Choosing schools before and right after relocating (Southern California: OC & South Bay)
Updated:2026-06-17
When you relocate, you end up deciding where to live and your child’s school/childcare almost at once, and in a short window. Without local knowledge it’s easy to miss options, so here we neutrally lay out the order to decide and the points to check in limited time (this is not a recommendation of any particular school).
First, have an “order to decide”
- Tentatively pick an area (where to live = school district) — beyond commute and rent, look at whether the area has many options for kids.
- How they’ll get to school (the reality of drop-off: distance, time, and — for dual-income families — whether extended care exists).
- Your Japanese-language policy (maintain it, or shift toward English? This changes depending on whether you plan to return to Japan or stay).
- Choose a facility type (determined by age and policy; see below).
Narrowing the area first lets you compare only the facilities you can actually reach, which reduces second-guessing.
Areas with many Japanese families and lots of options
Japanese families in Southern California are concentrated geographically. Information and facilities are mainly clustered in:
- Orange County (OC): centered on Irvine, plus Costa Mesa, Tustin, Huntington Beach, Fullerton, and more.
- LA South Bay: centered on Torrance and Gardena, plus Lomita, Palos Verdes, and more. Many Japanese companies’ North American bases are here, and commercial facilities are concentrated too.
Cram schools and preschools often have campuses in both Torrance and Irvine, so it’s easier to search if you view OC and the South Bay as effectively one “Southern California Japanese education ecosystem.”
The facilities to look at change with age and length of stay
Pre-school age (childcare / early education)
- Daycare / preschool: policies split into primarily-Japanese, Japanese–English bilingual, and English-only. For dual-income families, extended care, full day, pickup, and Saturdays matter.
- Plenty of Japanese families choose an English-only local school. Treat Japanese support not as a requirement but as one axis for comparison.
School age (elementary and up)
- Local school + supplementary school (Saturday) / Japanese-language school: the standard for families wanting to maintain Japanese and Japan-curriculum subjects.
- There are also weekday Japanese schools (policies differ greatly, so check carefully).
- Cram schools / exam prep: these split by purpose — exams after returning to Japan, supplementing local school, English, math, etc. Both in-person and online options exist.
Planning to return vs. planning to stay
- Planning to return: emphasis on maintaining the Japanese curriculum (Japanese, math) and exams after returning.
- Planning to stay: some families focus on English and local-school adjustment, keeping Japanese at a “maintenance” level.
- Even at the same “Japanese-language school,” the purpose differs: learning it as a foreign language / maintaining ability / studying Japanese subjects on the premise of returning.
Be sure to check the “dynamic information” specific to relocation
Relocations often happen mid-year, so availability can be the deciding factor.
- Availability and waitlists (popular schools fill up).
- Enrollment and transfer timing (some accept transfers anytime).
- Summer-camp registration start dates (important for summer relocations).
- This is fast-changing information. Check the last-verified date for each facility and confirm the latest by official site or phone.
Pre-relocation checklist
- Narrow your area candidates to 2–3 (district, commute, rent)
- Decide a “facility type” for each child’s age (childcare / supplementary school / cram school / lessons)
- Share your Japanese-language policy (maintain / focus on English) and stay plan (return / stay) within the family
- Ask candidate facilities about availability, transfer eligibility, and enrollment timing
- If dual-income, confirm extended care, pickup, and Saturday options
- List visit/trial candidates so you can move quickly right after arriving
How to use Kokofami
Kokofami lets you cross-compare education for Japanese families in OC and LA by area × age × Japanese support × teaching method and more. Even before relocating, you can:
- Compare by category in the directory for your candidate area (OC / LA)
- See selection criteria in Points to check when choosing a supplementary / Japanese-language school
By listing your candidates before you fly over, you’ll be able to move quickly once you arrive.
This guide is a general overview and does not recommend any particular school. Fees, availability, and enrollment timing change, so please confirm the latest with each facility’s official information.