# ようがない: there is no way to

> Learn how to use ようがない, a JLPT N3 Japanese grammar point meaning there is no way to, with structure, nuance, examples, mistakes, and comparisons.

JLPT level: N3 · Updated: 2026-05-17 · Canonical: https://hane-app.com/blog/n3-you-ga-nai/

**ようがない** means **there is no way to**. It is a **JLPT N3** grammar pattern used to **say there is no method or possibility to do something**.

This grammar point often appears in **neutral** Japanese. If you want to **say there is no method or possibility to do something**, **ようがない** is a useful pattern to learn.

## What does ようがない mean?

Use **ようがない** when you want to **say there is no method or possibility to do something**.

Natural translations include:
- there is no way to
- impossible to
- no way to

The best translation depends on the sentence. Try to notice the writer's or speaker's purpose first, then choose the English phrase that fits that context.

## How to form ようがない

Verb ます-stem + ようがない

Examples of the pattern:
- 説明しようがない
- 助けようがない
- 調べようがない

The form before the grammar point matters. In JLPT questions, the wrong answer choices often use a similar meaning but attach it to the wrong verb form.

## When is ようがない used?

Use **ようがない** in situations like:
- explaining that no method exists to accomplish something
- answering JLPT reading questions
- making natural Japanese sentences

Tone and register:
- neutral
- Common in JLPT reading, grammar questions, and natural Japanese sentences

## ようがない example sentences

- 証拠がないので、調べようがない。 — There is no evidence, so there is no way to investigate.
- 彼の気持ちは説明しようがない。 — There is no way to explain his feelings.
- 住所が分からなければ、送りようがない。 — If we do not know the address, there is no way to send it.
- ここまで壊れていると、直しようがない。 — If it is broken this badly, there is no way to fix it.
- 何も情報がないので、答えようがありません。 — There is no information, so there is no way to answer.

After reading each sentence, ask what job **ようがない** is doing: saying there is no method or possibility to do something. That makes the nuance easier to remember than a one-word translation.

## Nuance of ようがない

The key nuance is **a natural way to express “there is no way to” with the right context and tone**.

This matters because **ようがない** does more than match a single English phrase. It shows how the speaker frames impossibility when no method exists.

For example:
- In context, it sounds natural when the surrounding sentence supports the nuance.
- Compared with **ことができない**, it has a different focus and level of formality.

## ようがない vs ことができない

Both **ようがない** and **ことができない** can appear in related situations, but they are different.

**ようがない**:
- means **there is no way to**
- stresses that no method exists
- fits the specific N3 pattern and nuance explained above

**ことができない**:
- means general inability
- does not necessarily imply that no method exists

Quick contrast examples:
- Target: 証拠がないので、調べようがない。 — There is no evidence, so there is no way to investigate.
- Compare: Try replacing it with **ことができない** and check whether the nuance still matches.

If both translations seem possible, check the tone. Is the sentence describing a missing method or a general inability? The context often tells you which grammar point is natural.

## Common mistakes with ようがない

Watch out for these mistakes:
- Using **ようがない** with the wrong verb form
- Confusing **ようがない** with **ことができない**
- Translating it too literally instead of reading the whole sentence

A helpful practice method is to write one sentence with **ようがない**, then rewrite it with **ことができない**. If the meaning or tone changes, explain that difference in your own words.

## Is ようがない on the JLPT?

Yes. **ようがない** is commonly taught as **JLPT N3** 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, study the grammar point in full sentences. JLPT questions often test whether you understand the surrounding context, not just the dictionary meaning.

## Practice questions for ようがない

Try making your own sentences with these prompts:
- Write one sentence using **ようがない**.
- Contrast **ようがない** with **ことができない**.
- Make a JLPT-style sentence where the context makes the meaning clear.

Keep your first sentences simple. Once the structure feels natural, add more context so the nuance becomes clear.

## Learning path for ようがない

To learn **ようがない** efficiently, review plain negation first, then practice stronger “no way / cannot” meanings with clear evidence.

1. First, make sure you can form **ようがない** without looking at the pattern chart.
2. Next, compare it with [わけがない](/blog/n3-wake-ga-nai/) and [切れない（きれない）](/blog/n3-kirenai/). These patterns are close enough that choosing between them helps you understand the nuance.
3. Finally, write sentences where the context proves something is impossible or unlikely; then check whether replacing **ようがない** with [がたい](/blog/n3-gatai/) or [ないことはない](/blog/n3-nai-koto-wa-nai/) changes the meaning.

## Related grammar to review next

- [わけがない](/blog/n3-wake-ga-nai/) — because it helps separate impossibility, strong negation, and inability.
- [切れない（きれない）](/blog/n3-kirenai/) — because it helps separate impossibility, strong negation, and inability.
- [ないことはない](/blog/n3-nai-koto-wa-nai/) — because it helps separate impossibility, strong negation, and inability.
- [決して～ない（けっして～ない）](/blog/n3-kesshite-nai/) — because it helps separate impossibility, strong negation, and inability.
- [がたい](/blog/n3-gatai/) — because it helps separate impossibility, strong negation, and inability.

## Learn ようがない with Hane

If you want to review **ようがない** together with the related patterns above, Hane helps you practice Japanese in short, focused sessions.

Browse more lessons here:
- [All grammar lessons](/blog/)
- [JLPT N3 grammar lessons](/blog/n3/)