What This Scholarship Actually Is
Not a study-abroad fund. A development investment.
Japan's government has been funding this scholarship since 1988 for one reason: to give citizens of ADB's developing member countries advanced training so they can go home and contribute to their country's development. The program is administered by the Asian Development Bank, and the field of study, the expected outcomes, and the selection criteria all reflect that purpose directly.
If you're looking for a path to study in Japan for its own sake, this is not that scholarship. If you have real work experience, a development-related field you want to deepen, and a genuine plan to return — this program was built for people like you.
Before You Go Any Further
Two Things That Confuse Everyone
You don't apply to ADB directly. Ever.
There is no ADB scholarship portal. There is no form you submit to the Asian Development Bank. The entire application happens at the university level — you apply to a designated institution, get admitted, and if they select you for nomination, your file goes to ADB from there. Many applicants spend weeks looking for an ADB application link that doesn't exist.
Living abroad disqualifies you — even if you're a citizen.
The requirement isn't just citizenship — it's citizenship and current residence in your home country. If you're Bangladeshi but working in Singapore, you are ineligible right now. The program specifically targets people who are based in their home country and want graduate training to do their existing work better. Diaspora applicants consistently miss this requirement.
Who This Is For
Five criteria. All of them matter. Miss any one and the rest of your application doesn't count.
Citizen of an eligible country
38 ADB developing member countries, ranging from Afghanistan to Viet Nam. No dual citizenship with a developed country.
Currently living in your home country
Not just a citizen — you must be residing and working in your home country at the time of application. No exceptions for temporary assignments abroad.
2+ years of full-time work
After your bachelor's degree, not during it. Internships, volunteering, and part-time work don't count. Only full-time, paid employment.
Under 35 years old
At the time of application submission, not at program start. Rare exceptions up to 45 exist for senior officials — but these require Japanese government endorsement.
Bachelor's degree with strong grades
A "superior academic record" is required. Informally, that means a GPA equivalent to about 3.5/4.0 or higher. The program doesn't publish a minimum, but institutions enforce this through their own admissions.
Commitment to return home
You must sign a commitment to return to your home country after graduation. You cannot be an ADB employee, and there's a 2-year ADB employment restriction post-program.
What the Selection Actually Looks For
Institutions screen first, ADB selects second. Understanding both layers is what separates candidates who get nominated from those who don't.
Development relevance of your work
The single biggest signal ADB looks for. Not just that you've worked — but that your work has touched real development challenges in your country. Public sector, NGO, international organization, infrastructure, health, agriculture, finance, environment: any sector works, but the work itself needs to connect to the country's broader development trajectory.
Alignment with ADB Strategy 2030
ADB's current strategy focuses on poverty reduction, climate resilience, regional integration, gender equity, digital infrastructure, and financial access. Programs and applicants whose work and proposed field of study connects to these priorities score higher. This is worth reading before you finalize your program choice.
Financial need — it's a preference factor, not just a box
Individual income under USD 25,000/year and family income under USD 50,000/year are explicit preference criteria in the selection guidelines. Higher earners can still apply, but they're ranked lower on this dimension. The income certificates you submit actually get evaluated — they're not formality documents.
Gender — women applicants receive explicit preference
This is stated directly in ADB's selection guidelines. Female applicants are given preference in the final selection when other factors are comparable. It's not a guarantee of selection, but it is a real, documented advantage that reflects the program's commitment to gender equity in development leadership.
Institution ranking of your candidacy
Each designated institution independently evaluates and ranks the ADB-JSP applicants they've admitted. ADB gives strong weight to the order the institution proposes. In practice, this means your relationship with the specific institution's admissions committee matters enormously — and choosing the right program for your background isn't just academic fit, it's strategic positioning.
What's in This Guide
Ten sections. Each one covers a part of the application that the official website either skips, understates, or makes harder to understand than it needs to be.
Who Can Apply
Every eligibility rule explained — including the edge cases around work experience, the abroad study restriction, and the age limit exceptions.
How to Apply
Step-by-step walkthrough with timelines, documents, and deadlines — structured so you can actually use it as a checklist.
Partner Universities
All 27 institutions across 9 countries, organized by field so you can find the programs that actually match your background.
Funding & Benefits
The full financial picture — stipend breakdown, what's covered, what's not, and how far the money actually goes in Tokyo vs. Bangkok vs. Singapore.
Selection & Scoring
How the two-stage selection actually works, what ADB weighs, and where applicants typically lose points.
Statement of Purpose
How to write an SOP that makes your return plan believable, connects your work history to your proposed study, and doesn't sound like everyone else's.
ADB-JSP vs Other Scholarships
Head-to-head with MEXT, JJ/WBGSP, Chevening, and Commonwealth — so you can decide which to pursue first.
After the Scholarship
What the 2-year return obligation actually means, what ADB alumni do after graduation, and what happens if you don't go back.
FAQ — 35 Questions Answered Directly
Real questions from forums, Reddit, Quora, and YouTube comment sections — answered without hedging. Eligibility edge cases, stipend reality, institutional interviews, income documentation, and more.
Program Quick Facts
Founded
April 1988
Funder
Government of Japan
Administrator
Asian Development Bank
Degree Level
Master's degrees only
Annual Awards
~130–140 scholarships
Partner Institutions
27 across 9 countries
Eligible Countries
38 ADB member countries
Total Scholars (to date)
4,600+ since 1988
Women Beneficiaries
1,515+
Japan Stipend (est.)
JPY 147,000/month
English Requirement
IELTS 6.0+ / TOEFL 79+
Age Limit
35 years (exceptions to 45)
One thing about deadlines that trips people up
There is no central ADB-JSP application deadline. Every one of the 27 institutions sets its own deadline, and they range from November through March depending on the intake cycle. ADB's website doesn't give you a deadline table — you have to visit each institution's admissions page individually. Start at least six months before you want to begin studying. If you're targeting a September intake, research deadlines by March of the same year at the latest.