新聞JLPT N1 edition · Native-level
Easy Japanese News for JLPT N1 (with furigana)
Advanced, near-native news for readers pushing toward JLPT N1 comprehension. Every story is an original Japanese adaptation of real news, free to read, with an English summary and tap-to-look-up in the Yomimaru app.
Updated dailyLast updated Jul 4, 202625 recent stories
Every Yominews story is adapted to each level. Pick yours.
Staff picks
Earlier this week
Technology
From the archive
- 01 Top 10 Best-Selling GIGAZINE Articles on Amazon: May 2026 Edition Includes '100 Greatest Novels' and 'Why the Sky Is Blue'GIGAZINEの2026年5月人気記事ランキング発表、「史上最高の小説100選」が1位に
- 02 Analysis: China Might Determine Next Move in Crude Oil Prices原油価格の未来、中国が握るカギ〜ホルムズ海峡再開交渉の影で〜
- 03 UK PM Starmer Announces Resignation Ahead of General Electionスターマー英首相、辞任を表明 ― 後継は9月までに決定へ
- 04 Can Honey Boost Your Workout Performance? Experts Weigh Inハチミツは運動前のエネルギー源になる?専門家が解説
- 05 Blue Glowing Spider Discovered in Remote Angola Alongside Dozens of New Speciesアンゴラの秘境で紫外線で青く光るクモを発見
- 06 Rats Raised with Love Develop a Sense of Justice and Morality愛情で育てられたネズミ、正義感を発達させる?研究が示す人間らしい公正さ
Questions & answers
Is N1 news the same as native Japanese news?
Very close. N1 adaptations keep the advanced grammar, formal register, and full kanji range of native reporting. The adaptation is mostly editorial (clear structure, attributed sources) rather than simplification. Furigana stays available for the rare readings even native speakers double-check.
Can I read the same story at an easier or harder level than N1?
Yes. Every Yominews story is one page carrying all of its published JLPT levels. Open any article and switch levels with the tabs at the top; the story stays the same, only the Japanese adapts.
Is Yominews free? Do I need an account?
Reading is completely free with no account required. A free Yomimaru account adds tap-to-look-up dictionary entries, grammar explanations from Tomo-Sensei, your built-in tutor, and saving words to your own study deck.
How often is new N1 content published?
Yominews adapts fresh stories from current Japanese news and rebuilds this page every day. The newest stories appear in the spotlight at the top; older ones move down into the weekly sections and the archive.