Kawai Juku's Key Findings on 2026 Secondary Exam Applications
The Kawai Juku analysis report, released in late February 2026, provides a comprehensive breakdown of applicant trends for national and public university secondary exams (known as the individual university entrance exams or 個別試験 following the Common Test). According to the report, top-tier universities saw applications drop to 98% of the previous year's levels, signaling a cautious approach among students amid heightened competition. This marks a continuation of subtle shifts in Japan's higher education landscape, where the number of 18-year-olds remains stable at around 1.09 million—the second-lowest on record—but future declines loom large.
The report aggregates data from final application deadlines, revealing that while overall front-schedule (前期日程) applications held steady at 235,310 (100% year-over-year), mid- and late-schedule slots fell to 95% and 96% respectively. For the prestigious 'Top 10 Difficult Universities' (難関10大学)—including the University of Tokyo, Kyoto University, and Osaka University—early-phase applicants totaled 55,133, down 2% from 2025.
This safety-oriented trend stems from the unexpectedly tough 2026 Common Test for University Admissions (大学入学共通テスト), where average scores dipped across most subjects, with physics hitting a historic low of 45.55 points (down 13.4 points). Students, facing uncertain scores, opted for broader safety nets rather than high-risk bids on elite programs.
In contrast, private universities reported application surges, with overall interest up 2-3% and Common Test-based entries jumping 10%. This divergence underscores how public institutions, long the gold standard, are feeling the pinch of demographic stagnation and test volatility.
Common Test 2026: The Catalyst for Cautious Choices
The Common Test, a standardized two-day exam taken by nearly 500,000 high school seniors (496,237 applicants, up 0.2%), sets the stage for secondary applications. With a 93.5% participation rate and averages sliding—science types at 60% (down 3 points), liberal arts at 60% (down 2)—students recalibrated ambitions.
Physics' record low reflected deeper computational demands, while chemistry paradoxically rose 11.5 points due to fewer novel topics. Information I plummeted to 56.6, highlighting gaps in digital literacy. Top scorers (80%+) dwindled, pushing many toward 'safer' private options or mid-tier publics.
This year's test, administered January 18-19, amplified existing pressures from Japan's low birth rate (projected 667,542 births in 2025, down 5.3%). MEXT forecasts the 18-year-old cohort peaking at 1.09 million in 2026 before a steep drop to under 500,000 by 2040, threatening university viability.
- Average 6-subject science score: 60% (lowest since 2022).
- Physics: 45.55 (historic low, left-shifted distribution).
- English Reading up, Listening down—mixed language results.
Such volatility encourages diversified applications, with students spreading bets across schedules and institutions.
Breakdown by Exam Schedule: Front Steady, Later Rounds Fade
Kawai Juku's data dissects applications by phase:
| Schedule | Applicants | YoY % | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early (前期) | 235,310 | 100% | 2.9x |
| Middle (中期) | 31,132 | 95% | 12.9x |
| Late (後期) | 152,809 | 96% | 10.2x |
Early phase stability masks risks for elites, while later rounds—often high-ratio safety valves—saw sharper drops, partly as universities like Asahikawa Medical and Yamagata eliminate them.
Regional variations: Hokkaido and Shikoku up 9%, urban Kanto down 3%—students fleeing high-stakes metros for local options.Kawai Juku full report
Spotlight on Elite Institutions: Tokyo Science U's Sharp Drop
Among the Top 10:
- Tokyo U: 99% (8,329 early), science faculties down (理二 91%).
- Kyoto U: 99% (8,015 early), engineering peak in 10 years.
- Tokyo Science U: 87% (3,754 early)—largest fall, driven by tightened first-stage quotas (4x to 3.5x), medical down to decade low.
- Osaka U: 103% (up), bucking trend.
Medical fields broadly down 5%, reflecting post-boom adjustments. These shifts challenge brand prestige amid fiercer competition.Explore faculty openings at top Japanese universities
Photo by Stuart Davies on Unsplash
Private Sector Thrives: Applications Up Amid Public Caution
Privates contrast sharply: overall +2%, Common Test mode +10%, general entry +1%. Waseda, Sophia, Tokyo Science privates, MARCH,関関同立 saw gains, as students bolster backups post-Common Test woes.
This resilience aids financial stability, with privates (80% of capacity) absorbing overflow while publics grapple capacity underfill.
Root Causes: Test Difficulty Meets Demographic Reality
Primary driver: Common Test's unanticipated rigor, skewing scores low and prompting risk aversion. Broader: Japan's fertility crisis—births halved since 1990, 18yo cohort flat at 1.09M but post-2026 plunge to 880k entrants by 2040 (MEXT).
Urban-rural shifts, economic uncertainty, rising juku costs amplify trends. Students increasingly view unis vocationally, favoring privates' flexible paths.
University Impacts: Financial Strain and Mergers on Horizon
Top publics face revenue dips from unfilled seats; privates 30% at high risk by 2040 per MEXT, spurring mergers (29 since 2000 vs 3 prior 50yrs). Responses: intl recruitment (Japan hit 435k intl students early), program diversification, online offerings.
Link to career advice for adapting educators.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Students, Experts Weigh In
Students cite test shock, prefer privates' stability. Experts like Kawai Juku note 'safety nets' proliferation. MEXT pushes reforms: relaxed intl quotas at Tohoku/Tsukuba (+10%).
Future Outlook: Navigating the 2026 Demographic Cliff
Post-2026 cliff accelerates closures/mergers; unis pivot to intl/lifelong learning. Positive: quality focus, innovation.Japanese uni jobs surging.
Advice for Prospective Students and Families
- Diversify apps: mix public/private/Common Test/general.
- Leverage mock data: track personal ranks.
- Explore privates: rising stars.
- Consider intl paths or vocational.
For career guidance, visit higher-ed career advice.
