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Guten Tag The universal polite greeting every beginner learns on day one.

Personally vetted German tutors who specialize in absolute beginners. Patient, structured, and built around the three things that decide whether German clicks for you in the first 90 days.

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German tutor introducing basic vocabulary to an adult beginner student
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 Beginners tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has German tutors who specialize in working with absolute beginners. That's its own craft: pronunciation modeling, patient article drilling, the right pace on the case system, and steady vocabulary building with every noun introduced alongside its der, die, or das. 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 adult beginner instruction.

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Erste Schritte — first foundations

5 German foundations every beginner needs in the first month

These are the building blocks that decide whether your first 90 days of German build into real momentum or stall out in textbook frustration. Screenshot for the trial lesson.

  1. 01

    Der, die, das

    Every German noun has one of three genders. Der is masculine, die is feminine, das is neuter. The gender is largely unpredictable from meaning, with some patterns: words ending in -ung, -heit, -keit are feminine; diminutives in -chen are neuter; days, months, seasons are masculine. Beyond the patterns, common nouns just have to be memorized with their article from day one.

    e.g. Der Tisch, die Lampe, das Buch, der Mann, die Frau, das Kind.

  2. 02

    Umlauts (ä, ö, ü) and ß

    The four extra letters German adds to the standard alphabet. The umlauts are not optional decoration. Schön and schon are different words. Für and fur are different. Möhre (carrot) and Mohre would mean different things. The eszett ß represents a double-s sound after a long vowel and shows up in everyday words like Straße and weiß.

    e.g. Heißen, schön, für, müssen, Größe.

  3. 03

    Compound nouns

    Famous German compound nouns are real and entirely predictable once you know the parts. Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung is speed-limitation, the speed limit. Krankenversicherungsgesellschaft is sick-insurance-company, a health insurance company. Beginners learn to decompose long words into their parts rather than memorize them whole. Once the habit clicks, German vocabulary expansion accelerates dramatically.

    e.g. Haus + Tür = Haustür (front door). Hand + Schuh = Handschuh (glove).

  4. 04

    All nouns capitalized

    Every noun in German is capitalized, not just proper nouns. Das Auto, der Hund, die Schule, das Essen. Lowercase nouns in German writing read as immediately wrong. The side benefit: German text is easier to parse because the nouns visually pop out, which speeds reading once you start working with real German materials.

    e.g. Ich gehe heute mit meinem Hund in den Park.

  5. 05

    V2 word order

    In main clauses, the conjugated verb sits in the second position, regardless of what comes first. Ich gehe heute zur Arbeit, Heute gehe ich zur Arbeit, Zur Arbeit gehe ich heute: all three are correct and the verb stays second. Subordinate clauses (introduced by weil, dass, wenn) send the verb to the end. This feels alien to English speakers at first; consistent exposure internalizes it within a few months.

    e.g. Heute habe ich keine Zeit. Weil ich heute keine Zeit habe.

About German for Beginners

From zero to your first real German sentence

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to German for Beginners

Articles, genders, and the first 200 words

We teach every noun with its article from day one. Never Tisch, always der Tisch. Patterns where they exist (the -ung/-heit/-keit/-schaft feminine cluster; -chen/-lein diminutive neuters; days, months, and seasons masculine) get explained and drilled. The 150 to 200 highest-frequency German words get folded into your active vocabulary through repetition with their articles, not flashcards in isolation. Most beginners reach reliable article instinct on familiar vocabulary by month four.

Sein, haben, present tense, and V2 word order

The two foundational verbs (to be and to have), the regular present-tense conjugation pattern, and the V2 main-clause word order in the first month cover the majority of basic sentences you'll want to make. Family, food, daily routine, work, hobbies, time, location. Once these are automatic, modal verbs (können, müssen, wollen, sollen) and the perfect tense slot in with much less friction in months two and three.

Pronunciation foundations from day one

Umlauts (ä, ö, ü), the eszett ß, the ich-sound and ach-sound, vowel purity, the German w as English v, the German z as English ts. Lessons include short listening-and-repeat drills with native audio so your ear builds alongside your speaking. Beginner German pronunciation is best learned correctly the first time, not corrected later, which is why we frontload the most distinctive sounds.

Case-system preview and Goethe A1 pathway

We don't drill the full case system in month one; that's a grammar specialty. We do introduce the concept so you're oriented when it shows up, teach the highest-frequency case-triggered patterns (accusative after haben, dative after mit and bei), and build the habit of noticing case markers as you encounter them. For students aiming at Goethe A1 certification (often required for German residence permits), the curriculum maps to the exam's four modules with mock practice in the final weeks before the test.

FAQ

About German for Beginners lessons & classes

Is German actually as hard as everyone says?

Honestly, the first 3 to 6 months feel harder than other European languages because of the case system, the three genders, and the V2 word order. After that, German becomes easier than many learners expect. The rules are highly logical, vocabulary is largely Germanic and predictable, and once the case system clicks the whole language opens up. Most students who push through the initial grammar wall find German genuinely rewarding. Spanish-style "sounds great after three months" isn't German's profile; German is more of a long slope that levels out into stable progress.

How do I memorize all the noun genders?

Three things at once. First, always learn nouns with their article from day one: das Haus, not Haus. The article becomes part of the word in your memory. Second, learn the patterns where they exist (-ung/-heit/-keit feminine, -chen/-lein neuter, days/months/seasons masculine). Third, accept that a chunk of common das and der words just have to be drilled until they're automatic. We weave article drills into vocabulary work rather than treating them as a separate exercise. Most beginners reach reliable instinct on familiar vocabulary by month four.

When do I start learning the four cases?

We introduce the concept in week 1 or 2 so you're not blindsided when case markers start appearing in your vocabulary. We drill the most common case-triggered patterns (accusative after haben, dative after mit) progressively starting month two. The full four-case system gets dedicated focus in months three through six. Trying to absorb the full case system in week one is the most common reason beginners burn out. Progressive exposure works better.

How long until I can hold a basic conversation in German?

From zero, weekly hour-long lessons plus 20 to 30 minutes of daily German exposure typically produces functional A2 conversation within 6 to 9 months. That means introducing yourself, ordering food, talking about your family and your day, basic small talk. Conversational comfort at B1 (the level Goethe-Zertifikat B1 tests, and often the level required for German residence permits) usually takes another 6 to 9 months. Faster timelines are possible with more intensive schedules; slower timelines are normal for learners with less time.

Do I need to focus on German for Germany, Austria, or Switzerland?

Not in the first six months. Hochdeutsch (Standard German) is the foundation everyone learns, and it's universally understood across all German-speaking countries. The regional variation (Bavarian, Austrian, Swiss German) is an accent and vocabulary layer that comes after solid Hochdeutsch foundations. Beginners who try to learn a regional variant from scratch tend to get confused; pick Hochdeutsch as your base and absorb regional flavor through exposure once you're solid.

What does a typical beginner German lesson look like?

A first-month lesson runs about an hour and typically includes 10 minutes of warm-up conversation in German (even halting), 15 minutes of new vocabulary with pronunciation drill and articles, 15 minutes of grammar in context (a single point introduced through example sentences), 10 minutes of listening practice with a short audio clip, and 10 minutes of structured role-play or guided conversation. Homework is light and primarily listening-focused. No two lesson plans are identical; your tutor calibrates based on what's clicking and what isn't.

What's the trial lesson like for a complete beginner?

30 minutes, free, with the tutor you select. For absolute beginners, the trial is half assessment and half preview: the tutor will introduce themselves in German and English, gauge whatever you already know (even passive cognate recognition from English counts), explain the typical first-month roadmap, and answer your questions about cadence, expectations, and Goethe certification if relevant. You'll leave with a sense of whether this specific tutor's approach feels right. If it doesn't, switching is easy.

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