In Part 1 you read short texts like emails and decide for each statement between true and false. Here’s how to find the information reliably.
As of 2026 · Built to the official exam format
Practice the same format you’ll see on exam day, get your score against official criteria, and see where you still need work.
Free to try · No account needed
Key takeaways
Part 1 tests whether you understand short, simple texts – usually private emails or short letters. You read the texts and decide for five statements whether they are true or false.
It’s about simple information: who comes when? What does someone bring? You don’t have to understand every word, just find the important information. Read the statement first, then look for the matching spot in the text.
A false statement often differs in just one detail – a different time, a different person. Read carefully for the information. Every correct decision scores points; wrong answers are not penalized.
Read the statement first and underline the important information (name, time, thing).
Look for the matching spot in the text for that information.
Compare the statement with the text: is it really correct?
Decide true or false and move on to the next statement.
Don’t leave any task open – when unsure, guess.
Transfer your answers to the answer sheet in good time.
A short example in the same format: you read a short text and decide whether the statement is true.
„Hallo Tom, der Deutschkurs beginnt am Montag um 9 Uhr, nicht um 10 Uhr. Bitte komm pünktlich! Viele Grüße, Frau Klein"
Statement: “The German course starts at 10 a.m.”
Why? In the text the course starts “um 9 Uhr, nicht um 10 Uhr” (at 9, not at 10). So the statement is wrong – false.
Du liest (sinngemäß): „Liebe Maria, ich komme am Samstag um 15 Uhr zu deiner Party. Ich bringe einen Kuchen mit. Bis dann! Lena"
Is the statement true or false? Statement: “Lena brings a cake.”
Try this section in the real exam format and find out how confident you are before exam day.
Free to try · No account needed
Even a different time or person makes the statement false. Read carefully.
A matching word isn’t enough. Check whether the whole statement is correct.
Read the statement first, then the text – that way you search purposefully.
No answer means a guaranteed zero. Guess an answer if you have to.
Five true/false tasks on short texts like emails.
No. You should find the important information. Read the statement first, then search the text purposefully.
No. There is no penalty – decide on every statement.
Read short emails and practice finding information. In a Prepliq mock you practice this with instant scoring.
Learn 600+ of the most important telc German A1 words interactively with flashcards.
Preview and download the official telc German A1 practice test – with answers and study material.
Practice this exam part in the official format and see what needs more attention before the real test.
Free to try · No account needed