5 min read
Goethe A1 vs A2 vocabulary: what changes
The practical difference between Goethe A1 and A2 vocabulary, with a simple progression plan.
The jump from Goethe A1 to A2 is not just a bigger word count. A1 vocabulary supports immediate needs; A2 vocabulary lets you describe routines, arrange plans, talk about simple problems, and understand short connected texts.
A1 is about immediate survival
At A1 you need introductions, numbers, dates, family, food, home, shopping, directions, and basic verbs. The words are concrete and usually tied to one short exchange.
A2 adds range and detail
At A2 you need more words for work, study, health, errands, travel issues, preferences, and simple comparisons. You also need more verbs for planning and explaining, not only naming objects.
Move levels with overlap
Do not abandon A1 topics when starting A2. Revisit the same areas with more detail: food becomes ordering and preferences; travel becomes delays and directions; family becomes routines and descriptions.
Study checklist
- Check A1 basics before starting A2.
- Add verbs and adjectives to each familiar topic.
- Practice short connected answers, not single words only.
FAQ
Can I skip A1 vocabulary if I already speak a little German?
Only if you can use the basics quickly. Many A2 problems come from weak A1 words.
What is the fastest A2 topic to learn?
Choose the topic you meet most often in real life, then add adjacent topics such as appointments, transport, and shopping.