By Ian O'Sullivan — Premier TEFL
Quick answer: No, you do not need to speak Japanese to teach English in Japan. Most eikaiwa (conversation school) and ALT (Assistant Language Teacher) jobs use an English-only or "English immersion" teaching method, and the JET Programme accepts applicants with zero Japanese. However, basic conversational Japanese makes daily life far easier, helps in interviews, and expands your job options — especially for direct-hire school roles, rural placements, and university positions.
One of the most common worries for aspiring English teachers is the language barrier. The good news is that Japan actively recruits native and fluent English speakers precisely because they do not speak Japanese in the classroom. Language is only one piece of the puzzle, so it is worth reading our complete guide to teaching English in Japan, covering salaries and visa requirements, alongside this article. This guide explains exactly when Japanese matters, when it does not, and how much you realistically need for work and life.
1. Why most teaching jobs don't require Japanese
The dominant teaching philosophy in Japanese language education is immersion: students learn faster when the teacher speaks only English. Eikaiwa chains such as AEON, ECC, Berlitz and Nova build their entire model around this, and their training explicitly discourages using Japanese in lessons. As an ALT working alongside a Japanese Teacher of English (JTE), the JTE handles classroom management and translation, leaving you to model natural English.
This is why the two largest entry routes — eikaiwa and ALT dispatch/JET — set no Japanese-language requirement. Your job is to be the authentic English voice in the room.
2. The JET Programme and Japanese ability
The government-run JET Programme is explicit that Japanese language ability is not required to apply as an ALT. Placements are made across the country, including rural towns where little English is spoken locally, and JET provides orientation and ongoing support. While Japanese is not required, JET does note that a willingness to learn the language and adapt to local life strengthens your application. You can review the official eligibility guidance on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan (JET information).
3. When Japanese genuinely helps (or is needed)
| Target Career Path / Setting | Required Japanese Level | Why It Matters for Teachers |
|---|---|---|
| Eikaiwa & Public ALTs / JET | None (Zero Ability) | English-only immersion methods are strictly enforced in class. |
| Rural & Small Town Placements | Basic (Survival / N5) | Limited local English infrastructure; needed for banking and daily routines. |
| Direct-Hire Private Schools | Conversational (N4 - N3) | Necessary for coordinating with local faculty and staff meetings. |
| University Positions / Management | Advanced (Business / N2+) | Required for curriculum development and independent school admin duties. |
4. How much Japanese do you need for daily life?
For life outside work, aim for survival-level Japanese: greetings, numbers, ordering food, asking directions, and reading basic hiragana and katakana. Japan's public services are increasingly multilingual, and Japan's education ministry supports Japanese-language learning resources for foreign residents. You can explore official language-support and study information via the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT).
Most teachers find that three to six months of casual study — apps, a weekly class, or a language exchange — is enough to handle daily routines comfortably.
5. Tips for learning Japanese before and after you arrive
- Learn hiragana and katakana first; they unlock menus, signs, and train stations.
- Use spaced-repetition apps for vocabulary and a textbook series for grammar.
- Practise a 60-second self-introduction for interviews.
- After arrival, join a local international exchange or volunteer group for free conversation practice.
- Consider the JLPT (Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) as a study goal; N5–N4 covers everyday basics.
6. Does a TEFL certificate matter more than Japanese?
Yes. For employers and visa sponsors, a recognised TEFL qualification and a bachelor's degree carry far more weight than Japanese ability for most entry roles. A 120-hour TEFL course demonstrates you can plan lessons and teach English effectively, which is the core of the job. Japanese is a bonus that improves your life and long-term prospects, not a gatekeeper for getting hired.
About the author: Ian O'Sullivan writes for Premier TEFL on teaching English abroad and building a career teaching English in Japan.