🇩🇪 German

German Modal Verbs

German modal verbs are among the most frequently used words in the language. They modify the meaning of the main verb to express ability, permission, obligation, desire, or preference. There are six modal verbs, and once you learn their conjugations and the sentence structure they require, you unlock a massive range of expression.

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The Six Modal Verbs at a Glance

GermanEnglish
Pronunciation
könnencan, to be able to
KUH-nen
müssenmust, to have to
MEW-sen
dürfenmay, to be allowed to
DEWR-fen
sollenshould, to be supposed to
ZOL-en
wollento want to
VOL-en
mögento like
MUH-gen

Sentence Structure with Modals

When a modal verb appears in a sentence, the sentence structure changes: the modal verb is conjugated and sits in the V2 position, while the main verb moves to the end in infinitive form.

Common Mistake

The main verb ALWAYS goes to the end of the sentence as an infinitive when used with a modal. This is the most important word order rule for modal verbs. "Ich kann sprechen Deutsch" is wrong — it must be "Ich kann Deutsch sprechen."

Conjugation: Present Tense

All modal verbs share a distinctive conjugation pattern: the ich and er/sie/es forms have no ending, and most modals show a vowel change in the singular.

können (can)

PronounFormEnglish
ichkannI can
dukannstyou can
er/sie/eskannhe/she/it can
wirkönnenwe can
ihrkönntyou all can
sie/Siekönnenthey/you (formal) can

müssen (must)

PronounFormEnglish
ichmussI must
dumusstyou must
er/sie/esmusshe/she/it must
wirmüssenwe must
ihrmüsstyou all must
sie/Siemüssenthey/you (formal) must

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dürfen (may)

PronounFormEnglish
ichdarfI may
dudarfstyou may
er/sie/esdarfhe/she/it may
wirdürfenwe may
ihrdürftyou all may
sie/Siedürfenthey/you (formal) may

wollen (to want to)

PronounFormEnglish
ichwillI want to
duwillstyou want to
er/sie/eswillhe/she/it wants to
wirwollenwe want to
ihrwolltyou all want to
sie/Siewollenthey/you (formal) want to
Common Mistake

Do not confuse German "will" with English "will." German "ich will" means "I want to," not "I will." To say "I will" (future), German uses "ich werde." This is one of the most common mistakes English speakers make.

Practical Usage Examples

Note that mögen is often used alone without a second verb, especially when expressing liking for something. Its subjunctive form möchten (would like to) is extremely common: Ich möchte ein Bier bestellen (I would like to order a beer).

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the six German modal verbs?

The six modal verbs are: können (can/to be able to), müssen (must/to have to), dürfen (may/to be allowed to), sollen (should/to be supposed to), wollen (to want to), and mögen (to like). Each one modifies the meaning of the main verb in the sentence.

How does word order change with modal verbs?

In a sentence with a modal verb, the modal is conjugated and takes the second position (V2 rule), while the main verb goes to the end of the sentence in its infinitive form. For example: "Ich kann Deutsch sprechen" (I can speak German) — kann is second, sprechen is at the end.

What is the difference between müssen and sollen?

Müssen expresses personal necessity or strong obligation (I must, I have to). Sollen expresses external expectation or advice from someone else (I should, I am supposed to). "Ich muss arbeiten" = I have to work (necessity). "Ich soll arbeiten" = I am supposed to work (someone told me to).

What is the difference between können and dürfen?

Können means physical ability or general possibility (I can do it, I know how). Dürfen means permission (I am allowed to). "Ich kann schwimmen" = I can swim (ability). "Darf ich schwimmen?" = May I swim? (permission). In casual speech, können sometimes replaces dürfen for permission.

Do modal verbs have irregular conjugation?

Yes. All German modal verbs have vowel changes in the singular forms (ich, du, er/sie/es) and no ending for ich and er/sie/es forms. For example, können: ich kann, du kannst, er kann (no -e or -t endings). The plural forms follow regular patterns: wir können, ihr könnt, sie können.