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German for Travel tutors, lessons & classes

Entschuldigung The single most useful word for a traveler in any German-speaking country.

Personally vetted German tutors who specialize in pre-trip preparation. Practical, regionally calibrated lessons for travelers heading to Berlin, Munich, Vienna, Zurich, and the rest of the German-speaking world.

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German tutor preparing a traveler for a trip to Germany or Austria
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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German for Travel tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has German tutors who specialize in pre-trip travel preparation. The work is specific: itinerary-anchored vocabulary, region-calibrated pronunciation, transit and restaurant scenarios drilled to reflex, and the cultural codes that matter in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real backgrounds in pre-trip instruction.

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Unterwegs — travel culture

5 things every traveler needs to know about German-speaking countries

These are the cultural realities that separate a comfortable trip from a confusing one. Screenshot the infographic before you fly.

  1. 01

    S-Bahn versus U-Bahn

    Two different transit systems sharing most German cities. The S-Bahn is the suburban commuter rail, usually above ground for longer stretches and reaching outlying neighborhoods. The U-Bahn is the underground metro, dense in the city core. Both use the same ticket in most systems. Trams (Straßenbahn) and buses complete the network. Tickets must be validated before boarding on most systems; inspectors do random checks.

    e.g. Ich nehme die U-Bahn ins Zentrum, dann die S-Bahn nach Hause.

  2. 02

    Die Rechnung, bitte

    The bill comes only when you ask for it. German and Austrian servers won't bring it preemptively the way American servers do, and bringing it early reads as rushing you out. Die Rechnung, bitte in Germany, Zahlen, bitte in Austria. Tip 5 to 10 percent rounded up, often handed directly to the server with the rounded total when paying. Stimmt so means keep the change.

    e.g. Die Rechnung, bitte. Vierundzwanzig Euro fünfzig? Sechsundzwanzig, stimmt so.

  3. 03

    Toilette / WC

    Standard everyday terms for the bathroom. Toilette is universal and direct; WC is the abbreviation on signs across the German-speaking world (and most of Europe). Klo is the casual everyday word once you're past the formality threshold. Saying bathroom in English in a German cafe is understandable but reads as American in a way Germans gently notice.

    e.g. Entschuldigung, wo ist die Toilette?

  4. 04

    Bargeld bitte

    Cash is still strongly preferred in German restaurants, small shops, bakeries, and bars outside the most international establishments. Many smaller venues don't accept cards at all. ATMs (Geldautomat or Bankomat in Austria) are everywhere. Carrying 50 to 100 euros in cash at all times is normal in Germany in a way it isn't in the US.

    e.g. Akzeptieren Sie Karte? Nein, leider nur Bargeld.

  5. 05

    Sonntag geschlossen

    Almost all retail is closed on Sundays across Germany, Austria, and German Switzerland. Grocery stores, clothing shops, electronics stores, most pharmacies. The exceptions are bakeries (often open Sunday morning), gas station shops, train station shops in major cities, restaurants, and tourist-zone exceptions. Plan your Saturday shopping accordingly.

    e.g. Ach, der Supermarkt ist heute zu. Es ist Sonntag.

About German for Travel

German you'll actually use on the trip

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to German for Travel

Transit, navigation, and asking for help

The vocabulary of German public transit: S-Bahn, U-Bahn, Tram, RE, IC, ICE, Hauptbahnhof, Gleis, Bahnsteig, Haltestelle, Umsteigen. Buying and validating tickets at machines and apps. Asking for directions in German: Wo ist...?, Wie komme ich nach...?, Welche Linie fährt nach...? Plus the recovery phrases when you don't understand the answer: Können Sie das wiederholen?, Etwas langsamer, bitte, Können Sie es mir zeigen?

Restaurants, ordering, and tipping

Reading German menus and the food vocabulary that recurs (Vorspeise, Hauptgericht, Nachspeise, Beilagen; the meat words; the regional specialties). The order protocol: greeting the server, ordering drinks and food in sequence, requesting the bill. Tipping conventions across Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Bavarian and Austrian regional dishes worth knowing about (Knödel, Schnitzel, Spätzle, Tafelspitz). Plus dietary vocabulary for vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, and allergy needs.

Hotel check-in, shopping, and medical basics

Check-in conversation with hotel reception. Room-related vocabulary (Zimmer, Bett, Bad, Dusche, Klimaanlage, Wlan). Shopping conversation in stores, markets, and bakeries. The Apotheke-versus-Drogerie distinction. Basic medical vocabulary in case something goes wrong: Ich habe Kopfschmerzen, Mir geht es nicht gut, Ich brauche einen Arzt. Emergency numbers and how to summon help in German.

Region-specific calibration for your destinations

Berlin German has its own slang and rhythm. Bavaria and Austria use Grüß Gott and Servus instead of Guten Tag and Tschüss, plus a softer pronunciation and distinct vocabulary (Semmel for bread roll, Jänner for January in Austria, Heuer for this year). Northern Germany uses Moin as an all-day greeting. Swiss German speakers switch to Hochdeutsch when talking to outsiders, so visitors don't need to learn Swiss German itself. Your tutor calibrates pronunciation and vocabulary to where you're actually going.

FAQ

About German for Travel lessons & classes

How much German do I really need for a one-week trip to Berlin or Munich?

Honestly, not much for survival; English coverage in major German cities is excellent and most service staff under 40 speak workable English. But a working vocabulary of 200 to 300 travel words plus a handful of polite phrases changes the trip noticeably. Germans soften their register when you try, treat the effort as a sign of respect, and you have a much smoother experience navigating transit, restaurants, shops, and any small problems that come up. Four to eight weeks of pre-trip lessons typically gets travelers to that functional baseline.

Do I need to learn Austrian or Swiss German if I'm going to Vienna or Zurich?

No. Hochdeutsch (Standard German) is universally understood and is what you'll hear from anyone speaking with a non-local. Vienna uses some distinctly Austrian vocabulary (Jänner, Sackerl, Servus) that's worth knowing but doesn't change the underlying language. Swiss German is functionally a separate spoken language, but Swiss German speakers switch to Hochdeutsch when speaking with outsiders, so visitors don't need to learn Swiss German itself. Your tutor will mention the regional vocabulary worth knowing for your destinations.

What's the tipping convention?

Lower than American norms. 5 to 10 percent rounded up to the nearest convenient number is standard in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Tips are typically handed directly to the server when paying, not left on the table. The standard move: when the server states the total, you say the rounded-up amount when handing over cash. Stimmt so means keep the change. Tipping with card is fine in venues that accept cards but cash is preferred. Service workers are paid actual wages, so the tip is appreciated but not the load-bearing part of their income the way it is in the US.

How do I handle the famous German service curtness?

Don't take it personally. German service culture prioritizes efficiency and accuracy over American-style warmth. A flat response or no smile from a server, shop clerk, or transit worker isn't rudeness, it's just the cultural baseline. The corollary: when you ask for something specific and the answer is short and direct, you're getting useful information. Smile and small-talk are not the social currency they are in the US. Greeting on entry (Guten Tag) and farewell on departure (Auf Wiedersehen or Tschüss) are the politeness moves that matter.

Can I get by paying with credit cards everywhere?

Not reliably. Cards are accepted in larger restaurants, hotels, and chain stores, but cash remains strongly preferred in smaller restaurants, bars, bakeries, kiosks, and many traditional shops. Some venues don't take cards at all, especially in Berlin and Munich. Carry 50 to 100 euros in cash at all times. ATMs (Geldautomat) are everywhere and use the standard 4-digit PIN with international debit cards. Notify your bank before traveling to avoid card freezes.

How early should I start lessons before my trip?

Ideally 6 to 8 weeks ahead with one or two weekly sessions, plus 15 to 20 minutes of daily exposure (Easy German YouTube clips for your destination city, podcasts, app reps). That gives you time to build a real working vocabulary and drill key scenarios to reflex. A 2-week sprint helps too, but the curriculum is tighter (we focus on the absolute essentials: greetings, transit, restaurant, asking-for-help). Some students start lessons months ahead and ramp up intensity in the final 4 weeks; that works well for travelers who want to do more than survive.

What's the trial lesson like for a pre-trip student?

30 minutes, free, focused on your itinerary. Bring your dates, your destinations, your hotel area, your interests (food, hiking, museums, business meetings, family visits), and your starting level. The tutor maps a curriculum prioritized by what you'll actually encounter and outlines a weekly plan. You'll leave the trial with a clear sense of what's achievable in your timeframe. Most students continue with the trial tutor; switching is easy if the fit isn't right.

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