Understanding the Shift in 2026 National University Secondary Exam Applications
In the highly competitive landscape of Japanese higher education, the release of Kawai Juku's latest analysis has spotlighted a notable trend: a decline in applications to top national universities for the 2026 secondary examinations. This shift comes on the heels of a particularly challenging University Entrance Common Test (大学入学共通テスト, abbreviated as 共通テスト or Common Test), held in January 2026. High school students and repeat examinees, facing unexpectedly low scores, have adopted a more cautious 'safety-oriented' (安全志向) approach, redirecting their wishes to universities with higher perceived chances of acceptance rather than aiming solely for the most prestigious institutions.
The Common Test serves as the first major hurdle in Japan's university admissions process. It's a standardized, multi-subject examination taken by nearly 500,000 applicants annually, covering subjects like Japanese, math, sciences, social studies, and foreign languages. Scores from this test determine eligibility for the subsequent secondary exams (二次試験), which are university-specific and often more subjective, testing deeper analytical skills through essays and problem-solving. For national universities, the front-period (前期日程) secondary exams in February-March are the primary gateway, with mid (中期) and late (後期) rounds as backups.
This year's Common Test drew 496,237 applicants, a slight increase from 495,171 the previous year, with a 92% examination rate. However, predicted average scores dropped to around 608 points for science tracks and 592 for humanities (out of 1000 for key subjects), signaling heightened difficulty—particularly in new areas like Information I and physics.
Kawai Juku's Comprehensive Data Breakdown
Kawai Juku, one of Japan's leading preparatory schools (予備校 or juku), tracks application wishes through its extensive network. Their February 2026 report reveals that front-period applications to national and public universities totaled 235,310—a stable 100% compared to 2025—but with underlying shifts. The overall application ratio held at 2.8-2.9 times the capacity, yet mid-period fell to 95% and late-period to 96% year-over-year (YoY).
By university group:
- Top 10 difficult nationals (難関10大学, e.g., Tokyo, Kyoto Imperial predecessors) and quasi-difficult/ regional hubs: 98% YoY decline.
- Other universities: Notable increases as applicants pivoted.
These figures underscore a strategic recalibration post-Common Test results, released in late January, prompting students to avoid high-risk top-tier bids.
The Role of Common Test Difficulty in Driving Changes
The 2026 Common Test emphasized 'student-initiated, dialogic, and deep learning' per Ministry of Education guidelines, incorporating real-world scenarios, multiple data sources, and integrated analysis. Subjects like Information I challenged students with programming simulations for cultural festivals, while physics saw notably low averages, exacerbating score shortfalls.
Without score adjustments—a decision confirmed post-exam—raw performances dictated progression. Kawai Juku notes this led to '合格浪人' (合格浪人, successful ronin or repeaters who passed elsewhere last year) surging, with non-current students comprising a higher share. Students who anticipated 80-90% scores but hit 70% reassessed, favoring mid-tier nationals over elite gambles.
For context, national universities like the University of Tokyo (東京大学) traditionally demand Common Test scores above 90% for competitive faculties, making even minor dips disqualifying.
Safety-Oriented Application Strategies Explained
'Safety志向' manifests as diversified wish lists: multiple safer backups over singular top aims. Step-by-step:
- Common Test scores announced.
- Students predict secondary chances using juku tools like Kawai's Kei-Net deviation values (偏差値).
- Shift to universities with 50-70% pass probabilities vs. top's 20-30%.
Hit Hardest: Tokyo Science University and Others
Tokyo Science University (東京科学大学), formed by merging Tokyo Institute of Technology and Tokyo Medical and Dental University, saw an 87% YoY plunge—three years of declines. Tightened first-stage screening and medical faculty drops cited. Conversely:
- Osaka University: 103% up.
- Hitotsubashi University: 104% up.
- Hokkaido University: 104% up.
Private universities, meanwhile, report increases, absorbing shifts.Kawai Juku's full report details faculty-wise trends.
Regional Disparities in Application Patterns
Applications rose in Hokkaido (over 12k first in 6 years), Hokuriku, Shikoku (3rd year up), Kyushu. Declines hit Kanto (Tokyo-centric), Tokai, Kinki—likely due to private alternatives like Waseda or Keio booming. Volatile examples: North Sea Technical U (134% after swings), Akita Prefectural (118%).
This reflects local demographics and private competition; rural regions see nationals as prime options.
Gains for Mid-Tier Institutions Amid Elite Squeeze
While elites contract, mid-tier nationals gain, stabilizing overall numbers. This balances loads, potentially easing secondary exam pressures. Universities adapt via quotas for internationals (e.g., MEXT allowing expansions at three nationals from FY2026) and holistic admissions (40% non-Common Test paths).Scholarship opportunities aid access.
Japan's Broader Higher Education Enrollment Crisis
Beyond 2026, Japan's 18-year-old population halves by 2040, pressuring 800+ universities. 30% privates risk fiscal collapse; nationals fare better but face quality demands. Strategies: intl recruitment (400k+ now), online/hybrid, vocational ties.
Cultural context: Juku culture intensifies pressure; parental investment averages ¥1M+ yearly.
Implications for Stakeholders and Future Reforms
Universities: Lower top apps mean enrollment shortfalls, prompting AO entries (admissions office, holistic). Students: Balanced lists reduce stress but may dilute elite talent pools. Policymakers eye reforms like reduced Common Test reliance.
Check Japan higher ed jobs for post-grad paths.
Actionable Advice for Applicants and Families
- Analyze scores via Kei-Net tools.
- Diversify: 3-5 wishes balancing dream/safety.
- Prep secondary: Focus essays, interviews.
- Consider privates/internationals.
Explore career advice for long-term planning.
Looking Ahead: Trends and Opportunities
2027 may see stabilized apps if tests normalize, but demographics loom. Positively, this fosters merit-based access, intl diversity. AcademicJobs.com positions as your resource—visit Rate My Professor, Higher Ed Jobs, Career Advice, University Jobs, or Post a Job for next steps.
