is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tomoki Izumi. It began serialization online via Kadokawa's Web Comic Apanta website in November 2018, with fourteen tankà Âbon volumes released so far. The manga is licensed in North America by Yen Press. An anime television series adaptation by Passione aired from October to December 2021.
High school student Miko Yotsuya has the unfortunate ability to see horrifying ghosts and spirits that haunt her and the people around her. Despite this, Miko does her best to ignore the existence of ghosts and tries to live out a normal high school life.
Mieruko-chan is written and illustrated by Tomoki Izumi, and began serialization in Kadokawa's ComicWalker website on November 2, 2018. Kadokawa Shoten began publishing the series in print in April 2019 and have released fourteen tankà Âbon volumes as of March 2026. The series is licensed in English by Yen Press.
An anime television series adaptation was announced on March 18, 2021. The series is animated by Passione and directed by Yuki Ogawa, with Takahiro Majima serving as assistant director, Shintarà  Matsushima serving as directing assistant, Kenta Ihara supervising and writing the series' scripts, Chikashi Kadekaru designing the characters and serving as chief animation director, and Makoto Uno designing the monsters. Kana Utatane composed the music for the series. Sora Amamiya performed the opening theme , as well as the ending theme . The series aired from October 3 to December 19, 2021, on AT-X, Tokyo MX, KBS Kyoto, SUN, and BS NTV. Funimation licensed the series outside of Asia. Muse Communication licensed the series in South and Southeast Asia.
On December 10, 2021, Funimation announced the series would receive an English dub, which premiered on December 12.
A live-action film adaptation, directed by Yoshihiro Nakamura, was released on June 6, 2025.
In 2019, Mieruko-chan was nominated for the 5th Next Manga Awards in the digital category and placed 10th out of 50 nominees. As of October 2022, the manga had over two million copies in circulation.
Anime News Network (ANN) had two editors review the first volume of the manga: Rebecca Silverman praised the final chapter for taking the story in a more sustainable direction than the first two Hana-filled ones, but critiqued that it felt "pretty disconnected" from the beginning, concluding with: "Since it does have interesting art (and mild fanservice if you're looking for that) and an evolving mythology, I think it will be worth giving it that second volume to even itself out." Caitlin Moore commended Tomoki's creative designs on the horrific ghosts and Miko's "body language and facial expressions" when ignoring them, but was critical of the horny "gaze-y camera angles" and "random, subtle out-of-place fanservice shots" distracting her from enjoying the manga's concept, concluding with: "I'm having a hard time not thinking of the manga this could have been with a different author â one where the horrors Miko encounters are metaphors for the intrusions a teenage girl faces, instead of the paneling intruding on her itself."
Fellow ANN editor Nicholas Dupree placed Mieruko-chan at number five on his top 5 best anime list of 2021, praising the adaptation's combination of deadpan comedy with "absolutely rock-solid horror fundamentals" and delivering "sincere, heartwarming moments" that show the afterlife's sentimental side, concluding that: "All of that combined gives you a show that can scare you, punch you in the gut, and then make you laugh like an idiot in a single episode." Allen Moody from THEM Anime Reviews wrote: "I'm calling this an interesting failure. The situation is not without its fascinating aspects, but you usually like to see some progression in the protagonist's situation, and it's largely absent here."