Definition:
German modal verbs (Modalverben) are a closed class of six auxiliary verbs — können (can/be able), müssen (must/have to), dürfen (may/be allowed), sollen (should/be supposed to), wollen (want to), and mögen/möchten (like/would like) — that express modality: epistemic (probability, possibility) and deontic (obligation, permission, volition) meanings. German modals share characteristic properties: irregular conjugation with identical 1st/3rd person singular forms (no ending), governing of a bare infinitive that appears at clause-end position (reflecting the German word order verbal bracket), and past tense formation via weak dental addition to their ablaut past forms. Modal verbs are extremely high-frequency and are among the first functional items L2 German learners encounter in German grammar.
The Six German Modals
| Verb | Core meanings | Epistemic use |
|---|---|---|
| können | can, be able to | could be, might (it’s possible that) |
| müssen | must, have to, need to | must be (logical necessity) |
| dürfen | may, be allowed to, be permitted | — |
| sollen | should, be supposed to, be said to | supposedly, reportedly |
| wollen | want to, intend to | claims to (I hear he wants to) |
| mögen/möchten | like to; would like (möchten) | might, may |
Present Tense Conjugation (Irregular)
| Person | können | müssen | dürfen | wollen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | kann | muss | darf | will |
| du | kannst | musst | darfst | willst |
| er/sie/es | kann | muss | darf | will |
| wir | können | müssen | dürfen | wollen |
| ihr | könnt | müsst | dürft | wollt |
| sie/Sie | können | müssen | dürfen | wollen |
Note: 1st and 3rd person singular are identical and lack the -t ending of regular verbs.
Modal + Infinitive Construction
Modals govern a bare infinitive that appears at the end of the main clause:
- Ich kann Deutsch sprechen — I can speak German (modal V2 position; infinitive clause-final)
- Er will morgen kommen — He wants to come tomorrow
In subordinate clauses:
- Ich weiß, dass er Deutsch sprechen kann — I know that he can speak German (both verb elements at clause end)
Möchten Special Note
Möchten is the subjunctive II form of mögen that has grammaticalized as a present-tense polite desiderative (would like): Ich möchte einen Kaffee — I would like a coffee. It is one of the first German modal forms taught due to its high usage frequency in polite everyday requests.
History
German modals descend from Proto-Germanic preterite-present verbs — verbs whose present tense originated in an original perfect/past form. This explains their anomalous conjugation (no -en present, identical ich/er forms). They are cognate with English modal auxiliaries: können ˜ can, müssen ˜ must, sollen ˜ shall, wollen ˜ will, dürfen ˜ dare.
Common Misconceptions
- “wollen = will (English future)” — False cognate: German wollen = “want to” (volition); English future “will” corresponds to German werden
- “müssen nicht = must not” — German muss nicht = “doesn’t have to” (no obligation); darf nicht = “must not” (prohibition). This false-friend error has pragmatic real-world consequences
Criticisms
- The müssen nicht / darf nicht distinction is a systematic false-friend trap for English speakers that many courses handle insufficiently
Social Media Sentiment
German modal false cognates — especially müssen nicht vs. darf nicht — generate many “wait, that’s what it means?!” posts from German learners. Möchten is widely appreciated for being a predictable politeness tool. Last updated: 2026-04
Practical Application
- Teach the müssen nicht (doesn’t have to) vs. darf nicht (must not) contrast explicitly and early — the false-friend trap causes real communication errors
- Drill möchten in customer service and interaction contexts as day-one vocabulary through meaning-contextualized exposure
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Durrell, M. (2011). Hammer’s German Grammar and Usage (5th ed.). Routledge. — Comprehensive reference for German modal conjugation and usage.
- Diehl, E., Christen, H., Leuenberger, S., Pelvat, I., & Studer, T. (2000). Grammatikunterricht: Alles für die Katz? Niemeyer. — Longitudinal study of L2 German acquisition including modal verbs.
- Nuyts, J. (2001). Epistemic Modality, Language, and Conceptualization. John Benjamins. — Cross-linguistic study of epistemic modality including German modals.