Perfekt vs. Präteritum: What’s the Real Difference?

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08.09.2025

Tymur Levitin
Tymur Levitin
Teacher of the Department of Translation. Professional certified translator with experience in translating and teaching English and German. I teach people in 20 countries of the world. My principle in teaching and conducting lessons is to move away from memorizing rules from memory, and, instead, learn to understand the principles of the language and use them in the same way as talking and pronouncing sounds correctly by feeling, and not going over each one in your head all the rules, since there won’t be time for that in real speech. You always need to build on the situation and comfort.
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When learning German, many students are confused by the two past tenses: Perfekt and Präteritum. Both describe past actions, but they are not used in the same way. This guide gives you the simple rules, with examples and common mistakes to avoid.


The Simple Rule

  • Perfekt → used in spoken German, everyday conversations.
  • Präteritum → used in written German, books, reports, stories.

That’s the easiest rule to start with.


Perfekt: Everyday Past

Perfekt is built with haben/sein + Partizip II.

Rules:

  • Use haben with most verbs.
  • Use sein with verbs of movement or change of state (gehen, fahren, kommen, sterben).
  • Focuses on completion and result.

Examples:

  • Ich habe gegessen. (I ate / I have eaten.)
  • Wir sind nach Berlin gefahren. (We went to Berlin.)
  • Sie hat das Buch gelesen. (She read the book.)

Präteritum: Narrative Past

Präteritum uses simple verb endings without auxiliaries.

Rules:

  • Common in books, news, reports, and storytelling.
  • In spoken German, used mostly with sein and haben (ich war, ich hatte).
  • Focuses on sequence of facts rather than result.

Examples:

  • Ich aß einen Apfel. (I ate an apple.)
  • Er ging ins Zimmer. (He went into the room.)
  • Wir hatten keine Zeit. (We had no time.)

Perfekt vs. Präteritum Side by Side

ContextPerfekt ExamplePräteritum Example
Everyday speechIch habe gespielt.Ich spielte.
Story in a novelEr ging ins Zimmer.
Formal reportDie Firma investierte.
Conversation resultIch habe gewonnen!

Common Mistakes — and How to Fix Them

  • Ich bin gespielt.
    ✔️ Ich habe gespielt. (haben with spielen)
  • Wir haben gegangen.
    ✔️ Wir sind gegangen. (sein with verbs of movement)
  • ❌ Using Präteritum in casual speech: Ich spielte gestern Fußball.
    ✔️ More natural: Ich habe gestern Fußball gespielt.

FAQ: Perfekt and Präteritum

Q: Do Germans mix both tenses?
Yes. In conversation, Perfekt is more common, but Präteritum appears in stories and formal contexts.

Q: Should I learn Perfekt first?
Yes — it covers 90% of everyday communication.

Q: Why do textbooks focus so much on Präteritum?
Because it is common in reading, and you need it to understand German literature and media.


Final Note

For beginners, the key rule is simple:

  • Perfekt = everyday speech
  • Präteritum = written stories and reports

👉 For a deeper exploration of how Germans understand time in grammar, see Tymur Levitin’s Author’s Column.


📚 Related Articles on German Grammar


👨‍🏫 Author: Tymur Levitin — founder, director, and senior teacher at Levitin Language School | Start Language School by Tymur Levitin.
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