20 Most Common German Phrases Every Beginner Should Know
By Miracle Team ·
You do not need perfect grammar to start speaking German — you need a small set of high-frequency phrases that cover the situations beginners actually face: greeting people, ordering food, asking for directions and politely admitting you didn’t understand a word. Here are the 20 phrases that give you the biggest head start, grouped by situation.
Greetings & basics
1. Hallo! / Guten Tag! — Hello! / Good day! The universal openers. Guten Tag is the safe, polite choice with strangers.
2. Wie geht’s? — How are you? Informal and friendly. The polite version is Wie geht es Ihnen?
3. Danke schön! / Vielen Dank! — Thank you! / Many thanks! You will use this constantly. Germans appreciate explicit politeness.
4. Bitte — Please / You’re welcome A wonderfully multipurpose word: it means “please,” “you’re welcome,” and even “here you go.”
5. Entschuldigung — Excuse me / Sorry Your key for getting attention, squeezing past people, and apologizing. Pronounce it ent-SHOOL-dee-goong.
Surviving a conversation
6. Ich verstehe nicht. — I don’t understand.
7. Können Sie das bitte wiederholen? — Could you please repeat that?
8. Sprechen Sie Englisch? — Do you speak English?
9. Ich lerne Deutsch. — I’m learning German. Say this and most Germans will instantly slow down and encourage you.
10. Wie sagt man … auf Deutsch? — How do you say … in German? The single best phrase for learning new words in the wild.
At a café or restaurant
11. Ich hätte gern einen Kaffee. — I’d like a coffee. Ich hätte gern… is the polite ordering pattern — just swap in any item.
12. Die Speisekarte, bitte. — The menu, please.
13. Die Rechnung, bitte. — The bill, please.
14. Das schmeckt sehr gut! — This tastes really good!
Getting around
15. Wo ist …? — Where is …? Combine with der Bahnhof (train station), die Toilette (toilet) or das Hotel.
16. Wie viel kostet das? — How much does this cost?
17. Ich möchte nach … fahren. — I want to go to …
18. Links, rechts, geradeaus — Left, right, straight ahead Three words that decode every direction you will ever receive.
Emergencies
19. Hilfe! — Help!
20. Ich brauche einen Arzt. — I need a doctor.
A 60-second pronunciation survival guide
German pronunciation is far more regular than English — once you know five rules, you can say almost anything you can read:
- W sounds like English V: wie = “vee”, was = “vass”.
- V sounds like English F: viel (much) = “feel”.
- Z is “ts”: zahlen (to pay) = “TSAH-len”.
- The famous “ch” after e/i is a soft hiss like the start of “huge”: ich ≈ “ish” with a breathy h.
- Ü is “ee” said with rounded lips: für, Tschüss. It feels silly the first ten times, then it clicks.
When in doubt, listen to a native recording and copy the rhythm, not just the sounds — German stresses the first syllable of most words, which instantly makes you sound more natural.
Sie or du? A 20-second etiquette note
German has two words for “you”: formal Sie and informal du. As a visitor, default to Sie with adults you do not know — waiters, shop staff, strangers on the street. Use du with children, close friends, and anyone who offers it first (“Wir können uns duzen!”). Nobody will be offended by a polite Sie, so it is always the safe move.
A simple 7-day plan to make these stick
- Days 1–2: Greetings and basics (phrases 1–5). Say each out loud five times with audio.
- Days 3–4: Conversation survival (6–10). These rescue you from every awkward moment, so over-practice them.
- Day 5: Café phrases (11–14) — rehearse a full imaginary order, from Guten Tag to Die Rechnung, bitte.
- Day 6: Directions and shopping (15–18).
- Day 7: Emergencies (19–20), then run the whole list as a self-test: read the English, recall the German.
Learn the patterns, not just the sentences: Ich hätte gern… unlocks hundreds of orders, Wo ist…? unlocks every place name you know. Five minutes a day beats one hour on Sunday.
This is exactly what German For Kids And Beginners is built for: every phrase comes with native-speaker audio, a slow-playback mode and mini games that quiz you until each pattern is automatic. It also trains der/die/das genders with every noun, so you build correct habits from day one. And if you prefer learning words through images first, the picture-based method is explained in our guide to learning vocabulary with pictures.
Download German For Kids And Beginners free on Google Play and master all 20 phrases this week.