MEXT Scholarship 2028: Full Guide to Study in Japan for Free
The MEXT Scholarship is the Japanese Government scholarship for international students. It is one of the most respected fully funded scholarships in Asia and can support undergraduate, master’s, doctoral, research, teacher training, Japanese studies, college of technology and specialised training college categories. Students planning to enter Japan in 2028 should start preparing in 2027. This is because the Embassy Recommendation route usually opens much earlier than the actual arrival year. Study in Japan explains that recruitment for students arriving in Japan in April 2027 or September/October 2027 was made between April and May of the previous year, and the first screening was conducted between May and July by Japanese embassies or consulates. For MEXT 2028, students should expect many embassy calls to open around April to May 2027, but the exact schedule will differ by country.
What is MEXT?
MEXT stands for Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. The MEXT Scholarship supports international students who want to study in Japan at different academic levels. Study in Japan lists several MEXT scholarship types, including research students, teacher training students, undergraduate students, Japanese studies students, college of technology students, specialised training college students and Young Leaders Programme students. It also lists tuition exemption, monthly scholarship amounts and round-trip travel expenses for different categories.
What does MEXT cover?
MEXT is considered fully funded because it usually covers:
- Tuition
- Entrance examination fees
- Monthly allowance
- Round-trip airfare
- Japanese language preparatory education where required
- University placement support
The exact amount depends on the category and annual budget. Study in Japan lists monthly amounts such as ¥143,000 to ¥145,000 for some graduate categories and ¥117,000 for some undergraduate or training categories, with tuition exempted and round-trip airfare provided. Students should check the latest category-specific guideline because amounts can change.
MEXT categories
1. Research Students
This is the common route for master’s and PhD applicants. A student may first enter as a research student and then move into a regular master’s or doctoral programme after passing university entrance procedures. This route is best for students with a bachelor’s or master’s degree who want graduate study in Japan.
2. Undergraduate Students
This is for students who want to complete a bachelor’s degree in Japan. It can include Japanese language and preparatory education before starting the degree.
3. College of Technology Students
This is often for technical and engineering-related education. It is useful for students interested in practical technical training.
4. Specialized Training College Students
This category can cover vocational and specialised fields.
5. Japanese Studies Students
This is usually for students already studying Japanese language or culture at university.
6. Teacher Training Students
This is for teachers who want training and research in education in Japan.
Who can apply?
Eligibility depends on the category. For research students, the 2027 application guideline stated that applicants must have the nationality of a country that has diplomatic relations with Japan, and applicants with Japanese nationality at the time of application are not eligible unless they meet specific dual-nationality conditions. Age requirements depend on the category. Study in Japan states that research students must generally be under 35 and eligible for admission to a master’s or doctoral programme at a Japanese graduate school. Students must check their local Japanese Embassy because the first screening is conducted by the Japanese diplomatic mission in the country of citizenship.
Application routes
Embassy Recommendation
This is the most common route for many students. The applicant applies through the Japanese Embassy or Consulate in their country. The process may include document screening, written exams and interviews.
University Recommendation
In this route, a Japanese university recommends the student to MEXT. It is often used for graduate programmes, research students and specific university partnerships.
Other recommendation routes
Some categories may involve official overseas recommending organisations or special programmes.
Expected timeline for MEXT 2028
The exact timeline will vary by country, but students can plan as follows:
| Period | Action |
|---|---|
| January to March 2027 | Choose category and prepare documents |
| April to May 2027 | Embassy Recommendation calls may open |
| May to June 2027 | Submit documents |
| June to July 2027 | Written exams and interviews |
| July to August 2027 | First screening results |
| August to September 2027 | Contact Japanese universities for provisional acceptance, if required |
| Late 2027 to early 2028 | Final MEXT and placement decisions |
| April or September/October 2028 | Arrival in Japan |
Required documents
MEXT documents vary by category, but may include:
- Application form
- Placement preference form
- Field of study and research plan
- Academic transcripts
- Graduation certificate or expected graduation certificate
- Recommendation letter
- Medical certificate
- Passport or ID
- Abstract of thesis, if applicable
- Language certificates, if available
- Portfolio, if relevant
Research applicants must pay special attention to the Field of Study and Research Plan. This is one of the most important documents in the application.
How to write a strong research plan
A strong MEXT research plan should include:
- Research title
- Background and problem
- Research question
- Why Japan is the right place
- Methodology
- Expected results
- Relevant professors or laboratories
- Connection to your previous studies
- Contribution to your home country and Japan
Do not write a vague proposal. A research plan like “I want to study renewable energy in Japan” is too broad. A better plan identifies a specific technical, social or policy problem and explains how the Japanese university can support the research.
Do you need Japanese language?
Many graduate programmes in Japan are available in English, and some embassies state that Japanese is not required for many subjects. For example, the Embassy of Japan in the UK states that no knowledge of Japanese is necessary for many subjects for the postgraduate scholarship, although this depends on course and university. However, Japanese language ability is still a major advantage for daily life, integration, internships and long-term career planning.
Best fields for MEXT
Japan is strong in:
- Engineering
- Robotics
- Artificial intelligence
- Manufacturing
- Disaster risk reduction
- Architecture
- Urban planning
- Environmental engineering
- Marine science
- Public policy
- Japanese studies
- Education
- Health sciences
- Agriculture
- Materials science
Common mistakes
Applicants often fail because they:
- Start after the embassy deadline is announced.
- Choose the wrong category.
- Write a weak research plan.
- Do not check local embassy requirements.
- Submit incomplete documents.
- Ignore written exam preparation.
- Contact professors too late.
- Choose universities without checking research fit.
Final advice
MEXT is one of the best scholarships in the world, but it rewards early preparation. Students targeting MEXT 2028 should start in early 2027, not after the call opens. Need help applying? We can help you choose the correct MEXT category, prepare your research plan, organise documents, shortlist Japanese universities and review your full MEXT 2028 application. ---
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