Award-Winning Japanese Tutors
serving Manhattan, NY
Award-Winning
Japanese
Tutors in Manhattan
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

Brian prepared for and took the SAT Subject Test in Japanese with Listening, which means he's worked through the grammar structures, kanji recognition, and listening comprehension challenges that define intermediate Japanese study. He approaches language learning with the same systematic thinking he applied to economics and CS at Caltech — breaking down sentence patterns and verb conjugations into logical rules rather than pure memorization.

Having completed an Asian Languages minor at UCLA, Abrahim brings formal training in Japanese grammar, kanji acquisition, and reading comprehension to his tutoring. He approaches the language methodically — building from particle usage and verb conjugation patterns up to reading authentic texts — which works especially well for students who want structure rather than immersion-only learning.
Few Japanese tutors can combine formal academic study with real teaching experience in Japan — Sophie has both. Her East Asian Studies work at Princeton included intensive Japanese language training, and she spent time teaching English in Japan, which gave her deep familiarity with how the two languages map onto (and diverge from) each other. She tackles everything from hiragana and katakana basics to particle usage and keigo politeness levels.
Having prepared for and taken the SAT Subject Test in Japanese with Listening, Dylan brings practical fluency in grammar structures like particle usage, verb conjugation groups, and honorific registers. He tackles reading comprehension by teaching students to decode kanji compounds in context rather than relying purely on rote memorization. Rated 5.0 by students.
As an Asian Studies major at Duke, Caitlin engages with Japanese language in an academic context that goes beyond textbook dialogues — she understands how kanji, hiragana, and katakana each function within the writing system and why particles like は and が trip up English speakers. She walks through sentence structure and honorific levels with cultural context that makes the grammar patterns memorable.
Cori is pursuing a Japanese minor at MIT, which means she's actively working through the grammar structures, kanji readings, and particle usage that trip up most learners. That proximity to the learning process gives her a practical sense of what sticks and what needs extra repetition.
Emily minored in Japanese at Texas A&M and continues to engage with the language through media and self-study. She teaches hiragana, katakana, and foundational grammar patterns like particle usage with the same structured approach she applies to her other languages, making the writing systems feel systematic rather than overwhelming.
Jacob's degree in East Asian Languages and Civilizations from the University of Chicago means his Japanese instruction is rooted in deep study of the culture, history, and linguistic traditions behind the language. He connects vocabulary and grammar to their cultural logic — explaining why certain verb endings carry social weight or how kanji compounds reflect Chinese origins — giving students a richer understanding than drills alone provide. Rated 5.0 by students.
Having majored in Japanese at SUNY Albany, James doesn't just know the language — he understands the grammar architecturally, from particle usage and verb conjugation tiers to the nuances of honorific speech. He teaches reading and writing through cultural context, connecting kanji compounds to their historical roots so students retain them long-term rather than cramming and forgetting. Rated 4.9 by students.
Growing up attending the Japanese Weekend School of New Jersey while enrolled in American public schools, Hidefusa developed native-level fluency in both languages and a deep understanding of where English speakers stumble with Japanese. He teaches everything from hiragana and katakana basics to kanji recognition, particle usage, and keigo (formal speech) — drawing on the bilingual instincts of someone who has lived in both linguistic worlds.
Learning Japanese means juggling three writing systems, unfamiliar grammar structures, and a set of politeness registers that don't exist in English. Katharine brings a methodical, pattern-oriented mindset to breaking down concepts like particle usage, verb conjugation groups, and kanji radicals so that each lesson builds logically on the last.
Though her degrees are in biology and science education, Sarah lists Japanese among her interests and brings a teacher's instinct for breaking complex systems into learnable parts — useful when students are wrestling with hiragana stroke order or the logic behind particle placement. Her 5.0 rating and four years of classroom teaching mean she knows how to pace a lesson and adjust when something isn't landing.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Your first session is an opportunity to discuss your current level, learning goals, and any specific challenges you're facing—whether that's mastering verb conjugation, building conversational confidence, or preparing for the JLPT. Your tutor will assess your skills across reading, writing, speaking, and listening to create a personalized learning plan tailored to your needs.
Unlike classroom settings where speaking time is limited, personalized 1-on-1 instruction gives you consistent, focused practice in real conversation. Your tutor can correct pronunciation and accent in real-time, respond naturally to your questions, and adjust difficulty to keep you challenged without overwhelming you—building the fluency and confidence you need for actual communication.
The best approach combines both. Your tutor will help you understand grammar structures so you can construct sentences correctly, but also teach you how native speakers actually use the language in everyday contexts. This balance ensures you're not just memorizing rules—you're developing the intuition to speak and write naturally.
Spaced repetition and active retrieval practice are proven methods for vocabulary retention. Your tutor can incorporate these techniques into lessons, using flashcards, contextual examples, and conversation to help you recall words naturally rather than memorize lists. Connecting new vocabulary to cultural context and real-world scenarios also makes words stick better.
Yes. Understanding Japanese culture—from honorifics and politeness levels to social customs—is essential to using the language appropriately. Many tutors weave cultural insights into lessons so you grasp not just what to say, but when and how to say it in ways that respect Japanese communication norms.
Absolutely. Whether you're aiming for JLPT N5 (beginner) through N1 (advanced), a tutor can structure your preparation around the exam's specific requirements for reading, writing, listening, and grammar. They'll help you build the vocabulary and test-taking strategies you need while ensuring your overall Japanese skills remain balanced across all four competencies.
Verb conjugation is one of Japanese's most challenging aspects, but breaking it into patterns helps. Your tutor will teach you the underlying logic behind conjugations, then provide repeated practice in context so patterns become automatic. Regular, focused instruction is far more effective than trying to memorize conjugation tables on your own.
Look for tutors with native or near-native fluency, teaching experience, and ideally knowledge of Japanese pedagogy or test preparation (like JLPT). Varsity Tutors connects you with expert tutors who can demonstrate proficiency across all four language skills and explain the 'why' behind grammar rules, not just the rules themselves.
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