に/へ means to; toward. It is a JLPT N5 Japanese grammar pattern used to mark direction or destination.
This grammar point appears often in beginner conversations, classroom Japanese, and JLPT-style questions. If you want to mark direction or destination, に/へ is a useful pattern to learn because it helps you build natural basic sentences.
What does に/へ mean?
Use に/へ when you want to mark direction or destination.
Natural translations include:
- to
- toward
- to; toward
The exact English translation changes with context. Focus on the role of the grammar point in the sentence first, then choose the English phrase that sounds natural.
How to form に/へ
Place + に/へ + movement verb
Examples of the pattern:
- 学校に行く
- 東京へ行く
- 家に帰る
Pay attention to the word form before and after the pattern. Many beginner mistakes happen because the meaning is understood, but the grammar is attached to the wrong form.
When is に/へ used?
Use に/へ in situations like:
- going to a place
- returning home
- showing direction
Tone and register:
- neutral; へ can feel more direction-focused
- Common in daily speech, textbook examples, and beginner JLPT questions
に/へ example sentences
- 明日、東京へ行きます。 — I will go to Tokyo tomorrow.
- 毎日学校に行きます。 — I go to school every day.
- 家に帰ります。 — I go home.
- 友達は日本へ来ました。 — My friend came to Japan.
- 駅に向かっています。 — I am heading to the station.
Read the Japanese sentence first, then check the English translation. Try to notice what the grammar point contributes: question, contrast, reason, time limit, suggestion, negation, comparison, or obligation.
Nuance of に/へ
The key nuance is に emphasizes destination, while へ emphasizes direction toward a place.
This matters because beginner Japanese often uses small words and endings to show meaning that English expresses with word order or helper verbs. For に/へ, the sentence can change a lot depending on placement and context.
For example:
- In conversation, it helps the listener understand に emphasizes destination, while へ emphasizes direction toward a place.
- Compared with で, it has a different job even when the English translation looks close.
に/へ vs で
Both に/へ and で can express related ideas, but they are different.
に/へ:
- marks destination or direction with movement
- answers “to where?”
で:
- marks where an action takes place
- answers “where did the action happen?”
Quick contrast examples:
- 学校に行きます。— I go to school.
- 学校で勉強します。— I study at school.
If you are unsure which one to use, ask what the sentence is trying to do: ask a question, connect ideas, show a reason, mark time, make an invitation, compare two things, or express obligation.
Common mistakes with に/へ
Watch out for these mistakes:
- Using で after 行く to mark destination
- Thinking に and へ are always different in English
- Forgetting へ is pronounced “e” as a particle
A good study habit is to write one short sentence and then change only the grammar point. This makes the difference between similar patterns easier to feel.
Is に/へ on the JLPT?
Yes. に/へ is commonly taught as JLPT N5 grammar.
That means learners should be able to:
- recognize it in reading
- understand its nuance in context
- use it in simple original sentences
For test preparation, do not only memorize the English gloss. Practice identifying the words around the grammar point, because JLPT questions often test structure and context together.
Practice questions for に/へ
Try making your own sentences with these prompts:
- Say you go to Tokyo.
- Say you return home.
- Say your friend came to Japan.
Keep the sentences short at first. Once the form feels natural, add time words, places, reasons, or contrast to make the sentence more realistic.
Learn に/へ with Kanjiru
If you want to review に/へ together with kanji, vocabulary, and other JLPT N5 patterns, Kanjiru helps you practice Japanese in short, focused sessions.
Browse more lessons here: