustrated phase, don't bail yet. The listening section clicked for me way later than I expected, like almost right before the exam. You won't feel ready and you'll probably pass anyway if you've put in consistent time. Consistency really does beat cramming here more than any other test I've taken.
Just passed N5 last month and honestly the thing that helped me most wasn't any fancy app or paid course. I'd been doing flashcards forever but my listening was trash until I found some japanese language test video answers that actually walked through the audio sections step by step. Hearing how native speakers break down the questions changed how I approached the whole exam.
The vocabulary and grammar I could pick up anywhere, but listening practice with real explanations is what I couldn't find for free. If you're struggling with the audio portions specifically, that's where I'd focus your time first. Everything else kind of clicks once your ear adjusts.
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