The Guide
Mon, 15 June 2026

Cities / Tokyo / New International School (Tokyo)

New International School (Tokyo)

A genuinely bilingual English-Japanese school in Toshima, founded 2001, with multi-age classrooms and two homeroom teachers per class working as equals.

New International School (Tokyo) campus
New International School (Tokyo), 18. Photograph · School

Fees, annual
JPY 2m–2.6m
Founded
2001

A genuinely bilingual English-Japanese school in Toshima, founded 2001, with multi-age classrooms and two homeroom teachers per class working as equals.

NewIS runs a dual-language model that sets it apart in Tokyo. Two homeroom teachers, one English, one Japanese, plan and report together, and children learn core subjects through both languages from age three. The school added secondary years from 2014 and now runs through Grade 12, with CIS and Middle States accreditation. Mandarin and violin start around age six.

Parents who stay tend to be families who want their children to come out of school properly fluent in both languages, and the model delivers that more reliably than English-medium schools with a Japanese-as-a-foreign-language strand. The classrooms are well resourced, with interactive whiteboards and instruments in each homeroom. The student body is small, and teaching staff can be uneven; parents have noted variation between the Japanese and English-track teachers. For genuine bilingualism it remains one of Tokyo's stronger options.


Annual fees

Year level Age Fee
Pre-Kindergarten (PK1, PK2) - 1st child 3 ¥1,960,000
Kindergarten to Grade 1 - 1st child 5 ¥2,360,000
Grades 2-6 - 1st child 7 ¥2,450,000
Grades 7-8 - 1st child 12 ¥2,560,000
Grades 9-12 - 1st child 14 ¥2,600,000
Annual Resource & Program Development ¥200,000

One-time fees

Item Age Fee
Building and Facilities Fee (2nd+ child) ¥300,000
Entrance Fee ¥330,000
Building and Facilities Fee (1st child) ¥450,000

  • Dual-language English-Japanese school in Minami-Ikebukuro, founded in 2001 specifically for long-term international and mixed-heritage families in Tokyo, accredited through grade 12 by MSA and CIS.
  • Parents repeatedly describe a warm, accessible community. One parent who toured Tokyo schools called it "by far the most interesting and innovative" of the schools they visited. Communication and parent involvement, conferences, learning celebrations and volunteering, are described as substantive.
  • The dual-language model is the defining feature. Two teachers of equal status per class, one in English and one in Japanese, teach core subjects together. Parents who graduate children describe genuine bilingualism rather than token Japanese.
  • Multiage classes (typically two or three year groups together) are well-received by parents who value the social mix and peer-teaching dynamic, but the structure isn't for every family.
  • A minority of parents flag unevenness on the Japanese side. Some report Japanese teachers showing favouritism or being harder to engage with than the foreign teachers.

Positives

  • Bilingual outcome. Parents describe the dual-language programme as producing real bilingualism, not surface exposure.
  • Community and access to staff. Warm, communicative culture; teachers and leaders described as accessible.

Considerations

  • Multiage classes. Praised for social mix and peer learning, but the model is unusual and won't fit every child.
  • Japanese-side teaching. Some parents report favouritism or weaker engagement from a minority of Japanese-side teachers.
  • Suitability. Parents say the school fits long-term Japan residents and bicultural families better than short-term expat postings.

Accreditations

  • Council of International Schools 01

3-chōme-18-32 Minamiikebukuro, Toshima City, Tokyo 171-0022, Japan

School website