JLPT N3 Japanese Stories — Free Reading Practice
JLPT N3 stories deploy complex narratives, basic keigo, and the idiomatic grammar that bridges textbook Japanese to real-world usage. Longer plots, more characters, the texture of native writing.
N311 pagesA Step Toward the Dream - 夢への一歩
Saya works at an old Kyoto restaurant.
N312 pagesThe Correct Way to Fold - 正しいたたみ方
Aoi had just started a part-time job at a long-established ryokan.
N310 pagesThe Vampire Secret - ヴァンパイアの秘密
A lonely vampire makes charmingly awkward attempts to befriend humans.
N315 pagesHachiko the Loyal Dog - 忠犬ハチ公
Hachiko, the loyal Akita, faithfully waited at Shibuya Station.
N315 pagesHaruka Trip to Osaka - ハルカ大阪旅行
Haruka takes a day trip from Kyoto to explore vibrant Osaka.
N315 pagesPro Baseball Player - プロ野球選手
Alex overcomes barriers to pursue his baseball dream in Japan.
What is JLPT N3? The intermediate bridge
JLPT N3 is the level where Japanese starts feeling like a real language instead of a textbook exercise. It sits between the official "basic" tier (N5–N4) and the "advanced" tier (N2–N1).
N3 is the make-or-break level for most learners. The reason: there's no JLPT N3 textbook that holds your hand the way N5 and N4 textbooks do. You're expected to start absorbing language from real-ish sources — manga, light novels, NHK Easy News — and the gap between "controlled textbook Japanese" and "real Japanese" is widest right here.
N3 stories on this page are designed to bridge that gap. They run 800 to 1,000 Japanese characters across 10–15 pages — longer narratives with real plots and multiple characters. The grammar uses the patterns that show up on the N3 exam: ~ようになる, ~ばかり, ~ところ, ~ように, basic keigo (敬語, polite speech). The vocabulary starts pulling from registers you'll meet in actual native materials. If you can read N3 stories comfortably, you can read manga.
Study tips for N3
- Switch from "translation reading" to "Japanese reading". Force yourself to understand the Japanese sentence before you check the English, even when it's hard.
- Pay attention to the suffix patterns: ~がち, ~気味, ~っぽい, ~ぎみ. These are the texture of intermediate Japanese.
- Read the same story twice. First read: comprehension. Second read: notice the grammar patterns you missed.
- Start consuming native materials in parallel — Yotsuba manga, NHK Easy News, Japanese YouTube with Japanese subtitles. N3 stories aren't enough by themselves; they're a bridge to native input.
- Don't skip the keigo. It's a small share of N3 grammar but it appears constantly in the JLPT reading section.
N3 reading — frequently asked
Is N3 really that much harder than N4?
Yes. Stories run 800–1,000 characters vs. 600–800 at N4, and page counts go from 7–10 to 10–15. More importantly, the grammar starts adding nuance instead of just function — patterns like ~ばかり and ~とおり are about feeling, not just meaning.
Can I read manga at N3?
Slice-of-life manga (Yotsuba, Shirokuma Cafe) yes, with some lookup. Shonen action manga (One Piece, MHA) mostly yes, with more lookup. Seinen and literary manga still hard. N3 reading practice builds the muscles for all of them.
How much keigo do I need?
Just the basics: お~になる, ご~なさる, the polite forms of common verbs (いらっしゃる for いく/くる/いる, おっしゃる for いう, めしあがる for たべる). Full keigo mastery is an N2 topic.
How long is an N3 story?
800–1,000 Japanese characters across 10–15 pages — about 10 to 15 minutes on the first read. Substantially longer than N4 stories.
How do I know I'm ready to move to N2?
When N3 stories no longer surprise you with grammar — when every pattern is one you recognize, even if you couldn't explain it. That's usually after 6–12 months at N3.
350+ stories, native audio, tap-to-translate — in the app
The free web library is a curated slice. The Shinobi app has 350+ unique graded stories, native audio for every page, tap-to-translate on every word, JMDict dictionary lookups, and SRS review.