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Tense guide
Futur I (Future I)

Language: German
Tense:
Person:

Practice conjugation drills

Introduction

This verb form, like "ich werde gehen" (I will go), is most often used to talk about the future. It helps you say what will happen, what you plan to do, or what you guess will be true. It also has other special uses, like making a strong guess about the present or giving a firm command.

The most common use is to talk about a future event or to make a prediction. You use it when you are saying what you think is going to happen.

Es wird morgen regnen.
(It will rain tomorrow.)
Die Party wird lustig sein.
(The party will be fun.)
Er wird den Zug verpassen.
(He is going to miss the train.)
Wir werden nächstes Jahr nach Italien fliegen.
(We will fly to Italy next year.)

You can also use this form to express a personal intention or a firm plan. It shows that you have decided to do something in the future.

Ich werde ab morgen mehr Sport machen.
(I am going to exercise more starting tomorrow.)
Wir werden dich später anrufen.
(We will call you later.)
Sie wird das Projekt am Wochenende beenden.
(She intends to finish the project on the weekend.)

A very important use of this tense is to make an assumption or a strong guess about something happening right now. In this context, it is not about the future. It expresses what you think is probably true in the present.

Er ist nicht am Telefon. Er wird wahrscheinlich draußen sein.
(He's not at the phone. He is probably outside.)
Sie ist sehr müde. Sie wird wohl viel Arbeit haben.
(She is very tired. She likely has a lot of work.)
Das Licht ist an. Jemand wird zu Hause sein.
(The light is on. Someone must be home.)

Less often, this tense is used to give a very firm command or order. It sounds much stronger and more insistent than a normal command.

Du wirst jetzt dein Zimmer aufräumen!
(You will clean your room now!)
Ihr werdet sofort leise sein!
(You will be quiet immediately!)

Important: In everyday German, people often use the simple present tense with a time word (like "morgen" or "nächste Woche") to talk about the future. Using this "will" form is common but often adds a sense of formality, prediction, or strong intention.

Conjugation patterns