Edited by Aziza Francienne · B2C Marketing Manager
Tokyo is the heart of international education in Japan, with over 60 schools serving one of the world's largest expat communities. The city's international schools are spread across popular expat neighbourhoods like Minato, Shibuya, Meguro, and Setagaya. Despite being one of the world's most expensive cities, Tokyo's international school fees are competitive compared to Hong Kong or Singapore, and the quality of daily life — safety, cleanliness, public transport, food — is consistently rated among the best globally.
Compare 2 Christian international schools in Tokyo, Japan. Filter by curriculum, fees (average JPY 2,151,750), location, and more to find the right international school now.
Christian Academy in Japan (CAJ) is a K–12 co-educational day school in Higashi Kurume, in Tokyo’s northwest suburbs, established in 1950. Instruction is in English and follows a North American curriculum model with Bible classes across grades. In high school, students can take Advanced Placement (AP) courses and complete a required Senior Capstone research-and-project course. Each fall, “School Without Walls” replaces normal classes for a week so students practice leadership and service around Japan. World languages include Japanese and Spanish, offered from beginning levels through advanced/AP options. Students join co-curricular programs such as robotics, Student Council, National Honor Society, drama and music ensembles. Campus spaces include the ARK building, which houses the cafeteria/kitchen, band room and a multi-purpose room for events and activities. Athletics in the high school profile include basketball, soccer, volleyball, tennis and track.
Yokohama Christian School (YCS), founded in 2002, is located in Yokohama’s historic Bluff (Yamate-cho) area and serves children from Preschool through Grade 5. The elementary program uses an American Classical Christian curriculum, including resources such as Shurley English, Saxon Math and Bible materials. The school notes that social studies draws on students’ backgrounds and the school’s Japan location. YCS also offers an enrichment program across ages that includes art, music, PE, Latin, library, technology and worship, with Japanese listed as part of enrichment in the admissions FAQ. For after-school options, the school lists clubs such as Children’s Choir, Book Club, Homework Club, Multimedia Club and Running Club. The school also describes an After School Care program with extended options.
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