The 100 Most Common Chinese Characters

Grid of the most frequent Chinese characters with 的 highlighted at the top

The most common Chinese character is 的 (de), the possessive particle — it alone accounts for about 3.5% of all running text. Below is the full ranked top 100, with pinyin, core meanings, and exact occurrence counts, measured across the 658 graded stories in the Literate Chinese catalog (141,730 character occurrences, July 2026). These 100 characters cover 56.7% of everything you'll read in those stories — which is why they're the highest-leverage hundred things a beginner can learn.

Key takeaways
  • The top 10: 的, 了, 一, 他, 我, 是, 说, 不, 人, 个 — mostly grammar glue, not "vocabulary."
  • The top 50 characters cover 43.7% of all story text; the top 100 cover 56.7%; the top 300 cover 80.1%.
  • Several of the most common characters are heteronyms (的, 了, 地, 得, 着 each have more than one reading) — learn the dominant reading first.
  • Frequency lists differ by corpus: ours is dialogue- and story-heavy, so 妈 "mom" and 笑 "laugh" rank far higher than in newspaper-based lists like Jun Da's.
  • Knowing 100 characters ≠ reading: no complete story in our catalog is 98% readable on the top 100 alone. Meet these characters in stories, not flashcard isolation.

Where does this list come from?

Every list of "most common Chinese characters" depends on what text you count. Ours is measured across the 658 graded stories in the Literate Chinese catalog (July 2026) — 141,730 character occurrences of learner-oriented narrative text, from absolute-beginner dialogues to adapted classics. That makes it unusually honest about one thing: this is the frequency distribution of what a learner actually reads, not of newspaper editorials.

Full transparency about the method's fingerprints: a story corpus over-represents dialogue and daily life, and proper names leave traces — 约 (yuē) and 翰 (hàn) sit just outside our top 100 mostly because a popular story series stars a character named 约翰 (Yuēhàn, "John"). Every corpus has quirks like this; most lists just don't tell you.

In the tables, the traditional form follows in parentheses where it differs from the simplified (说/說). Where a character has multiple readings, we give the reading that dominates in running text, with the alternatives noted.

Characters 1–25

#CharacterPinyinMeaning & notesCount
1depossessive/attributive particle (我的 "my"); also dí (的确) and dì (目的)4,925
2lecompleted-action / change-of-state particle; also liǎo "to finish, to know" (了解)3,790
3one3,668
4he, him2,446
5I, me2,317
6shìto be2,129
7说 (說)shuōto say, to speak1,918
8not1,773
9rénperson, people1,702
10个 (個)general measure word1,629
11xiǎosmall; "little" prefix (小猫 "kitten")1,610
12yǒuto have; there is1,535
13zàiat, in; to be located1,507
14shàngup, on; to go up (上班 "go to work")1,444
15tiānsky; day (今天 "today")1,403
16们 (們)menplural suffix for people (我们 "we")1,325
17来 (來)láito come1,298
18you1,288
19hěnvery1,272
20里 (裡)inside, in (家里 "at home")1,072
21zinoun suffix (孩子 "child"); zǐ "child, son" when stressed1,027
22kànto look, watch, read1,000
23这 (這)zhèthis996
24hǎogood; well; also hào "to like" (爱好)977
25big892

Characters 26–50

#CharacterPinyinMeaning & notesCount
26dàoto arrive; up to, until888
27jiāhome, family870
28jiùthen, right away; just, precisely863
29着 (著)zheongoing-action particle (坐着 "sitting"); also zháo (着急) and zhuó846
30dōuall, both; also dū "capital city" (首都)768
31to go768
32also, too742
33can, may (可以 "can", 可是 "but")720
34yàoto want; will; must711
35xiǎngto think; to want; to miss685
36deadverbial particle (慢慢地 "slowly"); also dì "ground, earth" (地方)681
37decomplement particle (跑得快 "runs fast"); also dé "to get", děi "must"669
38that660
39xiàdown, below; next (下次 "next time")655
40后 (後)hòuafter, behind (以后 "afterwards")643
41she, her641
42会 (會)huìcan (learned skill); will; meeting611
43点 (點)diǎndot; o'clock; a little (一点 "a bit")598
44lǎoold; familiar prefix (老师 "teacher")587
45duōmany, much; how (多少 "how many")580
46shēngto be born; life; student (学生)580
47by means of; in 可以 "can", 以后 "after"574
48时 (時)shítime (时候, 时间)562
49méinot have; not (没有); also mò "to sink"559
50么 (麼)mesuffix in 什么 "what", 怎么 "how"558

Characters 51–75

#CharacterPinyinMeaning & notesCount
51开 (開)kāito open; to start; to drive533
52to rise, get up; 一起 "together"527
53xiàoto laugh, to smile493
54object marker (把门关上 "close the door"); to hold483
55zǒuto walk; to leave482
56还 (還)háistill, also; huán "to return, give back"480
57chīto eat477
58zuòto do, to make453
59chūto go out, to come out449
60zuìmost (最好 "best")448
61niányear443
62zhǐonly; as zhī, measure word for animals (traditional 隻)441
63and, with424
64过 (過)guòto pass, to cross; experience marker (去过 "have been")422
65妈 (媽)mom (妈妈)410
66xīnheart, mind (开心 "happy")404
67shìmatter, affair (事情)401
68miànface; side (前面 "in front"; for noodles, traditional uses 麵)396
69问 (問)wènto ask382
70yòuagain; both… and…380
71huíto return (回家 "go home")372
72it367
73self (自己 "oneself")353
74néngcan, to be able to349
75tàitoo, excessively (太好了 "great")345

Characters 76–100

#CharacterPinyinMeaning & notesCount
76míngbright; 明天 "tomorrow", 明白 "to understand"338
77zhēnreal, true; really334
78边 (邊)biānside, edge (旁边 "beside")333
79qiánfront; before332
80yǒufriend (朋友)327
81mànslow320
82péngfriend (朋友)320
83shénin 什么 "what"; also shí309
84给 (給)gěito give; for, to; also jǐ (formal compounds)308
85wǎnlate; evening (晚上)307
86见 (見)jiànto see, to meet (再见 "goodbye")305
87饭 (飯)fàncooked rice; meal (吃饭 "to eat")305
88jīnpresent, now (今天 "today")305
89爷 (爺)grandpa (爷爷)305
90别 (別)biédon't; other (别人 "others")303
91oneself (自己)302
92dàoroad, way; in 知道 "to know"300
93to hit; to play/do (打电话 "make a call")300
94ránso, like that (然后 "then", 突然 "suddenly")298
95ānpeaceful, safe (安静 "quiet", 晚安 "good night")297
96话 (話)huàspeech, words (说话 "to speak")296
97样 (樣)yàngappearance, kind (这样 "this way", 一样 "the same")293
98从 (從)cóngfrom293
99hòuin 时候 "time, moment"291
100对 (對)duìcorrect; toward, to; pair290

How much text do these 100 characters cover?

More than half. Measured across the same 658-story corpus, the top 50 characters cover 43.7% of all running text, the top 100 cover 56.7%, the top 200 cover 71.6%, and the top 300 cover 80.1%. The curve is steep at the start and flattens hard — 的 alone appears more often than the 90th and 100th characters combined, several times over.

The catch: coverage isn't comprehension. Even at 56.7% coverage, no complete story in our catalog reaches the ~98% threshold that reading research associates with comfortable comprehension on the top 100 alone. The top 100 are the skeleton of every sentence; the remaining characters are what the sentences are about. For the full staged breakdown of what each character milestone unlocks — from 300 through 3,000 — see how many characters you need to read Chinese.

How does this list compare to general frequency lists like Jun Da's?

The standard reference is Jun Da's Modern Chinese character frequency list (2004), compiled from a very large corpus of online text spanning news and fiction, and ranking nearly 10,000 characters. At the very top, the lists agree almost perfectly — 的, 一, 是, 了, 不, 人 dominate any Chinese corpus ever counted.

Below the top 20, the corpora diverge in an instructive way. Jun Da's corpus leans heavily on news and formal prose, so characters like 国 (國, guó, "country") — ranked #11 there — 经 (經, jīng), 民 (mín), and 产 (產, chǎn) sit high. In our graded-story corpus, 国 doesn't even crack the top 150. Meanwhile our list boosts the characters of dialogue and daily life: 你 "you" (#18), 笑 "laugh" (#53), 吃 "eat" (#57), 妈 "mom" (#65), 饭 "meal" (#87), 爷 "grandpa" (#89). Neither list is wrong — they're measuring different Chinese. If your near-term goal is reading stories, conversations, and fiction (which is where nearly every learner starts), a story-corpus ranking is the better study order; if you mainly read news, weight a general list higher.

How should you actually learn these characters?

Not from this table. A ranked list is a great map and a terrible vehicle: most of the top 30 are grammatical particles and function words that only make sense inside sentences. Nobody learns 的, 了, 着, 得, and 地 from flashcard definitions — you learn them by seeing them do their jobs a few hundred times, which is exactly what happens in your first ten graded stories. (We've written before about why flashcards alone don't produce readers.)

The efficient loop looks like this: read stories pitched at your level, let frequency do the scheduling (the top 100 will each appear dozens of times whether you plan it or not), and reserve spaced-repetition flashcards for the characters that refuse to stick on their own. Because these characters are this frequent, a beginner story is effectively a flashcard deck someone hid inside a plot. If you want to see the top 100 in the wild today, try reading your first story — at beginner level, the text above is more than half of what's on the page.

Frequently asked questions

What is the most common Chinese character?

的 (de), the possessive and attributive particle, in essentially every corpus ever measured. In our 658-story corpus it appears 4,925 times — about 3.5% of all text — and in Jun Da's general corpus it's around 4%. It links a describer to a noun: 我的书 "my book", 红色的车 "the red car".

Should I memorize the top 100 characters before reading?

No — learn them by reading. The top 100 are so frequent that any beginner story drills them automatically, with grammar and context attached. Pre-memorizing the list means learning 的, 了, and 着 as abstract trivia instead of as the machinery of sentences you understand.

Are the most common characters the same in traditional Chinese?

The ranking is essentially the same; only the forms change. Twenty-seven of our top 100 have a distinct traditional form (说/說, 个/個, 们/們, 这/這…), shown in parentheses in the tables. One quirk: simplified 只 covers both zhǐ "only" and the animal measure word zhī, which traditional writes as 隻.

Why do 朋 and 友 both make the top 100 on their own?

Because character counts split compound words. 朋友 (péngyou, "friend") is one word, but frequency lists count 朋 and 友 separately, so they arrive as a pair (#82 and #80). It's a good reminder that characters and words are different units — most Chinese words are two-character compounds.

How many of these characters work as standalone words?

Maybe two-thirds. Characters like 我, 你, 好, 吃, and 走 are complete words; others — 么, 们, 候, 什, 己 — almost never appear alone and only mean something inside compounds like 什么 or 时候. That's another reason to meet them in running text rather than on isolated cards.

Try reading your first story

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