German word order is consistently one of the most-searched grammar topics among learners — and for good reason. It's different enough from English to feel counterintuitive, and the rules interact with each other in ways that aren't always obvious. But there are really only three core rules to master, plus two secondary patterns. Nail these and most word order problems solve themselves.
Rule 1: Verb-Second in Main Clauses
In a German main clause (Hauptsatz), the conjugated verb is always the second element. Not the second word — the second element.
An "element" here means a grammatical unit: a subject, an object, a time expression, a whole prepositional phrase. That entire unit counts as one element, no matter how many words it contains.
| Position 1 (any element) | Position 2 (conjugated verb) | Rest of clause |
|---|---|---|
| Maria | arbeitet | heute im Büro. |
| Heute | arbeitet | Maria im Büro. |
| Im Büro | arbeitet | Maria heute. |
| Jeden Tag um acht Uhr | beginnt | die Schule. |
When anything other than the subject occupies position 1 — a time expression, a location, an adverb — the subject moves to position 3, directly after the verb. This is called Inversion, and it's not optional.
Wrong: Gestern Maria hat gearbeitet. Right: Gestern hat Maria gearbeitet.
Rule 2: Verb-Final in Subordinate Clauses
After a subordinating conjunction (weil, obwohl, dass, wenn, als, damit, etc.), the conjugated verb moves to the very end of the clause.
- Ich bleibe zu Hause, weil ich krank bin.
- Er hat gewusst, dass sie heute kommt.
- Ruf mich an, wenn du in Berlin ankommst.
What happens with two verbs in a subordinate clause?
When you have a modal verb or an auxiliary (haben, sein, werden) plus an infinitive or past participle, both verbs go to the end — and the auxiliary or modal comes last:
- Sie sagt, dass sie das Buch lesen möchte.
- Er erklärt, dass er gestern zu Hause geblieben ist.
| Clause type | Verb position | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Main clause, simple | Position 2 | Sie arbeitet heute. |
| Main clause, two verbs | Position 2 + final | Sie hat heute gearbeitet. |
| Subordinate clause, simple | Final | ...weil sie heute arbeitet. |
| Subordinate clause, two verbs | Both final, auxiliary last | ...weil sie heute gearbeitet hat. |
Rule 3: The Verb Bracket (Satzklammer)
In main clauses when the verb has two parts, the conjugated verb locks into position 2, and the second part — infinitive, past participle, or separable prefix — goes to the very end of the clause. Everything else fills the middle.
- Ich habe gestern das Buch gelesen. (Perfekt)
- Sie kann morgen nicht kommen. (Modal)
- Er steht um sechs Uhr auf. (Separable verb)
The Satzklammer is why separable verbs work the way they do. In a main clause, the prefix always splits off and moves to the very end:
- aufstehen → Ich stehe morgen früh um sechs auf.
- anrufen → Er ruft dich morgen an.
Wrong: Ich aufstehe um sechs Uhr. Right: Ich stehe um sechs Uhr auf.
In a subordinate clause, separable verbs re-join because the whole verb goes to the end:
- ...weil er um sechs Uhr aufsteht.
TeKaMoLo: Adverb Order in the Middle Field
The middle field — everything between the two parts of the verb bracket — follows a preferred ordering for adverbs. The mnemonic is TeKaMoLo:
- Te — Temporal (when: gestern, morgens, um drei Uhr)
- Ka — Kausal (why: wegen des Regens, deshalb)
- Mo — Modal (how: schnell, mit dem Auto)
- Lo — Lokal (where: zu Hause, in Berlin)
The most important TeKaMoLo rule for B1: time before place.
- Preferred: Sie fährt morgen mit dem Zug nach Hamburg.
- Awkward: Sie fährt nach Hamburg morgen mit dem Zug.
Correct vs. Incorrect: Side by Side
| Rule | Wrong | Right |
|---|---|---|
| Verb-second after fronting | Gestern Maria hat gearbeitet. | Gestern hat Maria gearbeitet. |
| Verb-final in subordinate clause | ...weil ich bin müde. | ...weil ich müde bin. |
| Two verbs in subordinate clause | ...dass sie hat das gemacht. | ...dass sie das gemacht hat. |
| Satzklammer with modal | Ich kann nicht kommen morgen. | Ich kann morgen nicht kommen. |
| Separable verb in main clause | Er aufsteht um sechs. | Er steht um sechs auf. |
| Time before place | Ich fahre nach Berlin gestern. | Ich bin gestern nach Berlin gefahren. |
Common Mistakes at B1 Level
1. Putting the verb in position 3 after a fronted element
As soon as you start a sentence with gestern, morgen, leider, normalerweise, or any other non-subject element, the subject must come after the verb.
- Leider ich kann nicht kommen. → Wrong
- Leider kann ich nicht kommen. → Right
2. Forgetting verb-final after subordinating conjunctions
Especially after obwohl — learners often apply normal word order because the contrast feels like starting a new thought.
- Ich gehe raus, obwohl es regnet draußen. → Wrong
- Ich gehe raus, obwohl es draußen regnet. → Right
3. Keeping the separable prefix attached in a main clause
- Ich anrufe dich später. → Wrong
- Ich rufe dich später an. → Right
4. Misplacing the past participle
- Ich habe das Buch gelesen gestern. → Wrong
- Ich habe das Buch gestern gelesen. → Right
How This Appears in the TELC B1 Exam
Sprachbausteine: Some gap-fill tasks test word order directly — you may choose the correct sentence from two options that differ only in verb position.
Schreiben (Writing): Every sentence you write is assessed for grammatical accuracy. Verb-position mistakes are easy for an examiner to spot. Using fronted time expressions correctly (Gestern habe ich..., Leider kann ich nicht...) actively signals competence.
Hören (Listening): Understanding complex subordinate clauses in spoken German is easier when you already know to expect the verb at the end.
The Summary
- Main clause: Conjugated verb always in position 2. Front anything you like, but the verb doesn't move.
- Subordinate clause: Conjugated verb to the very end. Auxiliary or modal comes last of all.
- Verb bracket: Conjugated verb in position 2, infinitive/participle/prefix at the very end of the clause.
- Separable verbs: Prefix breaks off and goes to the end in main clauses; stays attached in subordinate clauses.
- Time before place as a baseline for adverb order.
Put these rules to work under real exam pressure. Our free TELC B1 mock exam includes Sprachbausteine tasks and a writing section where word order accuracy directly affects your score.