🌏 Destinations · All 🇯🇵 Japan · Full guide Tokyo Kyoto Kawaguchiko (Fuji) 🗣️ Survival Phrases 🧭 Travel Prep Guide About Contact 🇹🇭 ไทย🇬🇧 English🇨🇳 中文🇪🇸 Español🇫🇷 Français
🗣️ Survival Japanese

Essential Japanese Phrases — Speak Just These to Get By

You don't have to be fluent to have a brilliant trip — here's one set of phrases that covers about 90% of travel situations: greetings, ordering food, asking directions, shopping and emergencies, each with romaji pronunciation and kana. Keep this page in your pocket and you'll get around just fine, even if your Japanese is shaky.

Start Here

Forget the Grammar —Just Learn the Phrases You'll Actually Use

Ever felt nervous about heading to Japan when you can't speak a word of Japanese — how will you order food, how will you ask for directions? Here's the honest truth: you don't need to study the language for a year to have a great trip. The reality is that on any one trip you use the same handful of phrases over and over — hello, thank you, I'll have this, where is..., how much. That alone gets you across the whole city. A translation app and a bit of pointing cover the rest with ease.

This page gives you one set of phrases that covers roughly 90% of travel situations, sorted by category: greetings & manners · restaurants · directions & transport · shopping · emergencies · numbers. Each phrase comes with the English meaning, romaji (the English-style reading), and the kana/kanji so you can simply point and let a local read it. And here's the thing — Japanese people genuinely appreciate it when they see you trying to speak their language, even if your pronunciation is a little off.

🗣️ One tip before you start: if you only remember 3 words, make them sumimasen (excuse me / sorry / calling a member of staff), arigatou gozaimasu (thank you) and onegaishimasu (please / I'd like...). These three work in almost any situation; for everything else, just open the tables below when you need them.
🙏
Manners First
sumimasen + arigatou are the most-used of all — Japanese people say them dozens of times a day.
📱
An App Has Your Back
Google Translate's camera mode reads menus and signs instantly — download it for offline use.
👉
Pointing Works Too
Point at a photo menu, write a number, or hand over your phone to read — all of it gets the message across.
🗾
Big Cities Have English Signs
Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto have English signage and numerals almost everywhere.
The Most-Used Categories

Greetings, Manners and at the Restaurant

Start with the two categories you'll use from the moment you step off the plane — saying hello and thank you, and ordering and paying. Read straight down the "romaji" column, or point at the Japanese column and let a local read it.

Meaning (English)Romaji (reading)Japanese
Hello (daytime)konnichiwaこんにちは
Good morningohayou gozaimasuおはようございます
Thank you (very much)arigatou gozaimasuありがとうございます
Excuse me / sorry / calling staffsumimasenすみません
Please / I'd like...onegaishimasuお願いします
Yes / Nohai / iieはい / いいえ
It's fine / No thanks (polite decline)daijoubu desu大丈夫です
Do you speak English?eigo o hanasemasu ka?英語を話せますか?
🍜 Restaurant manners: say itadakimasu (いただきます · thanks for the meal) before you eat, and gochisousama deshita (ごちそうさまでした) when you finish · slurping noodles out loud is perfectly polite · and Japan has no tipping culture — don't leave a tip behind.
Meaning (English)Romaji (reading)Japanese
I'll have this (pointing at the menu)kore o kudasaiこれをください
Could I see the menu?menyuu o onegaishimasuメニューをお願いします
The bill, pleaseo-kaikei onegaishimasuお会計をお願いします
Delicious!oishii!おいしい!
I can't eat porkbutaniku wa taberaremasen豚肉は食べられません
Could I have some water?o-mizu o kudasaiお水をください
Is it spicy?karai desu ka?辛いですか?
I'm full / That's enoughmou ii desuもういいです
Phrases by Situation

Directions, Shopping and Emergencies

Here are the phrases that help you find your way, pay, and ask for help — each card is one situation. Just learn the ones you'll actually need; open the rest when the moment comes.

🧭
🚶 Directions
Asking the Way
Directions

Signs in the big cities usually have English, but if you're genuinely lost this set of phrases helps. Point at the place name on your phone and ask using one of these.

📍Where is...? ...wa doko desu ka? (…はどこですか?)
🚉Station: eki (駅)
🚻Where's the toilet? toire wa doko desu ka? (トイレはどこですか?)
➡️Straight / left / right: massugu / hidari / migi
Japan Travel Prep →
🚆
🎫 Transport
Trains & Getting Around
Transport

Japan's rail network is complex but the signs are clear, and an IC card is the easiest way to tap in and out. Keep these for asking about platforms or routes.

🎟️Which platform for...? ...made wa nanban-sen desu ka?
💰How much is the fare? ikura desu ka? (いくらですか?)
🚖To... please (to a taxi): ...made onegaishimasu
🛑Drop me here: koko de oroshite kudasai
Japan Travel Prep →
🛍️
🛒 Shopping
Shopping & Paying
Shopping

Big stores take cards everywhere, but small shops and markets may be cash-only, so keep some cash on you. You can also ask about tourist tax refunds at any shop with a Tax-Free sign.

💴How much? ikura desu ka? (いくらですか?)
💳Do you take cards? kaado wa tsukaemasu ka? (カードは使えますか?)
🧾Can I get Tax-Free? menzei dekimasu ka? (免税できますか?)
👀Just looking: miteru dake desu (見てるだけです)
Things To Do in Osaka →
🆘
🚑 Emergency
Emergencies & Getting Help
Emergency

Japan's emergency numbers — police 110 · ambulance/fire 119, free from any phone · plus the JNTO visitor hotline in English, 24 hours: 050-3816-2787.

🆘Help! tasukete! (助けて!)
🚑Please call an ambulance: kyukyusha o yonde kudasai
🏥Hospital / police: byouin (病院) / keisatsu (警察)
🤒I feel ill / it hurts here: guai ga warui / koko ga itai
Japan Travel Prep →
🏨
🛏️ At the Hotel
At the Hotel · Check-In
At the hotel

Most hotel front desks have at least some English, but at a small ryokan or guesthouse these phrases help things go smoothly.

🔑I'd like to check in: chekku-in onegaishimasu (チェックイン)
🧳Can you store my luggage? nimotsu o azukatte moraemasu ka?
📶Is there WiFi? wai-fai wa arimasu ka? (Wi-Fiはありますか?)
🕙What time is check-out? chekku-auto wa nanji desu ka?
Japan Travel Guide →
💬
🙂 Small Talk
Little Words That Make People Smile
Small talk

You don't have to use these, but they instantly warm things up — Japanese people often smile when they hear a traveller making the effort to speak their language.

👋Goodbye / take care: sayounara / shitsurei shimasu
😊So cute / amazing: kawaii / sugoi (かわいい / すごい)
🙏Sorry (for the trouble): gomen nasai (ごめんなさい)
I don't understand / could you speak slowly: wakarimasen / yukkuri onegaishimasu
Japanese Etiquette →
Survival Numbers

Counting in Japanese + Prices in the Thousands

Numbers come up most when you're asking prices, ordering quantities, or saying how many people. The simplest trick: if you're not sure, write the Arabic numeral on paper or tap it into your phone's calculator — every Japanese person reads Arabic numbers.

1–10
The Basic Count

1 ichi · 2 ni · 3 san · 4 yon/shi · 5 go · 6 roku · 7 nana/shichi · 8 hachi · 9 kyuu · 10 juu · for 11–19 just add on, e.g. 12 = juu-ni, 20 = ni-juu.

100 · 1,000
Hundreds & Thousands (for Prices)

Hundred hyaku (100) · thousand sen (1,000) · ten thousand man (10,000) · so 500 = go-hyaku, 3,000 = san-zen, ¥10,000 = ichi-man-en. Japanese prices are usually in the thousands to tens of thousands, so these three words are enough.

Quick Tip
Writing Beats Speaking

You don't need to memorise them all — when you ask a price and can't catch it, just hand over your phone or paper and let them write the Arabic number. Fast and foolproof. For people, use futari (2 people), and ...people = ...-nin.

Communication Tips

6 Tricks That Get You Understood Every Time

Sometimes the words run out — but these tricks let you communicate with anyone even when you hit the language wall. Picture having these in your pocket, and travelling solo stops feeling daunting at all.

📷
Google Translate Camera Mode
Point the camera at a Japanese menu, sign, or label and it translates over the top instantly. Download the Japanese pack for offline use before you fly.
🎙️
Conversation Mode + DeepL
Speak into your phone and let it translate the reply back — ideal for longer chats. DeepL handles long sentences more naturally.
👉
Point at a Photo Menu
Many Japanese restaurants have photo menus or plastic food samples out front — just point and you've ordered, no words needed.
✍️
Write Numbers Instead of Saying Them
Prices, times, quantities — if you can't catch them, hand over paper or your calculator and let them write the Arabic numeral. Fast and error-proof.
🗾
Know Where English Is Thin
The countryside, small shops, and family-run places tend to have less English. Have your app and basic phrases ready more than you would in a big city.
🗣️
Keep the Vowels Short
Japanese has 5 vowel sounds, a-i-u-e-o — keep each syllable short, clear, and evenly stressed, without dragging it out or hitting it hard.
Map

The Cities TravellersVisit Most

Big cities like Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Sapporo, and Fukuoka have English signs and Arabic numerals almost everywhere — you can get around with ease even without any Japanese. Tap a pin on the map to open that city's guide.

Allergies · Vegetarian · Halal

How to Talk About Food as Safely as Possible

If you have an allergy or avoid certain meats, this really matters — because dashi (fish stock) and pork hide in many dishes that look like they wouldn't have them. The safest move is to hand a Japanese card to the staff to read.

🚫
I Can't Eat...
"...wa taberaremasen" (…は食べられません) — just put the word in front, e.g. butaniku (pork), gyuniku (beef), ebi (prawn).
🥗
Vegetarian / No Meat
"watashi wa bejitarian desu" (ベジタリアンです) — but watch out, fish dashi still hides in soups and sauces, so ask if there's fish stock too.
🐟
What Is Dashi?
dashi (出汁) = stock from dried fish or seaweed, in almost all Japanese cooking. Ask "dashi wa haitte imasu ka?" (does this have dashi?).
🪪
Carry an Allergy Card
Write what you can't have in Japanese on paper or save it in your phone, and hand it to the staff to read — safer than pronouncing it, especially with a serious allergy.
🏷️
The 8 Mandatory Allergens
Japanese law requires 8 to be declared on packaged food: egg, milk, wheat, buckwheat, peanut, prawn, crab, and walnut (added 2023). You can read the labels at a konbini.
🕌
Halal
"kore wa hararu desu ka?" (これはハラルですか) asks if it's halal. Big cities have halal-certified restaurants, and the Halal Gourmet Japan app helps you find them.
🍱 Want to dig deeper into eating? Open the guide to halal, vegetarian, and allergy-friendly eating in Japan — with restaurants, apps, prayer rooms, and detailed survival tips.
Related Guides

Keep Prepping for Japan — Etiquette, Connectivity, and Eating

🙇

Japanese Etiquette

Take your shoes off, no tipping, quiet on the train, sort your rubbish — how to act without feeling awkward in any situation.

Japanese Etiquette →
🍱

Halal, Vegetarian & Allergies

Finding halal restaurants, avoiding fish dashi, carrying an allergy card, and reading konbini labels in Japan.

Eating Guide →
📶

Connectivity in Japan (eSIM/WiFi)

eSIM, Pocket WiFi, or SIM — which is best value, and how to stay online for translation and navigation all trip.

Connectivity in Japan →
🍜

Japanese Food Guide

The must-try dishes — ramen, sushi, izakaya — so you know the plate before you order and order what you'll love.

Food Guide →
ℹ️

Japan Travel Prep

Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything before you fly.

Travel Prep →
🇯🇵

Full Japan Travel Guide

Every region and city, with links into city guides, hotels, and attractions across Japan.

Japan Guide →
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions AboutJapanese for Travellers

Can I travel Japan on my own without speaking Japanese?
Easily. Big cities like Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto have English signs and Arabic numerals almost everywhere, and Japanese people are kind and will try hard to help even if their English isn't fluent. Just learn a few key words like sumimasen (excuse me / sorry), arigatou gozaimasu (thank you) and ...wa doko desu ka (where is...?) and you'll get by fine. A translation app handles the rest.
What is the single most useful word to know in Japan?
It's sumimasen (すみません). It works for almost everything — sorry, excuse me, getting past someone, calling a member of staff in a shop, and even a small thank-you. Japanese people say it dozens of times a day. If you only remember one word, make it this, followed by arigatou gozaimasu (thank you) and onegaishimasu (please / I'd like...) — three words that work in nearly any situation.
Which translation app is best for Japan?
Google Translate works well and it's free. Its standout features are the camera mode, which translates a Japanese menu or sign the moment you point at it, and conversation mode, which translates spoken speech back and forth. DeepL handles longer sentences more naturally. Download the Japanese language pack for offline use before you fly, in case you hit a spot with poor signal.
How do I say I have a food allergy or don't eat pork in Japanese?
Say butaniku wa taberaremasen (I can't eat pork), or — more reliable — point at a Japanese allergy card that lists what you can't have written out in advance, because dashi (fish stock) and pork hide in many dishes. If your allergy is serious, write it on a card or save it in your phone in Japanese and hand it to the staff to read. That's safer than pronouncing it yourself.
Is Japanese hard to pronounce?
Easier than you'd think. Japanese has only 5 vowel sounds (a-i-u-e-o), similar to many other languages, and every syllable is short, clear, and evenly stressed — there are no rising-and-falling tones. The most common slip is dragging vowels out too long; with a word like arigatou, keep the syllables flat and even rather than stressing them, and people will understand you just fine.
What are the emergency numbers in Japan?
Dial 110 for police and 119 for an ambulance or fire — both are free from any phone, including public ones, and English interpreters are available in many areas. There's also the JNTO Japan Visitor Hotline on 050-3816-2787, which offers English support 24 hours a day. Useful words to know are tasukete (help!) and kyukyusha (ambulance).
Ready to Go?

Keep These Phrases Handy
and Carry On Planning Your Japan Trip

Bookmark this page to open when you need it, then move on to our Japan travel prep guide — visa, connectivity, trains, etiquette — or start looking early for well-placed hotels in the city you're heading to.

🔴 Search Hotels in Japan Japan Travel Prep