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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsUnderstanding Toshin’s Latest 2026 University Deviation Value Rankings
Toshin, one of Japan’s leading cram schools known as yobikō, has just refreshed its highly anticipated university deviation value rankings for the 2026 entrance exams. Released on April 11, these rankings offer prospective students, parents, and educators a clear snapshot of the academic benchmarks required for admission to top institutions. Deviation values, or hensachi in Japanese, represent a standardized measure of entrance exam difficulty, calculated on a scale where 50 indicates average performance among test-takers. Unlike global university rankings that emphasize research output or employability, hensachi focuses squarely on the competitive intensity of Japan’s rigorous university entrance process, making it an indispensable tool for applicants navigating the gaokaku system.
This update incorporates data from the past three years of Common Test for University Admissions results alongside Toshin’s own Common Test Main Level Mock Exams, conducted six times a year exclusively for university qualifiers. The C-line deviation value specifically denotes the score needed for a 50% chance of passing, providing a realistic target for study planning. With Japan’s ongoing demographic challenges—including a projected decline in 18-year-olds to under 1 million by 2026—these rankings highlight shifting applicant pools and intensifying competition at elite levels.
The Role of Hensachi in Japan’s University Admissions Landscape
In Japan, university admissions revolve around hensachi as a primary metric for self-assessment. Originating from statistical deviation scores, hensachi transforms raw exam results into a comparable index across subjects and institutions. For national universities, it averages six subjects from the Common Test plus individual exams; for privates, it typically draws from three subjects in individual or hybrid tests. This distinction underscores why direct comparisons between public and private institutions aren’t feasible—national exams demand broader preparation, often pushing hensachi higher.
Prospective students use these figures to calibrate their preparation. A hensachi of 70+, for instance, signals entry to Japan’s most selective programs, where acceptance rates hover below 10%. Amid reforms like the expansion of recommendation-based admissions and English proficiency tests, hensachi remains the gold standard for general selection routes, influencing choices from high school course tracks to juku enrollment. Cultural context amplifies its weight: families invest heavily in exam prep, with total spending exceeding ¥1 trillion annually, viewing high hensachi as a pathway to stable careers in bureaucracy, medicine, or engineering.
Top National and Public Universities: Unchanged Elites Lead the Pack
The University of Tokyo (Tōdai) dominates Toshin’s 2026 rankings once again, with its Faculty of Science Class III (理科三類) topping at 74—the highest overall. This medicine-bound track edges out even Kyoto University’s medical program at 72. For humanities/social sciences in the pre-entrance phase, Tōdai’s Faculty of Letters Class I holds 72, followed by Classes II and III at 71.
| Rank | University/Faculty | Hensachi (C-line) | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tokyo U, Science Class III | 74 | Tokyo |
| 2 | Tokyo U, Letters Class I | 72 | Tokyo |
| =3 | Kyoto U, Medicine | 72 | Kyoto |
| 4 | Tokyo U, Science Class I | 72 | Tokyo |
| 5 | Tokyo U, Letters Class II/III | 71 | Tokyo |
| 6 | Kyoto U, Education (Science) | 70 | Kyoto |
| 7-11 | Kyoto U multiple (Education Hum, Economics, Law, etc.) | 69 | Kyoto |
Osaka University’s economics and law faculties clock in at 67, while regional powerhouses like Nagoya (66) and Tohoku (65) round out the top tier. No major shifts from 2025, but Toshin notes sustained demand despite fewer applicants overall.
Private Universities: Keio and Waseda Maintain Supremacy Amid Applicant Surges
Private institutions shine in Toshin’s private rankings, with Keio University’s Faculty of Medicine leading at 75—surpassing even Tōdai’s peak due to specialized testing. Waseda follows closely in advanced engineering (72) and politics/economics (72). Early data shows applicant numbers up 10% year-over-year for top privates, bucking the national trend.
| Rank | University/Faculty | Hensachi |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Keio U, Medicine | 75 |
| 2 | Waseda U, Advanced Engineering (Physics, etc.) | 72 |
| 3 | Waseda U, Politics/Economics | 72 |
| 4 | Keio U, Engineering Gates B/C | 73 |
| 5 | Early Rice (MARCH group averages 60-65) | 65-70 |
Chuo University’s commerce/law (66-68) and Sophia (64-69) hold strong. For full lists, check Toshin’s interactive rankings page.
Key Changes and Rising Faculties in the 2026 Update
This April refresh reveals subtle upward ticks for medical and engineering tracks, driven by post-pandemic applicant rebounds. Tokyo Science University’s medicine rose to 71, aligning with national demand for STEM amid Japan’s aging society. Conversely, some humanities faculties dipped 1-2 points due to reallocations. Toshin highlights 74.4% of successful elite admits locked in targets by high school second year March, urging early focus.
- Increased qualifiers: Tokyo U +91 (906 total), former Imperial 7 +141.
- Private surges: 10% more apps to Keio/Waseda.
- Medical schools +69 qualifiers.
Regional Breakdown: Beyond Tokyo and Kyoto Dominance
While Kanto (Tokyo area) claims 60% of top-50 spots, Kansai (Kyoto/Osaka) follows at 25%. Hokkaido University’s education/economics (65) leads northern rankings, Tohoku Law (65) the northeast. Kyushu University and Kobe (64-66) anchor west. Emerging: Shiga University Economics (67), a rare non-imperial riser. Applicants from rural prefectures increasingly target mid-tier privates with 55-60 hensachi for accessibility.
Comparing Toshin with Benesse, Kawai, and Others
Toshin’s C-line aligns closely with Benesse’s for privates (Keio Med 75-76), but Kawai (河合塾) rates nationals slightly lower (Tokyo 70-73). Rivero (駿台予備校) emphasizes descriptive tests, pegging medicine at 70+. Discrepancies arise from mock exam pools: Toshin’s qualifier-focused data suits ambitious students. Applicants cross-reference for balanced views, as per a Resemom analysis.
Implications for 2026 Applicants: Strategies Amid Declining Birthrates
With high school graduates dropping 5% yearly, competition concentrates at elites: Tōdai apps up 3% despite totals falling. Strategies include hybrid prep (Common Test + individuals), targeting “safety nets” at 5-10 hensachi below goals. Toshin advises bridging gaps via weekly mocks, noting 40% improvement possible in a year. Stakeholder views: MEXT pushes diversification, but 70% still chase general routes.
Real-World Case Studies: Success Stories from Toshin Qualifiers
Take H.S. from Awa High: Deviation +15.7 (61.3 to 77.0) via targeted mocks. K.S. from Shishakkan: +7.4 to 71.8. Timelines: Year 2 March decisions yield 74.4% success rate. Post-admit, high hensachi correlates with 90%+ employment in top firms.
Future Outlook: Reforms Shaping 2026 and Beyond
2026 sees expanded AO (comprehensive selection) to 20%, but hensachi governs 60% of seats. AI proctoring and English SAT-style tests loom, potentially recalibrating values. Toshin predicts stable tops but rising mid-privates. Actionable: Track updates quarterly, align with career goals via career advice resources.
Photo by Jimmy Phillips on Unsplash
Actionable Insights for Aspiring Students and Parents
- Assess current hensachi via Toshin mocks; aim 5-point annual gains.
- Diversify: 1 dream (70+), 2 targets (65), 3 safeties (55-60).
- Balance: 60% subjects, 40% mindset via group study.
- Risks: Burnout (20% dropouts); solutions: sleep 7hrs, weekly reviews.
- Comparisons: Use Toshin for targets, Benesse for trends.
These rankings empower informed choices in Japan’s high-stakes system.

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