The Guide
Wed, 24 June 2026

Cities / Kuala Lumpur / Japanese School of Kuala Lumpur

Japanese School of Kuala Lumpur

A Japan-MEXT national-curriculum school in Saujana, Subang, run by the Japan Club of Kuala Lumpur and built around the Japanese expatriate community.

Japanese School of Kuala Lumpur campus
Japanese School of Kuala Lumpur, Seksyen U2. Photograph · School

Curriculum
MEXT Japanese national curriculum (Nihonjin Gakkō)
Founded
1966

A Japan-MEXT national-curriculum school in Saujana, Subang, run by the Japan Club of Kuala Lumpur and built around the Japanese expatriate community.

Founded in 1966, JSKL teaches the Japanese national curriculum from kindergarten through junior high (ages 3 to 15). Enrolment runs through Japan Club of Kuala Lumpur membership and is restricted to Japanese-nationality families with valid Malaysian residence permits, so this is a school for Japanese expatriate families on posting, not for the wider international market.

The campus sits inside the Saujana Golf and Country Club estate and has three teaching blocks, two pools and a school yard. English is taught twice a week with native-speaker teachers, with students grouped by proficiency. Japanese families speak well of the dedicated teaching staff and the strong community feel; the school does not offer high school, so families on longer postings transfer their teenagers to international schools or back to Japan.


  • Japanese MEXT-aligned school operating since 1966, with the current Saujana, Subang campus in use since 1993. Serves children of Japanese expatriate families on rotation.
  • Curriculum is the Japanese national programme, with English a stronger fixture than at most overseas Japanese schools: native-speaker English lessons run twice a week from kindergarten through secondary.
  • Parent ratings on third-party platforms sit high. Aggregate ratings around with a clear positive skew. Parents describe the campus as well-resourced, with two swimming pools, a primary, secondary and kindergarten block, and a school yard, and call out staff dedication, with Japanese teachers volunteering to run extra language classes.
  • One isolated complaint reports difficulty getting through on the main phone line during the school day. Otherwise the negative pool is very small.
  • Practical read: the school is well-regarded inside the Japanese community and ranks high in the Japanese-overseas-school cohort. It is not a typical international option for non-Japanese-speaking families.

Positives

  • Long-established Japanese expatriate school. Operating since 1966, considered one of the leading overseas Japanese schools in Asia.
  • English provision stronger than most JP-overseas schools. Twice-weekly English with native-speaker teachers across all years.
  • Facilities. Subang campus has primary, secondary and kindergarten blocks, two swimming pools and shared school grounds.
  • Staff dedication. Parents describe teachers as committed, with extra Japanese language sessions run on a voluntary basis.

Considerations

  • Front-office responsiveness. Isolated complaint about difficulty reaching the school by phone; not a recurring theme.
  • Audience fit. Built around the Japanese national curriculum; not a fit for non-Japanese-speaking families.

Malaysia, Selangor, Shah Alam, Seksyen U2

School website