The 2026 University Entrance Common Test (大学入学共通テスト, Daigaku Nyūgaku Kyōtsū Tesuto), Japan's pivotal standardized exam for university admissions, has revealed a striking shift in student aspirations toward medical faculties. While overall test takers numbered around 496,000—a slight increase from 2025—applications to medical programs at national universities plummeted by approximately 9%, totaling just 21,180 aspiring candidates. This marks a significant departure from previous years' trends, where medical fields had seen sustained interest post-COVID. In contrast, prestigious private universities are experiencing a surge, with some reporting up to 20% increases in applicants, driven by strategic tuition reductions and perceived accessibility.
This decline in medical ambitions for public institutions coincides with broader patterns of students hedging bets through concurrent applications (併願, heigan) to private schools, exacerbated by the test's notorious difficulty and lower-than-expected average scores. As Japan grapples with an aging population and doctor shortages, these trends raise questions about future healthcare workforce pipelines and the evolving landscape of higher education.
Understanding the Common Test and Medical Admissions Landscape
The Common Test, administered over two days in mid-January, serves as the first hurdle for most university entrants, covering subjects like Japanese, math, sciences, and English. For medical faculties (医学部, Igakubu)—six-year programs leading to physician licensure—national and public universities traditionally dominate due to prestige and lower tuition (around ¥535,800 annually vs. private's ¥3-5 million). Private medical schools, numbering 38 out of Japan's 82, often require their own exams post-Common Test but increasingly utilize Common Test scores via dedicated entry modes.
Historically, medical aspirations peaked during the pandemic, with志望者 (shibōsha, applicants) surging 10-15% yearly. However, 2026 data from River合塾 (Kawai Juku) and Benesse Data Net shows a reversal: national med志望者 index at 91 (down 9%), private at 103 (slight up), with Common Test private modes leaping 14%.
Dramatic Decline in National University Medical Applicants
National medical schools bore the brunt, with志望者 dropping 9% to 21,180 per m3.com analysis. Benesse reports the med system志望者指数 at 91 vs. national average 98, signaling underperformance. Old imperial universities like Tokyo (理三) and Kyoto saw consecutive declines, Tokyo Science U (new merger) down 13 points YoY.
Regional quota admissions held steady, but Kanto-Koshinetsu (Tokyo area) and Kinki saw sharpest falls, reflecting urban students' pivot. Kawai Juku notes前期日程 stable at 101%, but後期 96% due to abolitions (Asahikawa, Yamagata, Saga med後期 ended).
- Tokyo U med:倍率 3→2.8倍, line up.
- Hirosaki U: 8→6倍.
- Nagasaki U:志望減予想,募集減76→66.
This shift challenges national unis' capacity, potentially easing competition but straining doctor supply amid Japan's 1.3 physicians/1,000 ratio (WHO target 2.5).
Private Universities: The New Favorites for Aspiring Doctors
Private med schools bucked the trend, with overall志望者微増 3% (Kawai). Common Test利用方式 exploded +14%, attracting risk-averse students. Prestigious privates shone:
| University | 志願者 Change |
|---|---|
| Fujita Med | +20% (学費30%減) |
| Hyogo Med | +307人 |
| Kinki U Med | +222人 |
| Japan U Med | 増加 |
| Keio Med | -200人超 |
藤田's tuition slash (¥30M/6yr → cheaper) drew 1,938志願者 (+19%). Diamond notes MARCH/early慶上理 privates up 4-5 points, signaling prestige appeal. General選抜 mixed, but Common Test modes like 北里新設 136人, 杏林 +60%志望 boosted privates.
Privates now 38/82 med schools, filling gaps with flexible entry (Common Test 88-96%ボーダー e.g. Juntendo 96.7%).
Regional Disparities: Kanto's Sharpest Drop
Kanto-Koshinetsu志望者最急減, urban med dream fade. Private shifts: Dokkyo Med微増 5,333 (2/3), Saitama Med + (3,000+). Nationwide, Hokkaido/Tohoku stable, Kyushu微減 (Kurume -微).
Post-test low averages (math/science slump) pushed students to private安全校.
Why the Shift? Test Difficulty, Post-COVID Fade, Tuition Reforms
- Tough Test: Low scores spurred併願 to privates.
- Med Hype Wane: COVID boom ended, '資格不安定' perception (unstable quals).
- Private Appeal: Tuition cuts (Fujita, Osaka Med), Common Test ease, reputation rise.
- Demographics: Stable 18yo pop, but '文高理低' (arts up, sciences down).
Experts (Diamond/Kawai): Students '強気' less, prioritizing privates.
Kawai Juku Med Entry ReportImplications for Japan's Medical Workforce
Decline risks doctor shortage (current 13/1,000 needed), unis may cut capacity. National focus quality, privates expand. Gender balance improving (women success > men recently).
Student Perspectives and Strategies
Aspirants pivot: Common Test backup for private general exams. Advice: Balance national dream with private safety, prep interviews. Higher ed career advice stresses versatility.
Expert Analysis and Comparisons
Benesse: Med 91 index vs prior highs. Kawai: Private Common Test boom signals hybrid future. Vs 2025: National down from peak.
Benesse Data Net志望動向Future Outlook: Reforms and Opportunities
MEXT eyes intl students (Tohoku/Tsukuba caps up), private financial risks (30% high by 2040). Solutions: Tuition aid, capacity adjust. For students: Explore privates via higher ed jobs, Japan uni jobs.
Balanced view: Shift democratizes med access, but sustains supply key.
Career Insights Beyond Medicine
Decline opens healthcare alternatives: Nursing, pharma. Check rate my professor, higher ed jobs for paths. Career advice essential.
