Native-level precision — write Japanese that surprises native speakers
JLPT N1 is the highest Japanese language certification. It requires near-native reading comprehension, mastery of ~10,000 words, literary and classical grammar patterns, and the ability to read and write at the level of Japanese news, legal documents, and academic papers.
These are the errors that show up most often in N1 writing. ZISTICA MOJIIQ's AI correction engine is calibrated to catch exactly these patterns — it won't just flag the mistake, it will explain the rule and show you the corrected form so you stop repeating the same errors.
Set your JLPT target to N1 and every correction is calibrated to your exact level. The AI explains mistakes using vocabulary and grammar you already know — no overwhelming explanations, no condescension. Practice writing in Gmail, Slack, Notion, or anywhere else and get instant feedback.
How hard is JLPT N1?
N1 is the hardest Japanese certification, with a pass rate of 20–30%. Many test-takers are students who have lived in Japan for years. The grammar section includes rare literary forms that even educated native speakers encounter only in formal writing.
What is the best strategy to pass JLPT N1?
At N1 level, mistakes are subtle — wrong particle choice, inappropriate register, or near-synonym confusion. Active writing practice with native-level corrective feedback exposes these blind spots. Reading is not enough; you must write and get corrected.
Is JLPT N1 worth it?
For academics, translators, and professionals in Japan, N1 is highly respected and opens doors that N2 does not. The process of reaching N1 also produces genuinely near-native Japanese ability.
Put it into practice
Write a sentence using what you just learned — then check it with the free Japanese grammar checker.