telc German A1

telc German A1 – Reading (Lesen)

Reading (Lesen) is the second part of the written telc A1 exam (Start Deutsch 1). Here you’ll find the structure, tasks, exercises and a clear strategy for each of the three parts.

As of 2026 · Built to the official exam format

3
Parts
15
Tasks
15
Points
25 min
Time
60 %
to pass

Key takeaways

  • Reading has 3 parts with 15 tasks in total.
  • Part 1 (short texts) and Part 3 (signs) are true/false; Part 2 is ad-matching (a/b).
  • Reading and writing share around 45 minutes – plan about 25 minutes for reading.

Overview

Reading is the second part of the written telc A1 exam. You read short, simple everyday texts – small letters and emails, ads and signs – and solve tasks about them. In total that’s 15 tasks in three parts. Reading and writing share a block of around 45 minutes; plan about 25 minutes for reading.

At its core it’s about finding simple information: what is the text about? which ad fits? what does the sign mean? You don’t have to understand every word, just recognize the important information. The texts are short and close to everyday life.

The three parts have different tasks: in Part 1 you read short texts (e.g. emails) and decide true/false, in Part 2 you find the matching ad for a situation (a or b), in Part 3 you read signs and notices and again decide true/false. Practice them separately.

Difficultyeasy

The texts are short and simple. The biggest hurdle is vocabulary – whoever knows the most common everyday words solves the reading confidently.

The parts at a glance

PartTask typeFocusTasksPoints
Part 1 – Short texts (T/F)True/FalseUnderstanding short texts55
Part 2 – Ads (a/b)Ad matchingComparing ads55
Part 3 – Signs (T/F)True/FalseUnderstanding signs55

Tips & strategy

Budget time with writing

Reading and writing share around 45 minutes. Plan about 25 minutes for reading and leave enough time for writing.

Task first, then the text

Read the statement or situation first. That way you know what to look for in the text and read purposefully.

Watch for key words

Look for the important information in the text – a name, a time, a price. You don’t have to understand every word.

In Part 2, check all conditions

For ad-matching, the ad must really fit the situation. Check place, time and offer, not just one matching word.

Never leave a box blank

There is no penalty for wrong answers. Guess rather than leave a task open.

Transfer to the answer sheet

Only the answer sheet is graded. Transfer your answers in good time, not in the final seconds.

Common text types

In the reading part you’ll meet typical simple A1 texts:

Short emails & letters
private messages to friends or family (Part 1).
Ads
small offers, e.g. flat, course, flea market (Part 2).
Signs & notices
notes in public places, e.g. shop, station (Part 3).
Notes & messages
short pieces of everyday information.

Common topics

The texts revolve around simple everyday topics. Prepare vocabulary for these areas:

Family & friends
invitation, arrangement, appointments
Home
flat hunting, address, furniture
Shopping & leisure
shop, course, offers
Public places
shop, station, notices on signs

1-week study plan

  1. Day
    1
    Learn the format

    Read this guide and do a first official reading practice test – without time pressure, just to understand the structure.

  2. Day
    2
    Part 1 – short texts

    Practice reading short emails and deciding true/false. Read the statement first.

  3. Day
    3
    Part 2 – ads

    Practice choosing the matching ad (a or b). Check that all conditions really fit.

  4. Day
    4
    Part 3 – signs

    Practice reading signs and notices and deciding true/false.

  5. Day
    5
    Vocabulary

    Review the most important A1 everyday words with the word list – family, home, shopping, time.

  6. Day
    6
    Full reading part under time

    Work through all three parts in one go in around 25 minutes and transfer your answers to an answer sheet.

  7. Day
    7
    Analyze your mistakes

    Look at every mistake: which word was missing? Review your weakest part specifically.

Are you ready?

  • I understand the important information in a short email.
  • I can decide confidently between true and false for a statement.
  • I can find the matching ad for a situation.
  • I understand simple signs and notices.
  • I know the most important A1 everyday words.
  • I can finish all 15 tasks within the time limit.

Frequently asked questions

How many parts does telc A1 reading have?

Three parts with 15 tasks in total: Part 1 (short texts, true/false, 5), Part 2 (ad-matching a/b, 5) and Part 3 (signs, true/false, 5).

How much time do I have for reading?

Reading and writing are done together in a block of around 45 minutes. There is no fixed split; plan about 25 minutes for reading.

What does reading test?

Whether you understand simple everyday texts – short emails, ads and signs. You should find the important information, not understand every word.

Can I use a dictionary in reading?

No. No aids such as dictionaries are allowed in the telc German A1 exam.

Are wrong answers penalized?

No. There is no penalty for guessing – so answer every task.

What’s the best way to practice reading?

Read short, simple German texts regularly and practice A1 vocabulary. At Prepliq you practice reading with realistic mock exams and get instant scoring; the interactive word list helps you lock in your vocabulary.

Free practice exercises

Useful resources

Other exam parts