The Subjunctive Mood In French: When And How To Use It
The French subjunctive sounds dramatic, but most of the time it is just French being French. You need it for wishes, doubts, emotions, and a bunch of little trigger phrases that show up in real life all the time.
This guide gives you the two things you actually need: when to use the subjunctive and how to build it without spiraling into grammatical despair.
Yak Box: The Fast Idea
Use the subjunctive mostly after que when the first part of the sentence shows wish, feeling, doubt, necessity, possibility, or judgment.
Je veux que tu viennes. = I want you to come.
Because je veux que shows a wish, viennes is in the subjunctive.
That is the core pattern. The rest is mostly learning the usual triggers and a few irregular forms.
A nice way to think about it: the indicative states facts, while the subjunctive often points to something uncertain, wanted, felt, judged, or not yet real. Not mystical. Just annoyingly specific.
When To Use The French Subjunctive
Here are the big situations where the subjunctive shows up most often in everyday French.
Wishes And Wants
vouloir que = to want that
Je veux que tu sois ici. = I want you to be here.
préférer que = to prefer that
Je préfère qu’on parte tôt. = I prefer that we leave early.
aimer que = to like that
J’aime qu’il fasse beau. = I like it when the weather is nice.
Emotion And Feeling
être content que = to be happy that
Je suis content que tu viennes. = I’m happy that you’re coming.
être triste que = to be sad that
Elle est triste qu’il parte. = She is sad that he is leaving.
avoir peur que = to be afraid that
J’ai peur qu’il soit en retard. = I’m afraid he may be late.
Necessity And Judgment
il faut que = it is necessary that
Il faut que nous finissions. = We must finish.
il est important que = it is important that
Il est important que vous compreniez. = It is important that you understand.
il vaut mieux que = it is better that
Il vaut mieux que tu attendes. = You’d better wait.
Doubt, Possibility, And Uncertainty
- douter que = to doubt that
Je doute qu’il sache la réponse. = I doubt that he knows the answer. - il est possible que = it is possible that
Il est possible qu’elle arrive demain. = It’s possible that she arrives tomorrow. - il se peut que = it may be that
Il se peut qu’on ait tort. = We may be wrong.
Conjunctions That Trigger The Subjunctive
Some linking phrases almost automatically call for the subjunctive. These are worth memorising because they are common and useful.
| French Trigger | English Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| pour que | so that | Je répète pour que tu comprennes. I’m repeating so that you understand. |
| afin que | so that / in order that | Elle écrit tout afin qu’on n’oublie rien. She writes everything down so that we forget nothing. |
| bien que | although | Bien qu’il soit fatigué, il travaille. Although he is tired, he is working. |
| avant que | before | Pars avant qu’il ne pleuve. Leave before it rains. |
| jusqu’à ce que | until | Attends jusqu’à ce qu’elle revienne. Wait until she comes back. |
| à condition que | provided that | Je viens à condition que tu m’aides. I’ll come provided that you help me. |
You may notice the little ne in avant qu’il ne pleuve. That is called the ne explétif. It often appears after certain formal expressions, but it does not make the sentence negative. French likes tiny traps like that.
When You Usually Do Not Use The Subjunctive
Do not use the subjunctive after clear statements of fact or certainty.
- Je sais que tu es prêt. = I know that you are ready.
- Il est certain qu’elle vient. = It is certain that she is coming.
- Je pense qu’il a raison. = I think he is right. — usually indicative in affirmative statements.
But flip the sentence into doubt or negation, and the subjunctive often appears:
- Je ne pense pas qu’il ait raison. = I don’t think he is right.
- Penses-tu qu’il soit prêt ? = Do you think he is ready? — in questions, the subjunctive is common because certainty is weaker.
How To Form The Present Subjunctive
Good news: the present subjunctive is not built from pure chaos. For most verbs, you start with the ils form of the present tense, remove -ent, and add these endings:
- que je -e
- que tu -es
- qu’il / elle / on -e
- que nous -ions
- que vous -iez
- qu’ils / elles -ent
| Verb | Present Ils Form | Subjunctive Stem | Example Form |
|---|---|---|---|
| parler = to speak | ils parlent | parl- | que je parle = that I speak |
| finir = to finish | ils finissent | finiss- | que nous finissions = that we finish |
| prendre = to take | ils prennent | prenn- | que vous preniez = that you take |
That works for a lot of verbs. Then, because this is French, some common verbs go rogue.
Most Useful Irregular Subjunctive Forms
| Verb | English Meaning | Subjunctive | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| être | to be | que je sois, que tu sois, qu’il soit, que nous soyons, que vous soyez, qu’ils soient | Il faut que tu sois prudent. You must be careful. |
| avoir | to have | que j’aie, que tu aies, qu’il ait, que nous ayons, que vous ayez, qu’ils aient | Je doute qu’il ait le temps. I doubt that he has time. |
| aller | to go | que j’aille, que tu ailles, qu’il aille, que nous allions, que vous alliez, qu’ils aillent | Je veux que nous allions au marché. I want us to go to the market. |
| faire | to do / to make | que je fasse, que tu fasses, qu’il fasse, que nous fassions, que vous fassiez, qu’ils fassent | Bien qu’il fasse froid, on sort. Although it is cold, we’re going out. |
| pouvoir | to be able to | que je puisse, que tu puisses, qu’il puisse, que nous puissions, que vous puissiez, qu’ils puissent | Je suis content que tu puisses venir. I’m happy that you can come. |
| savoir | to know | que je sache, que tu saches, qu’il sache, que nous sachions, que vous sachiez, qu’ils sachent | Je doute qu’elle sache cela. I doubt that she knows that. |
| vouloir | to want | que je veuille, que tu veuilles, qu’il veuille, que nous voulions, que vous vouliez, qu’ils veuillent | Il faut qu’ils veuillent changer. They need to want to change. |
| venir | to come | que je vienne, que tu viennes, qu’il vienne, que nous venions, que vous veniez, qu’ils viennent | Je veux qu’elle vienne tôt. I want her to come early. |
The Basic Sentence Pattern
Most subjunctive sentences follow this structure:
Main clause + que + different subject + subjunctive verb
| Pattern | Meaning | Example 1 | Example 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Je veux que + subject + subjunctive | I want that… | Je veux que tu viennes. I want you to come. | Je veux qu’il fasse attention. I want him to be careful. |
| Il faut que + subject + subjunctive | It is necessary that… | Il faut que nous partions. We have to leave. | Il faut qu’elle soit prête. She has to be ready. |
| Bien que + subject + subjunctive | Although… | Bien qu’il soit jeune, il est très calme. Although he is young, he is very calm. | Bien qu’ils aient peur, ils essaient. Although they are afraid, they try. |
Notice the different subject part. If the subject stays the same, French often uses an infinitive instead:
- Je veux venir. = I want to come. — same subject, so no que, no subjunctive.
- Je veux que tu viennes. = I want you to come. — different subject, so subjunctive.
Useful Real-Life Subjunctive Sentences
- Il faut que je parte. = I have to leave.
- Je suis content que tu sois là. = I’m happy that you’re here.
- Je ne pense pas qu’il ait compris. = I don’t think he understood.
- Avant que tu partes, appelle-moi. = Before you leave, call me.
- Bien qu’elle soit occupée, elle répond toujours. = Although she is busy, she always replies.
- Je veux que vous sachiez la vérité. = I want you to know the truth.
- Il est possible qu’on arrive en retard. = We may arrive late.
- Pour qu’ils puissent entrer, il faut un code. = For them to be able to enter, a code is needed.
- Je préfère qu’on mange ici. = I’d rather we eat here.
- J’attends jusqu’à ce qu’elle finisse. = I’m waiting until she finishes.
Practice Section
Try these before peeking at the answers. Your brain hates that, which usually means it is working.
Choose The Correct Form
- Il faut que tu (viens / viennes).
- Je sais qu’il (est / soit) prêt.
- Bien qu’elle (a / ait) raison, elle reste calme.
- Je veux que nous (allons / allions) ensemble.
- Je pense qu’il (a / ait) faim.
Answers
- viennes
- est
- ait
- allions
- a — affirmative je pense que usually takes the indicative
Swap The Trigger
Change the mood if needed.
- Je sais qu’il est là. → Je doute qu’il soit là.
- Elle vient avant le dîner. → Viens avant qu’elle ne dîne. or Viens avant qu’elle ne parte.
- Nous partons tôt. → Il faut que nous partions tôt.
Common Mistakes And Fast Fixes
- Mistake: Using the subjunctive after certainty.
Wrong: Je sais qu’il soit prêt.
Fix: Je sais qu’il est prêt. - Mistake: Forgetting that many triggers need que.
Wrong: Il faut tu viennes.
Fix: Il faut que tu viennes. - Mistake: Using the subjunctive when the subject stays the same.
Wrong: Je veux que je parte.
Fix: Je veux partir. - Mistake: Guessing irregular forms.
Wrong: Il faut que tu es.
Fix: Il faut que tu sois. - Mistake: Treating every que as a subjunctive signal.
Fix: Look at the trigger before que. Fact or certainty? Usually indicative. Wish, doubt, emotion, necessity? Often subjunctive.
Quick Reference Summary
| Use The Subjunctive After | Do Not Usually Use It After |
|---|---|
| il faut que je veux que je préfère que je suis content que je doute que il est possible que bien que pour que avant que jusqu’à ce que | je sais que il est certain que il est clair que je pense que (affirmative, usually) je crois que (affirmative, usually) |
Final Yak
The French subjunctive is not everywhere, but it is absolutely common. Learn the big triggers first: il faut que, je veux que, je doute que, bien que, pour que. Once those feel normal, the subjunctive stops looking like a grammar monster and starts looking like a pattern you can actually use.
Also, yes, native speakers sometimes avoid fancy structures in fast speech. That does not mean you get to ignore the subjunctive completely. Nice try.





