Have you ever started to feel confident about your Japanese ability, only to try and turn on a Japanese movie or TV show and not understand more than a smattering of words? Don’t worry, this is totally normal. Listening can be one of the most difficult skills to improve, but luckily, like any skill you just need more practice.

Podcasts are great for this. There’s a huge selection of free podcasts, comprising hours and hours of listening material, across a wide range of topics and styles. Because of all this, it’s never been easier to improve your listening ability, no matter where you are.

Previously, I rounded up a handful of what I felt were some of the best beginner-level Japanese podcasts around. This time, I’m back with another group, for intermediate Japanese learners. If you’re ready to take your listening practice up a notch, take a look below at some of the best options available!

What Makes a Good Podcast?

It’s better to have very high comprehension than something you have to struggle with to parse a single sentence.

Similar to last time, let’s talk about what makes a podcast good. For our purposes, I specifically mean what makes a podcast good practice. I think there’s sort of a sweet-spot for almost all practice materials. They should be at or only slightly above your current ability level, so that your comprehension remains high — it’s better to have very high comprehension than something you have to struggle with to parse a single sentence. Additionally, it needs to be interesting enough that you remain engaged and want to listen. If you’re bored to tears, you’ll probably stop actively listening, which defeats the point of the practice in the first place. Of course, the sort of content that you’re going to find interesting is different for everyone, which is one of the reasons I’ve collected a list: that way, everyone can find something they want to listen to.

It needs to be interesting enough that you remain engaged and want to listen.

Beyond that, all the same sorts of general podcast criteria apply. How long are episodes usually? Are the host or hosts ‘ voices clear and easy to understand? How is the release schedule? While these are the same sorts of considerations you might think about when looking for a new podcast in your native language, they’re only more important when looking for podcasts in a language you’re learning. After all, how can you hope to study if you have a hard time making out the dialogue?

Of course, I tried to pick podcasts that I felt already matched this criteria. Additionally, I looked for series with a large catalog of episodes, frequent release schedules, or both. That way, you can be sure you won’t run out of episodes to listen to too quickly, allowing you the time you need to get accustomed to something so that it’s as good a practice as it can be.

When writing about beginner podcasts, most tended to follow the same sorts of guidelines. Most series were hosted by a single person, who spoke relatively slowly, on a variety of topics for only a few minutes at a time. While this makes for an easy transition into listening practice, in most cases, it’s something I expect learners to progress beyond fairly quickly.

Intermediate podcasts can feature multiple hosts, more focused topics, and longer episodes.

Thankfully, once you move up to intermediate podcasts, they become much broader. From podcasts with multiple hosts, a more focused topic, and longer episodes, I find these to be much more engaging.

Still the focus is on immersion. And with that in mind, be gentle with yourself. Listening is hard! Like reading a book in another language, I find it takes time to settle into the speech patterns and rhythms of anyone new you’re listening to, even in a relatively controlled environment like a podcast. You might feel out of your depth with some of these at first, but stick with it, and see if it gets easier a few episodes in. Hopefully you’ll just adjust as you’re able to hear more, and can go back through those early episodes later, or if not, feel free to jump back down to the beginner recommendations for the time being. Language learning is a process, and one with many different domains, and a journey that isn’t always linear. Just be diligent, and you’ll get there.

Compared to the beginners podcasts, these intermediate podcasts have a wider range of difficulty, topics, style, and more. I’ve done my best to group them roughly by difficulty, but know that this isn’t an exact science. What’s easier for one person might be more difficult for another, and that’s totally normal.

In this first group, the podcasts still tend to offer some sort of help to Japanese learners, be it in the form of slowed speech, easier topics, and shorter episodes, they represent the first step up in difficulty from the beginner tier.

Easy Japanese

Easy Japanese is a podcast YouTube channel that’s also available on a wide range of podcast services, aimed at providing practice for Japanese learners around the N3 level. The intro promises no script, no editing, just natural, simple Japanese, and that’s what’s provided. Started in January of 2021, hosts Masa and Asami have now logged hundreds of podcasts between then and now, covering a wide range of topics. There’s no English used, but instead the hosts try to stick to simple words, or explain concepts in simple terms when necessary. Since launching, the podcast has become a video podcast on YouTube, and every episode from the very beginning has worked well with the closed-captioning provided on YouTube if you’d like to look at subtitles while you listen. Additionally, the pair livestreams twice-weekly, adding even more content to an already rich archive.

Among a crowded and ever-growing podcast pool for Japanese language learners, Easy Japanese manages to stand out as an extremely high-quality and useful resource for Japanese learners. By catering to Intermediate learners rather than absolute beginners, they’ve created a resource with a much longer shelf life, while still being fairly accessible. Easy Japanese sort of strides the perfect balance between natural, unscripted speech, while still being clear, articulate, and simple enough to be comprehensible to a large number of students. This is a great offering for anyone looking for a bit more practice, and really, who isn’t?

What sort of topics do they cover? Various, from “Summer Solstice” to “School Entrance Ceremony
Is it scripted or unscripted? Unscripted
Is it a monologue, or conversation? Monologue in the early episodes, conversation in the later episodes
Is there a transcript or accompanying material? Transcript (Free), but only in the YouTube Closed Captioning
What’s the average length of an episode? ~10 minutes
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