German Speaking Practice

German Conversation Practice That Feels Like a Real Conversation

Declension tables and vocabulary lists won't teach you to hold a conversation. Talking will — out loud, in real time, about real things. Here's how to get German conversation practice that actually builds speaking ability, and how to start right now.

Browser conversation demo coming soon.

The real goal

What “conversation practice” should actually mean

Most things sold as German conversation practice aren't conversations. They're gap-fill exercises, declension drills, or scripted dialogues where you read both roles. You finish feeling productive, but it never quite prepares you for a real conversation you didn't rehearse.

Real practice means producing German yourself, unscripted, fast enough to keep a back-and-forth alive. You don't know what's coming next, so you have to think in German — gender, case, verb position and all — instead of reciting a line you memorized. That's the only version that transfers to a real café, call, or meeting.

Why it's hard to find

Why most “speaking practice” doesn't move the needle

  1. It's recognition, not production

    Choosing the right answer trains you to recognize German. Speaking forces you to retrieve and build it — a different skill entirely.

  2. It's scripted

    Reading a dialogue aloud feels like speaking, but real conversation is unpredictable. You need reps responding to what you didn't see coming.

  3. It avoids real-time grammar

    On paper you have time to work out the case and send the verb to the end. In conversation you don't — and only live practice trains that.

What works

How to practice German conversation effectively

You build speaking like any physical skill: reps under realistic conditions.

  1. 1

    Speak more than you study

    If most of your time goes to grammar tables, flip it. An hour of talking beats five hours of passive review for fluency.

  2. 2

    Practice short and often

    Five minutes of real conversation daily beats one long weekly session. Recall improves with frequency.

  3. 3

    Talk about what you actually care about

    You'll reach for the words you'll genuinely use — your work, your weekend, your opinions — not textbook dialogues.

  4. 4

    Say it imperfectly, fix it after

    Get the whole thought out with the wrong case if you have to, then review. Stopping mid-sentence to self-correct kills your flow.

Try it now

Warm-up prompts to start talking

Say your answer out loud — full sentences, not single words. Don't write it down first.

  • Was hast du am Wochenende gemacht?

    What did you do this weekend?

  • Was war das Beste an deiner Woche?

    What was the best part of your week?

  • Was möchtest du dieses Jahr machen?

    What would you like to do this year?

  • Beschreib mir dein Lieblingsviertel in deiner Stadt.

    Describe your favorite neighborhood in your city.

Where Parla fits

Parla is built for the conversation, not the quiz

Parla gives intermediate and advanced learners a place to actually talk — no scheduling, no judgment.

  • Open-ended conversation

    Talk about real topics with an AI partner that responds naturally and keeps it going.

  • Available whenever you are

    No tutor to book, no partner to coordinate with. Practice at 6am or midnight.

  • Corrections after you finish

    Speak freely, then get a clear debrief — including the cases and word order you missed — without being interrupted.

  • Topics tuned to you

    Practice the subjects you'll actually discuss, at a level that stretches you without overwhelming you.

Start your German conversation practice today

The fastest way to get better at speaking is to start speaking. Five minutes is enough to begin.