# させてください: please let me do

> Learn how to use させてください, a JLPT N4 Japanese grammar point meaning please let me do, with structure, nuance, examples, mistakes, and comparisons.

JLPT level: N4 · Updated: 2026-05-17 · Canonical: https://hane-app.com/blog/n4-sasete-kudasai/

**させてください** means **please let me do** or **allow me to**. It is a **JLPT N4** Japanese grammar pattern used to make polite requests for permission.

This grammar point often appears in workplace conversation, customer service, formal notices, and JLPT N4 listening and reading questions. If you want to ask someone to let you do something in natural, polite Japanese, **させてください** is an essential pattern to master after the N5 basics.

## What does させてください mean?

Use **させてください** when you want to ask someone to allow you to perform an action. It is a humble, polite request that places the speaker in a lower social position relative to the listener.

Natural translations include:
- please let me do
- allow me to
- please permit me to

The best translation depends on the situation. In casual English you might simply say "Let me..."; in more formal contexts, "Allow me to..." fits better. Focus on the Japanese intent first: you are requesting that the listener grant you permission to act.

## How to form させてください

Conjugate the verb into its causative form, attach **て**, and add **ください**.

<div class="formation">
  <div class="formula">
    <span class="ftoken">Verb (causative form)</span>
    <span class="fplus">+</span>
    <span class="ftoken t-aux">て</span>
    <span class="fplus">+</span>
    <span class="ftoken t-aux">ください</span>
  </div>
</div>

Examples of the pattern:
- 考えさせてください
- 説明させてください
- 使わせてください
- 帰らせてください
- 手伝わせてください

The form before **てください** must be the causative, not the plain te-form. In JLPT questions, wrong answer choices often use the standard te-form or the causative without て, so check the ending carefully.

## When is させてください used?

Use **させてください** in situations like:
- asking a supervisor to let you handle a task
- requesting permission to speak, explain, or demonstrate
- politely asking to use an object or space
- making humble requests in customer service or business settings

Tone and register:
- polite and humble; lowers the speaker relative to the listener
- common in daily speech, workplace Japanese, service industry language, and JLPT N4 listening

## させてください example sentences

<div class="examples">
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>少<rt>すこ</rt></ruby>し<ruby>考<rt>かんが</rt></ruby>えさせてください。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Please let me think for a moment.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">polite request</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>私<rt>わたし</rt></ruby>に<ruby>説明<rt>せつめい</rt></ruby>させてください。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Please let me explain.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">humble</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp">この<ruby>電話<rt>でんわ</rt></ruby>を<ruby>使<rt>つか</rt></ruby>わせてください。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Please let me use this phone.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">permission</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp"><ruby>今日<rt>きょう</rt></ruby>は<ruby>早<rt>はや</rt></ruby>く<ruby>帰<rt>かえ</rt></ruby>らせてください。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Please let me go home early today.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">workplace</span></div>
  </div>
  <div class="example">
    <div class="example-jp">その<ruby>仕事<rt>しごと</rt></ruby>を<ruby>手伝<rt>てつだ</rt></ruby>わせてください。</div>
    <div class="example-en">Please let me help with that work.</div>
    <div class="example-foot"><span class="example-tag">offer</span></div>
  </div>
</div>

After reading each sentence, ask what job **させてください** is doing: the speaker is humbly asking the listener to grant permission to act. That makes the nuance easier to remember than a one-word translation.

## Nuance of させてください

The key nuance is that **させてください** is a direct appeal to the listener's authority. You are not merely asking if an action is acceptable; you are asking the listener to let you do it.

This matters because learners often confuse it with patterns that ask for objective approval. **させてください** frames the listener as the gatekeeper and the speaker as the recipient of permission.

For example:
- In context, it carries a humble, respectful weight that a simple question like "Can I...?" would not convey in Japanese.
- Compared with **てもいいですか**, it shifts the focus from general acceptability to the listener's specific grant of permission.

## させてください vs てもいいですか

Both **させてください** and **てもいいですか** can appear when you want to do something, but they are different.

<div class="compare">
  <div class="cmp">
    <div class="cmp-head a">させてください</div>
    <div class="cmp-sub">Humble request for the listener to grant permission</div>
    <div class="cmp-when">When you want someone to let you act</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg"><ruby>少<rt>すこ</rt></ruby>し<ruby>考<rt>かんが</rt></ruby>えさせてください。</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg-en">Please let me think for a moment.</div>
  </div>
  <div class="vs">vs</div>
  <div class="cmp">
    <div class="cmp-head b">てもいいですか</div>
    <div class="cmp-sub">Asking whether an action is acceptable or allowed</div>
    <div class="cmp-when">When you want to know if doing something is okay</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg"><ruby>少<rt>すこ</rt></ruby>し<ruby>考<rt>かんが</rt></ruby>えてもいいですか。</div>
    <div class="cmp-eg-en">Is it okay if I think for a moment?</div>
  </div>
</div>

If both seem possible, check the tone. **させてください** is softer and more deferential because it acknowledges the listener's power to permit the action. **てもいいですか** is more neutral and seeks confirmation about rules or general acceptability.

## Common mistakes with させてください

<div class="mistakes">
  <div class="mistake">
    <div class="mline"><span class="mark bad">❌</span> <span class="mline-body"><ruby>考<rt>かんが</rt></ruby>えてください。</span></div>
    <div class="mline"><span class="mark good">✅</span> <span class="mline-body"><ruby>考<rt>かんが</rt></ruby>えさせてください。</span></div>
    <div class="note"><strong>考えてください</strong> means "please think," not "please let me think." Use the causative form to ask for permission.</div>
  </div>
  <div class="mistake">
    <div class="mline"><span class="mark bad">❌</span> <span class="mline-body">この<ruby>電話<rt>でんわ</rt></ruby>を<ruby>使<rt>つか</rt></ruby>ってもいいですか。</span></div>
    <div class="mline"><span class="mark good">✅</span> <span class="mline-body">この<ruby>電話<rt>でんわ</rt></ruby>を<ruby>使<rt>つか</rt></ruby>わせてください。</span></div>
    <div class="note">While grammatically fine, <strong>てもいいですか</strong> asks if using the phone is acceptable. <strong>させてください</strong> is the humble choice when you want the owner to grant you permission.</div>
  </div>
</div>

A helpful practice method is to write one sentence with **させてください**, then rewrite it with **てもいいですか**. If the tone or social relationship changes, explain that difference in your own words.

## Is させてください on the JLPT?

<div class="jlpt-card">
  <div class="jlpt-shield">N4</div>
  <div class="jlpt-info">
    <div class="jlpt-checks">
      <p>Yes. <strong>させてください</strong> is commonly taught as <strong>JLPT N4</strong> grammar.</p>
      <ul>
        <li>Recognize the causative <strong>て</strong>-form + <strong>ください</strong> structure in listening and reading.</li>
        <li>Understand its humble, permission-seeking nuance in context.</li>
        <li>Use it correctly in simple original sentences.</li>
      </ul>
    </div>
  </div>
</div>

For test preparation, study the grammar point in full sentences. JLPT questions often test whether you understand the surrounding social context, not just the dictionary meaning.

## Practice questions for させてください

<div class="prompts">
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">1</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Write one sentence using the basic pattern to ask for permission.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">production</span>
  </div>
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">2</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Change the sentence into a more formal workplace style if possible.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">register</span>
  </div>
  <div class="prompt">
    <span class="prompt-num">3</span>
    <span class="prompt-text">Compare your sentence with <strong>てもいいですか</strong> and describe the tone shift.</span>
    <span class="prompt-tag">contrast</span>
  </div>
</div>

Keep your first sentences simple. Once the structure feels natural, add time words, places, and objects to make the sentence more realistic.

## Learning path for させてください

To learn **させてください** efficiently, start with the causative form, then solidify the combination with てください, and finally practice in real-world contexts.

<div class="path">
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">1</span>
    <span class="step-body">First, make sure you can form the causative of ichidan, godan, and irregular verbs without looking at a chart.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">2</span>
    <span class="step-body">Next, attach <strong>てください</strong> to the causative form and practice the five example sentences above until they feel automatic.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">3</span>
    <span class="step-body">Then compare <strong>させてください</strong> with <strong>てもいいですか</strong>. Choosing between them will help you understand the nuance of direct, humble permission.</span>
  </div>
  <div class="path-step">
    <span class="step-num">4</span>
    <span class="step-body">Finally, write three requests you might use at work, school, or a hotel, and say them out loud.</span>
  </div>
</div>

## Related grammar to review next

- [いたします](/blog/n4-itashimasu/) — reviews polite verb replacements and humble speech.
- [ございます](/blog/n4-gozaimasu/) — reviews polite copula and existential verbs.
- [でございます](/blog/n4-de-gozaimasu/) — reviews formal polite copula patterns.
- [させる](/blog/n4-saseru/) — reviews the base causative form before adding てください.

## Learn させてください with Hane

If you want to review **させてください** together with the related patterns above, Hane helps you practice Japanese in short, focused sessions.

Browse more lessons here:
- [All grammar lessons](/blog/)
- [JLPT N4 grammar lessons](/blog/n4/)