• CEFR A1 English Level

You're at the start of something real.

A1 isn’t about how little you know — it’s about how much you’re about to learn. Every fluent English speaker you’ve ever admired started exactly where you are now.
lavel | English Explorers
500–700

Words you'll learn at this level

60–100

Hours of study to reach A1

6 Levels Total

A1 → A2 → B1 → B2 → C1 → C2 — you're on the first step of a mapped, achievable journey

A1

01 — What is A1 —————

The real definition,
not just the textbook one.

The official description is useful, but it doesn’t tell you what A1 actually feels like. Here’s both.

Official CEFR Definition

Can introduce themselves and others and can ask and answer questions about personal details such as where they live, people they know, and things they have.
“Can interact in a simple way provided the other person talks slowly and clearly and is prepared to help.” — Council of Europe

What it actually means

You can survive in English — and that's more powerful than it sounds.

You can order at a café, read a “CLOSED” sign, understand your Uber driver’s confirmation text, and introduce yourself at a meeting without freezing. You need the other person to slow down, but you can do this.
It’s not fluency — it’s the foundation that makes fluency possible.
TL;DR

A1 is the beginning, not the bottom. It's your first working version of a second language — imperfect, functional, and genuinely impressive.

02 — Identify Yourself —————

You're probably at A1 if…

Forget the formal placement tests for a second. These real-life moments are a much better indicator of where you are.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon11 | English Explorers

You can introduce yourself confidently — name, where you're from, what you do — but panic the moment someone asks a follow-up question you didn't prepare for.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon12 | English Explorers

You can understand a basic text message like "I'm on my way" or "be there at 7" but a voice note from a native speaker at normal speed is basically a mystery.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon13 | English Explorers

You've successfully ordered at a café in English — but when they said "would you like room for cream?" you just said yes without knowing what it meant.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon14 | English Explorers

You can't follow TV shows even with subtitles turned off. Even slow, clear speech is mostly sounds to you right now — and that's completely normal at this stage.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon15 | English Explorers

You can't hold a real back-and-forth conversation about anything that goes off-script. Unexpected questions or topic changes still throw you completely.

Sounds familiar ✓

icon16 | English Explorers

You can read short, simple signs and menus and understand the gist — but a paragraph of English text requires a lot of stopping, re-reading, and Googling.

03 — Real-Life Abilities —————

What you can actually do at A1 — right now.

A1 is about functional communication, not perfection. Here’s what’s genuinely within your reach today.

01

Introduce Yourself

Share your name, where you're from, what you do, and a few basic facts about yourself.

"Hi, I'm Marco. I'm from Italy. I work in a restaurant."

02

Ask Simple Questions

Get information you need using basic question structures — especially when you can point at things.

"Excuse me, where is the bathroom?" / "How much is this?"

03

Handle Basic Transactions

Buy things, order food, and manage simple exchanges — especially when the setting is predictable.

"One coffee, please." / "Can I have the bill?"

04

Follow Basic Instructions

Understand directions and simple commands when they're spoken slowly and clearly.

"Turn left." / "Open the door." / "Please wait here."

05

Use Common Social Phrases

Navigate polite social moments — greetings, goodbyes, thank yous — without freezing.

"Nice to meet you." / "See you later!" / "Thanks so much."

06

Describe Your Immediate World

Talk about the things physically around you using basic nouns, colors, and simple adjectives.

"It's a big red bag." / "My room is small but nice."

04 — Everyday Communication —————

English in the real world, at A1.

Communication isn’t just conversations. Most of your English right now happens in text messages, simple signs, and short exchanges. Here’s what that looks like.
CEFR A1 English level
💬 Text & messaging — A1 can handle:
📱 Social media — what you can navigate:
🚧 Where A1 starts to struggle:

05 — Listening & Reading —————

What your ears and eyes can do at A1.

Passive skills — listening and reading — are where most learners are quietly stronger than they think. Here’s your real picture.
listening | English Explorers
Listening

Slow, clear speech in familiar contexts

Simple announcements — you catch the key information when spoken slowly and repeated.

"Attention please. The train to London departs from platform 4."

Numbers, times, and prices — your ears are tuned to these even when other words are fuzzy.

Catching "three thirty" or "$12.50" in a mostly incomprehensible sentence.

Familiar words in context — you pick out words you know, even if you miss the rest.

Hearing "coffee," "please," "sorry," "help" in everyday situations.

Native speed conversations — too fast, too connected. Words blur together. This is normal — even B1 learners struggle with this.
reading | English Explorers
Reading

Short texts in familiar, concrete contexts

Signs, labels, and menus — you can navigate physical spaces using written English.

"EXIT," "PUSH," "Allergens: contains nuts," "$4.50"

Very short texts — postcards, WhatsApp messages, and simple forms with slow re-reading.

"Hi! I'm at the café. Where are you? Call me."

Numbers, dates, and times — these transfer easily from your first language.

Reading "Monday, March 3 at 2:30pm" without help.

News articles or continuous prose — too much vocabulary, too many structures you haven't learned yet. Save this for B1+.

06 — Speaking & Writing —————

How you express yourself at A1.

Production — actually making English — is harder than recognition. But A1 gives you real tools. Here’s what you’ve genuinely got.
specking | English Explorers
Speaking
You speak in short, isolated sentences. You rely on the other person being patient and helpful. Context helps a lot — if you’re in a café, they’re expecting café words.

"I like coffee."

preference

"Where is the train?"

asking directions

"My name is Ana. I'm from Brazil."

introducing yourself

"Sorry, can you repeat?"

buying time — crucial

Honest note: You'll pause. You'll say "um" a lot. You might mix up word order. None of that stops communication — and native speakers appreciate the effort more than you think.

Writing | English Explorers
Writing
Writing gives you time that speaking doesn’t — you can think, check, and edit. This makes A1 writers often look stronger on paper than they feel in conversation.

"My name is Carlos. I am 28."

form or profile

"I live in Madrid. I have one sister."

about yourself

"OK. See you at 5. Thank you!"

text message

"I am on holiday. The weather is hot."

postcard / caption

Honest note: You'll make grammar mistakes — that's not just expected, it's necessary. People who never make mistakes are people who never try.

07 — Vocabulary & Grammar —————

What actually matters at this level.

Forget memorizing every word. Focus on the structures that unlock the most communication. Here’s what you need.

~600 words

That’s your A1 vocabulary range. It sounds small — and it is — but these 600 words cover the situations you’ll actually be in every day. Quality over quantity matters far more at this stage than trying to cram lists.

Your word bank covers the essentials: who you are, where you are, what you need, and how you feel.

People & family

Food & drink

Numbers & time

Colors & sizes

Places & directions

Feelings

Daily objects

Jobs

Weather

Shopping

Verb "to be"

PRIORITY #1

This one verb unlocks a massive amount of A1 communication. Master it and so much else falls into place.

I am / You are / She is / They are

"I am a teacher." / "She is from Japan."

Present Simple

DAILY USE

Talk about facts, routines, and things that are generally true. This is the tense you’ll use most at A1.

I work / She likes / They live

"I work in a school." / "He likes pizza."

Basic Questions

SURVIVAL TOOL

Six question words will take you surprisingly far. Learn these before anything else.

What? Where? Who? When? How much? How many?

"Where is the exit?" / "How much is this?"

There is / There are

DESCRIBE THINGS

A simple but hugely useful structure for describing your environment.

"There is a café near here." / "There are two bedrooms."

08 — Digital & Social Life —————

English online — the A1 reality.

The internet is where most of us actually encounter English today. Here’s what A1 looks like on the platforms you’re already using.

Instagram / TikTok

Following along visually

A1 learners actually thrive here — video + image context fills in a lot of language gaps. You understand more than you think.

can

Understand captions like “Good morning!” / “Monday mood 😴”

can

Leave a comment: “Beautiful!” / “❤️” / “So nice!”

hard

Understanding jokes, sarcasm, or slang like “no cap” or “it’s giving…”

WhatsApp / iMessage

Texting in English

Short message formats are actually ideal for A1. The structure is simple, context is clear, and there's time to think.

can

“OK see you at 7 🙌” / “I’m on my way” / “Sorry, I’m late!”

can

Understand: “Be there in 5 mins” / “Are you coming?”

can

Long voice notes at native speed or multi-topic conversations

YouTube / Netflix

Watching with support

Video with subtitles is one of the best A1 learning tools available — and you might enjoy it more than you expect.

can

Follow along with English subtitles + visual context

can

Pick out familiar words even without subtitles

hard

Understanding dialogue at full native speed without subtitles

02 — Identify Yourself —————

You're probably at A1 if…

Forget the formal placement tests for a second. These real-life moments are a much better indicator of where you are.

👋 Meeting new colleagues

A1 learners actually thrive here — video + image context fills in a lot of language gaps. You understand more than you think.

"Hi, I'm Maria. Nice to meet you. I work in marketing. And you?" — This is A1-doable, and it creates a real human connection.

❓ Asking for help at work

You can flag that you need something without necessarily being able to explain the full context. Simple, direct requests work just fine at this level.

"Excuse me, where is the printer?" / "Can you help me, please?" / "I don't understand. Can you repeat?"

📋 Following basic instructions

If instructions are given clearly and slowly — especially with demonstration — A1 learners can follow along and get the job done.

Nodding, pointing, and using "OK" and "yes" to confirm understanding. Not glamorous, but it works in a basic job environment.

📢 Understanding announcements

Workplace announcements — safety info, schedule changes, meeting reminders — are often short and repetitive, which A1 handles reasonably well.

"Fire drill today at 2pm. Please use the stairs." — Key words land even if the full sentence doesn't.

🎉 Being at a social event

Small talk formulas carry you further than you think. Most opening conversations follow predictable patterns that A1 handles well.

"Hi! I'm [name]. Nice to meet you. How do you know [host]?" — You'll get by, even if deeper conversation is harder.

🍽️ Going out to eat

Restaurants are an A1 comfort zone. The script is predictable, visual menus help, and staff are used to non-native speakers.

"A table for two, please." / "I'll have the pasta." / "Can I have the bill?" — Confidence wins here.

🗺️ Asking for directions

You can ask. Understanding the answer is the harder part — but pointing, looking at phones, and saying "sorry, can you show me?" all help.

"Excuse me, where is the metro?" is A1. What comes back might be harder — but most people will point.

🛒 Shoppin

One of the easiest A1 real-world scenarios. Predictable, repetitive, and context-rich. Signs, prices, and visual cues do most of the work.

"How much is this?" / "Do you have this in size medium?" / "I'll take it." — All completely within A1 reach.

10 — A Day in the Life —————

24 hours as an A1 English learner.

This is what A1 English actually looks like woven through a real day — not a textbook exercise, but your actual life.

☀️ Morning routine

Your phone alarm goes off. The notification says "Reminder: meeting at 10am today." You understand it. You also see an Instagram post from a brand you follow — "Good morning! Happy Monday ☕" — and you get it, you like it.

English moments: phone notifications, simple social media captions — A1 handles both comfortably.

8:00 AM

☕ Getting coffee before work

You stop at a café. "One flat white, please." The barista asks "Do you want a receipt?" You catch "receipt" — you say yes. Small win. Total success.

English moment: Basic transaction in a predictable context. Context and visual cues fill in the blanks.

9:30 AM

💼 Work meeting

Your manager says something quickly and you catch the words "project," "Thursday," and "email." You nod. Later, you check the email — short and clear — and you understand what's expected.

English moment: You miss some of the spoken meeting but the written follow-up email is manageable. A1 in action.

10:00 AM

🥗 Lunch — navigating a food truck

The menu is simple. You order "the chicken wrap, please." The person asks "Is that for here or to go?" — you've heard this before. "To go, please." Done.

English moment: Learned phrases do real work here. This is exactly why A1 vocab is worth building.

1:00 PM

📺 Evening — Netflix with subtitles

You put on an English-language show with English subtitles. You don't understand everything but you pick up words you know — "stop," "help," "I love you," "tomorrow." The visual story carries you through the rest.

English moment: Passive learning that actually works. This is one of the most effective things an A1 learner can do.

7:00 PM

11 — Your Journe —————

How long to get here — and what comes next.

Forget the formal placement tests for a second. These real-life moments are a much better indicator of where you are.

60–100

Hours of guided study

15–30

Minutes per day is enough

8–12

Weeks on average

How to spend your time well

phone2 | English Explorers

Flashcard apps (Anki, Quizlet)

10 minutes a day on vocabulary. The spaced repetition makes words stick faster than any list.

media | English Explorers

English content with subtitles

YouTube, Netflix, TikTok — content you already enjoy, in English. Even 20 minutes counts.

speck | English Explorers

Speak out loud — even to yourself

Narrate your day in English. "I am making coffee. It is hot. I am tired." Sounds silly, works incredibly well.

icon16 | English Explorers

A1 graded readers

Books written for learners at your level. Designed to be engaging, not frustrating.

Moving to A2 — your next milestone

Mastering A1 means you've built a real foundation. A2 is when English starts feeling less like survival and more like actual communication.

trand | English Explorers

Expand your vocabulary to 1,500+ words

A2 unlocks past tense, comparisons, and more complex sentence structures that let you tell stories, not just state facts.

date | English Explorers

Start talking about time — past and future

"I went to the market" and "I will call you tomorrow" open up entirely new conversations. A2 makes this happen.

heat | English Explorers

Get officially recognized (optional)

Cambridge A1 Movers or Trinity GESE Grade 2 formally certify your level if you need it for school, work, or immigration.

chat | English Explorers

Start real conversations — even imperfect ones

Language exchange apps like Tandem or HelloTalk let you talk to real people at a level that works for you.

?

11 — Your Journey —————

Still not sure if A1 is your level?

No worries — that’s exactly what the quiz is for. It takes about 5 minutes and gives you a clear, honest result across all six CEFR levels.
5 minutes · No sign-up needed · Instant result