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Canadian Academy

Japan, Kobe

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The school at a glance
Instructs in English
Fees ¥2,300,000 - 3,510,000
Ages 3 - 18 years
Pupil numbers 674
Type Co-educational, Co-educational (boarding)
Opened 1913
Bus Service Yes
Availability Are there places?
Academic offering
Curriculum IB (PYP), IB (MYP), IB (DP)
Taught languages Japanese
Typical class size 15
Strengths Sport, STEM, Service and Sustainability
Clubs Academic and Intellectual, Arts and Creative, Social and Hobbies, Leadership and Professional
Stages Preschool, Kindergarten, Elementary, Middle School, High School
Introduction

Canadian Academy is a PreK–Grade 12 international day and boarding school in Kobe, Japan. THe school was founded in 1913 and is located on Rokko Island. The school offers the International Baccalaureate (IB) continuum from Pre-K through Grade 12, including the Primary Years, Middle Years and Diploma programmes. Early Childhood includes programmes for 3 and 4-year-olds, with literacy and numeracy introduced in age-appropriate ways, as well as specialist classes that can include Japanese. Beyond classes, students can join activities such as Robotics Club, Model United Nations, science clubs and publications, alongside service clubs. For boarding, the school describes a programme for about 40 high school students from over 20 countries, studying in English while living in Japan.

4 Chome-4-1 Koyochonaka, Higashinada Ward, Kobe, Hyogo 658-0032, Japan

The Essentials

Canadian Academy has 674 pupils, typical class sizes of 15, instruction in English.

Location

Canadian Academy is on Rokko Island, a man-made community in Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. The island is connected to the mainland by the Rokkoliner rail line, placing the campus in a residential area with easy access to services. It is about 20 minutes from downtown Kobe and about 37 minutes to Osaka by public transport, with restaurants, shops, and a hospital nearby for convenience.

Stages

The school is organized into three divisions: Elementary School (Grades 1–5), Middle School (Grades 6–8), and High School (Grades 9–12). An Early Learning and Activities Center (ELAC) supports early years, with the ELAC library space on campus.

Type

Canadian Academy is co-educational and operates as a day and boarding international school. It maintains a boarding program with on-campus Gloucester House housing to support older students.

Pupil Nationality Mix

The student body includes more than 40 nationalities. The largest group comes from North America, with representation from East Asia and Japan as host country; languages spoken exceed 15. Historically, local Japanese students have comprised about a quarter of the community, with international students making up about three-quarters of the student body.

Additional learning support

The Student Services department provides English as an Additional Language (EAL), Learning Support, and Counseling through a multidisciplinary, inclusive approach. Differentiated instruction supports diverse learner needs.

Country affiliation

There is no formal country affiliation. The school is a Japan-based international school with historical Canadian roots.

Religious affiliation

Religious affiliation is not indicated; CA operates as a non-sectarian international school.

School day structure

The standard school day commonly runs from 8:30 a.m. to 3:25 p.m. with a 2:25 p.m. dismissal on Wednesdays. Secondary-level mornings include an advisory period to start the day.

Bus service

Canadian Academy offers bus routes on Rokko, Ashiya, and Osaka lines, with multiple stops. Registration is required, seating is limited, and options can be for full year or a semester; buses include monitors and CCTV on board. Fees and stops depend on distance.

Fees

Annual tuition at Canadian Academy ranges from JPY 2,300,000 to JPY 3,510,000 for 2026/27.

Application and initial fees
- Application fee: ¥90,000 (non‑refundable). Application fees are payable by credit card at the time of application.
- Registration fee (one‑time, new students): ¥400,000 (non‑refundable). The Registration Fee finalizes enrollment and reserves the student's space; it is payable within 30 days of the letter of acceptance or before the student's first day.
- Capital Contribution Fee (one‑time, new students): ¥600,000 (non‑refundable). The Capital Contribution Fee supports campus maintenance and renewal and is payable within 30 days of the letter of acceptance or before the student's first day.
- Building & Development Fee (annual): ¥300,000. This fee is charged annually to all students, is not prorated for mid‑year joins/withdrawals, and is fully refundable only according to the school's withdrawal schedule (see Refunds).

Tuition fees (annual) by year group
- Pre‑K / Kindergarten A: ¥2,000,000 per year.
- Kindergarten B: ¥2,580,000 per year.
- Grades 1–5: ¥2,580,000 per year.
- Grades 6–8: ¥3,020,000 per year.
- Grades 9–11: ¥3,090,000 per year.
- Grade 12: ¥3,210,000 per year.

Note on billing frequency: Tuition is charged and invoiced as an annual fee. The school publishes prorating rules for families joining during the year; see the prorating schedule below. A per‑term equivalent can be calculated as half the annual tuition where needed, but the published charges are annual and prorated according to published entry dates. (Per‑term amounts are a calculated division of the annual fees, not separately published charges.)

Prorating and refunds for tuition
- Tuition proration for students enrolling during the school year (School Year 2025–26):
- If the first day of school is on or before October 24, 2025: Tuition payable 100%.
- If on or before December 19, 2025: Tuition payable 75%.
- If on or before March 20, 2026: Tuition payable 50%.
- If on or before June 11, 2026: Tuition payable 25%.
- Refund schedule for withdrawal (School Year 2025–26):
- Semester One enrollment: withdrawal notice on or before July 1, 2025 = 100% refund; withdrawal on or before December 1, 2025 = 50% refund; withdrawal on or after December 2, 2025 = no refund.
- Semester Two enrollment: withdrawal notice on or before December 1, 2025 = 100% refund of the second semester; withdrawal on or after December 2, 2025 = no refund.

Boarding fees and related charges
- Boarding fee (annual, Grades 9–12): ¥3,200,000 in addition to the tuition fee. The boarding fee includes participation in the Residential Life Program and all meals during term time. Alternate activities during break weeks may carry additional charges. Students entering the boarding program at any point in Semester One are charged the boarding fee in full; students entering in Semester Two are charged 50% of the full boarding fee. The boarding fee is a year‑long commitment and is non‑refundable for families withdrawing during the school year.
- Boarding deposits and security: New students entering the boarding program pay a deposit of ¥500,000 to reserve a space (payable within 30 days of acceptance or before first day); returning students must also pay a ¥500,000 deposit when confirming intent to return. A security deposit of ¥50,000 is charged to new boarding students; it is refundable on departure net of any deductions for damages or outstanding charges. In the event of withdrawal after payment of the deposit, the deposit becomes non‑refundable in principle.

Transportation (school bus) fees and options
- Annual bus service fees vary by route and stop. Examples of annual rates for the 2025–26 year: Rokko Route (examples) — one‑way ¥177,450; round‑trip ¥334,950. Ashiya Route examples — one‑way ¥141,750; round‑trip ¥265,650. Osaka Route examples — one‑way ¥231,000; round‑trip ¥420,000. These fees are for a year‑long commitment to the bus program. Daily tickets are available for occasional riders at ¥1,200 per ticket (availability dependent on seat space). The bus payment schedule and pro‑rating follow the same rules as tuition.

Student support and extra program fees
- English as an Additional Language (EAL): For students entering Grade 1 or above who are assessed as requiring EAL in Phases 1–4, the EAL fee is ¥200,000 per year for the first three years of enrollment and ¥100,000 per year thereafter. The EAL fee is payable on the same schedule as annual tuition, is prorated on entry, and is not refundable for students leaving during the school year. The EAL fee is refundable only if a student is assessed at Phase 5 within the first quarter of attendance.
- Learning Support: If a student requires significant one‑to‑one learning support, a fee of up to ¥3,500,000 may be assessed (amount determined by the school and may be prorated). Participation in the Learning Support program is at the school's discretion.

Food services
- School lunches are provided by the school's food services provider (Cezar's Kitchen). Each student receives a Cezar's account that families top up directly; the school provides basic demographic information to the provider to create accounts. Families manage and top up lunch accounts directly with Cezar's Kitchen.

Other costs (uniforms, clubs, incidental charges)
- Uniforms and PE kit are sold through the school's Falcon Store; sample retail prices observed on the Falcon Store include a PE shirt at ¥2,500 and sweatpants at ¥3,500. Additional uniform items, sports kit, and school merchandise are available and priced individually through the store.
- After‑school clubs and some co‑curricular activities carry separate fees; some club sign‑ups and payments are handled through the school's activity platforms. Field trips, alternate break activities for boarders, and some competitive activities may carry additional charges. Annual or occasional charges for specific activities are invoiced separately.

Billing schedule, payment terms, and penalties
- Due dates:
- New families: school fees are due in full within 30 days of invoicing or before the new student's first day, whichever is earlier.
- Returning families: school fees are due in full by July 1 preceding the start of the school year.
- Installment option for privately paying families: a six‑month installment plan (July–December) may be requested; the plan must be secured by bank draft and carries a service charge of ¥25,000 per student (added to the first installment). Applications for the installment plan must be received by the Finance Office by the June 15 preceding the school year. Corporations sponsoring school fees must pay in full by the due date.
- Payment methods and currencies: Application fees are payable by credit card at application; all other fees are invoiced by the Finance Office and are payable by bank transfer only. All fees are payable in Japanese yen; bank transfer, credit card, or other charges are the responsibility of the payor. Families paying privately who choose installments must set up a bank draft for monthly collection.
- Late payment penalties and enforcement: Any amount owing for more than 30 days attracts a penalty charge of ¥5,000 per week. The school reserves the right to withhold or terminate a student's access to school services for outstanding amounts, which may include withholding report cards, transcripts, examination access, field trips, activities, or campus access.

Refunds and cancellation specifics
- Application Fee: non‑refundable. Registration Fee and Capital Contribution Fee: charged to all new students and non‑refundable. The Building & Development Fee is not prorated and is only refundable according to the school's specified withdrawal windows (see Building & Development Fee refund dates above). Tuition refunds follow the published withdrawal schedule for Semester One and Semester Two enrollments (see Prorating and refunds for tuition). Boarding deposits generally become non‑refundable in principle if a family withdraws after paying them; the boarding security deposit (¥50,000) is refundable on departure net of deductions.

Summary of key monetary figures (School Year 2025–26)
- Application fee: ¥90,000. Registration (one‑time): ¥400,000. Capital contribution (one‑time): ¥600,000. Building & Development (annual): ¥300,000. Tuition by year group: Pre‑K/Kindergarten A ¥2,000,000; Kindergarten B and Grades 1–5 ¥2,580,000; Grades 6–8 ¥3,020,000; Grades 9–11 ¥3,090,000; Grade 12 ¥3,210,000. Boarding (annual): ¥3,200,000. Additional possible fees: EAL, Learning Support (up to ¥3,500,000), bus service (varies by route), deposits for boarding (¥500,000) and boarding security (¥50,000).
Academics

Canadian Academy teaches IB (PYP), IB (MYP), IB (DP) for students aged 3 to 18.

Curriculum

The school offers the International Baccalaureate (IB) continuum from Pre-K through Grade 12. The Elementary program (Grades 1–5) uses the IB Primary Years Programme (PYP) with six transdisciplinary Units of Inquiry, drawing on AERO, Next Generation, and ACARA standards, and incorporating Balanced Literacy and Bridges mathematics. The Middle School program (Grades 6–8) follows the IB Middle Years Programme (MYP), comprising eight subject areas—Language Acquisition, Language and Literature, Individuals and Societies, Sciences, Mathematics, Arts, Physical and Health Education, and Design—and culminating in a Grade 10 Personal Project. High School (Grades 9–12) offers three graduation pathways: the CA Diploma paired with the IB Diploma Programme; the CA Diploma paired with the IB Bilingual Diploma; or CA Diploma with IB Course Certificates, with the IB Diploma core of Extended Essay, Theory of Knowledge, and CAS. The Japan Experience is a one-year program for Grade 9 (and sometimes Grade 10) that uses the IB MYP framework with a Japanese-focused curriculum and boarding options. English language support and Learning Support are available across the school as part of Student Services, including EAL and Learning Support for both elementary and secondary levels.

Wellbeing

Social and Emotional Learning (SEL)

CA supports Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) through the Student Services department, which uses a multidisciplinary, team-based approach to address each student's social-emotional needs and to develop adaptive learning skills, with counseling helping students understand perseverance, their emotions, goals, and conflict resolution.

Special Educational Needs (SEN)

Learning Support and English as an Additional Language are provided as part of CA's inclusive Student Support Services, focusing on differentiated and inclusive strategies to support all learners; CA describes itself as an inclusive learning community and does not identify itself as a specialist SEN institution.

English as an Additional Language (EAL)

EAL support is provided in-class as part of CA's EAL Program, led by an EAL coordinator, with daily in-class support integrated into core activities such as Unit of Inquiry, Writer's Workshop, and Reader's Workshop; elementary EAL efforts are described as in-class rather than pull-out.

Mental Wellbeing

Mental wellbeing is supported through Counseling as part of Student Services, with a counseling team addressing perseverance, emotions, and conflict resolution; in boarding, Head of Residential Life, dorm parents, and a dorm nurse monitor well-being and coordinate care.

Safeguarding

Canadian Academy has a Child Safeguarding Policy that is reviewed annually; all staff and outside contractors in teaching or supervisory roles receive safeguarding training, and a designated Child Safeguarding Team oversees implementation.

Admissions

Admissions

1. Online Application: Families may submit an application up to one year in advance of enrollment. The family creates an online account and can return to the application at any time; one application is required per child. Required supporting documents become available during the online process, and the act of submitting an application does not guarantee acceptance. After submission, the Admissions Committee reviews the application to assess fit relative to grade-level availability.

2. Supporting Documents: During the online process, submit the child's school records/transcripts for the past three years (where possible), standardised test results if available (e.g., ITBS, MAPs, PSAT, TOEFL), and any relevant testing/assessments or evaluations (IQ tests, psycho-educational, occupational, or speech therapy, socio-emotional evaluations). Include a copy of the child's passport and a clear digital photo (color, at least 400x600 pixels). These documents help the school understand the student's learning needs and profile.

3. School Reference: The Admissions process requires confidential recommendations: one for elementary applicants (PreK-3 through Grade 5) and two for secondary applicants (Grade 6-12). Provide the email addresses of the child's current teachers/principal/counselor so the school can request these recommendations. A confidential recommendations form becomes available during the online application process.

4. Application Fee: The application fee is ¥90,000 per application and is paid online to cover administrative costs. After payment, the child's application and supporting documents are reviewed by the Admissions Committee. The fee is non-refundable. If the applicant is placed in the waiting pool, the application remains active for two academic years (the year of application and the start of the following academic year), with potential requests for updated documentation.

5. Admissions Interview: Following the receipt of the application, documents, and fee, and subject to seat availability, the Admissions Committee reviews the submission to determine fit. An interview is scheduled that includes a spoken component with the child and an opportunity for questions. Depending on age and criteria, there may be mathematics, reading, and writing assessments, and non-native English speakers are evaluated for English as an Additional Language (EAL) support. Face-to-face interviews are preferred, but online interviews can be arranged for applicants outside the Kansai area; a second interview may occur for additional information.

6. Acceptance of Offer: After the interview, the Admissions Committee makes a recommendation to the Head of School, who makes all admissions decisions. Families applying for the current school year are typically notified of the decision by email and in writing within about one week of the interview. If accepted, families have one week to sign and return the Acceptance of Offer, and the Registration Fee is due one month after notification. If the required documents or fees are not submitted, the seat may be offered to other applicants.

Fees overview (context for admissions): The 2025-26 fee schedule includes an Application Fee of ¥90,000, a one-time Registration Fee of ¥400,000, a one-time Capital Contribution Fee of ¥600,000, and a Building & Development Fee of ¥300,000. Tuition by level ranges from ¥2,000,000 (Pre-K / Kindergarten A) to ¥3,210,000 (Grade 12), with a Boarding Fee of ¥3,200,000. These fees are reviewed annually and are subject to modest annual increases.

Scholarships

Canadian Academy does not publish any scholarship offerings on its official admissions/tuition pages, and there is no CA-listed scholarship program described in the admissions FAQs. Families interested in financial support should consider external avenues, such as government programs or other external scholarships, rather than CA-provided awards. The school does offer corporate partnership arrangements (Corporate Contribution Plan) that can affect financing for eligible families, but these are not scholarships awarded to students.

Waitlist

Yes. Canadian Academy maintains a waiting pool when spaces are not available in a given grade. To enter the waiting pool, applicants must complete the entire application process. For the current 2025-26 timeline, spaces are limited; applications for grades without availability will be considered for the start of the 2026-27 school year. When a seat becomes available, all applicants in the waiting pool are reviewed, and selections are made from the pool. Updated documentation may be requested over time. Applicants are typically notified of admissions decisions within a short window after the interview, and the pool remains active through the relevant academic years.

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