My first month in Germany, I mastered exactly one greeting: „Hallo.“ And yes, I used it everywhere—morning, evening, at the bakery, at the bank, even when waking up an annoyed cat on my host family’s couch.
One morning, a neighbour said „Moin!“ /moɪ̯n/ and I, thinking he was calling me “mine,” cheerfully replied „Ich gehöre niemandem!“ /ɪç ɡəˈhøːʁə ˈniːmandəm/
Translation: “I belong to no one!”
After that, I decided it was time to actually learn the greetings Germans use every day. The good news? You don’t need many. The ones that exist are warm, practical, and fun to say—especially with a yak accent.
Quick Primer
German greetings fall into a few easy categories:
- Universal greetings
- Time-of-day greetings
- Regional greetings
- Polite/formal greetings
- Casual, friendly ones you can use with anyone your yak-heart desires
Most are short, clean, and beautifully predictable once you see the patterns.
| German | IPA | Natural English Meaning |
| Hallo | /ˈhaloː/ | Hello |
| Guten Morgen | /ˈɡuːtən ˈmɔʁɡn̩/ | Good morning |
| Guten Tag | /ˈɡuːtən taːk/ | Good day / Good afternoon |
| Guten Abend | /ˈɡuːtən ˈaːbn̩/ | Good evening |
| Tschüss | /tʃʏs/ | Bye |
| Auf Wiedersehen | /aʊ̯f ˈviːdɐˌzeːən/ | Goodbye |
The magic of greetings in German is that once you learn the “Guten + time of day” pattern, you basically unlock the full system.
The Universal Everyday Greetings
These work anywhere, anytime.
Hallo
hallo /ˈhaloː/ — the classic hello
Use it:
- with strangers
- with friends
- in shops
- on the phone
- to greet cats, dogs, people, and confused yaks
It’s your safest go-to greeting.
Hi
hi /haɪ̯/ — casual, borrowed from English
Very common among younger people.
Hey
hey /heɪ̯/
Friendly and casual. Yes, Germans say this too.
Guten Tag
Guten Tag /ˈɡuːtən taːk/ — good day / good afternoon
Works in all formal situations and shops.
Time-Of-Day Greetings
Guten Morgen
Guten Morgen /ˈɡuːtən ˈmɔʁɡn̩/
Good morning (until around 11–12).
Guten Tag
Guten Tag /ˈɡuːtən taːk/
Good afternoon (most of midday until about 5–6).
Guten Abend
Guten Abend /ˈɡuːtən ˈaːbn̩/
Good evening.
Gute Nacht
Gute Nacht /ˈɡuːtə naxt/
Means good night, but only when leaving for bed or ending the day—not as a greeting.
(If you greet someone with Gute Nacht at 10pm on the street, you sound like a mysterious ghost.)
Friendly, Casual Everyday Greetings
These add colour to your German life.
Na?
Na? /na/ — the German “hey, what’s up?”
Common among friends. Said with a rising tone.
Alles klar?
Alles klar? /ˈaləs klaːɐ̯/ — all good? everything okay?
Very common, friendly check-in.
Wie geht’s?
Wie geht’s? /viː ˈɡeːts/ — How’s it going?
Answer with:
Gut, und dir? /ɡuːt ʊnt diːɐ̯/ — Good, and you?
Grüß dich
Grüß dich /ɡʁyːs dɪç/ — hi there
Casual, warm.
Grüß Gott (regional)
Germany south + Austria.
Not religious in daily use, just a polite hello.
Grüß Gott /ɡʁyːs ɡɔt/ — hello (Southern German style)
Polite And Formal Greetings
Perfect for:
- business
- customer service
- older people
- first encounters
Guten Tag
Still king of formal greetings.
Sehr erfreut
Sehr erfreut /zeːɐ̯ ɛɐ̯ˈfʁɔʏ̯t/ — pleased to meet you
Used when being introduced.
Freut mich
Freut mich /fʁɔʏ̯t mɪç/
A friendly, less formal version of “nice to meet you.”
Regional Greetings (Fun, Optional, Very Charming)
Moin (Northern Germany)
Moin /moɪ̯n/
Used all day. Mixes well with coffee, rain, and seagulls.
Servus (South Germany, Austria)
Servus /ˈzɛʁvʊs/
Means both hello and bye.
Grüezi (Switzerland)
Grüezi /ˈɡryːətsi/
Swiss-German version of hello. Very local, very lovable.
Using regional greetings as a foreigner gets you an instant smile.
Mini Dialogues
Dialogue 1 – At A Café
Hallo! Was möchten Sie bestellen?
/ˈhaloː vas ˈmœçtən ziː bəˈʃtɛlən/
Hello! What would you like to order?
Guten Morgen! Einen Cappuccino bitte.
/ˈɡuːtən ˈmɔʁɡn̩ ˈaɪ̯nən kapuˈtʃiːno ˈbɪtə/
Good morning! A cappuccino, please.
Dialogue 2 – Meeting Someone New
Guten Tag, ich bin Anna Schmidt.
/ˈɡuːtən taːk ɪç bɪn ˈana ʃmɪt/
Good afternoon, I’m Anna Schmidt.
Freut mich! Ich heiße Tom.
/fʁɔʏ̯t mɪç ɪç ˈhaɪ̯sə tɔm/
Nice to meet you! I’m Tom.
Dialogue 3 – Casual Street Greeting
Na? Alles klar?
/na ˈaləs klaːɐ̯/
Hey, everything good?
Ja, alles bestens. Und selbst?
/jaː ˈaləs ˈbɛstns ʊnt zɛlpst/
Yep, all good. And you?
Quick Reference
| German | IPA | English Meaning |
| Hallo | /ˈhaloː/ | Hello |
| Hi | /haɪ̯/ | Hi |
| Hey | /heɪ̯/ | Hey |
| Guten Morgen | /ˈɡuːtən ˈmɔʁɡn̩/ | Good morning |
| Guten Tag | /ˈɡuːtən taːk/ | Good day |
| Guten Abend | /ˈɡuːtən ˈaːbn̩/ | Good evening |
| Gute Nacht | /ˈɡuːtə naxt/ | Good night |
| Wie geht’s? | /viː ˈɡeːts/ | How’s it going? |
| Alles klar? | /ˈaləs klaːɐ̯/ | All good? |
| Grüß dich | /ɡʁyːs dɪç/ | Hi |
| Servus | /ˈzɛʁvʊs/ | Hello/bye |
| Moin | /moɪ̯n/ | Hello (north) |
| Grüezi | /ˈɡryːətsi/ | Hello (Swiss) |
| Tschüss | /tʃʏs/ | Bye |
| Auf Wiedersehen | /aʊ̯f ˈviːdɐˌzeːən/ | Goodbye |
Five-Minute Practice Plan
- Say Hallo, Guten Morgen, Guten Tag, Guten Abend out loud with a steady rhythm.
- Practise switching tone: say Na? like a curious friend, then like a sleepy yak.
- Greet three imaginary people: a shopkeeper (formal), a friend (casual), and a neighbour (neutral).
- Shadow one dialogue: read it slowly twice, then try once without looking.
- Practise one regional greeting—Moin or Servus—until it feels natural.
- Record yourself saying Wie geht’s? and answer Gut, und dir? three times.
When A Greeting Turns Into A Connection
Once you master these greetings, Germany opens up like a friendly neighbourhood. You’ll order bread without fear, chat with strangers at bus stops, and maybe even survive the icy stare of a Berlin barista. Greetings are tiny, but they unlock big moments. And nothing beats the feeling of tossing out a smooth Guten Morgen that lands perfectly.





