Translate English into German with correct cases, compound nouns and spoken audio. Free, unlimited and instant.
German is spoken by over 100 million people in the EU’s largest economy. Translate your English into grammatically correct German and hear every word.
Text-to-speech reads your German translation with natural pronunciation including umlauts, compound stress patterns and the precise articulation that German demands.
Save any German translation as a spoken audio file for business rehearsal, study or professional content creation.
Your text is processed and erased. No accounts, no logs, no data collection.
German builds single words from entire concepts and declines every adjective. Translate your English and hear how precision sounds in the language of Goethe.
Paste English and receive German with four cases, compound nouns, separable verbs and umlauts all correctly handled. Grammar that would take years to master, applied instantly.
Play your translation to verify compound word stress, umlaut pronunciation and the overall rhythm of spoken German before using it professionally.
Download spoken German as MP3 for client preparation, trade fair rehearsal, academic presentations or language study materials.
Germany has the largest economy in Europe and the fourth largest in the world. German-speaking markets (Germany, Austria, German-speaking Switzerland, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and South Tyrol) represent over 100 million consumers with enormous purchasing power. English-speaking businesses entering these markets need German-language websites, product documentation, marketing materials, legal contracts, technical manuals and customer support. The German market strongly prefers native-language content, and English-only approaches underperform dramatically compared to properly localized German materials.
Germany is also one of the world’s largest export markets and a global leader in automotive engineering, industrial machinery, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, renewable energy and precision manufacturing. English-speaking companies in supply chains connecting to German industry need German-language correspondence, technical specifications and compliance documentation. Beyond business, millions of English-speaking tourists visit Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Vienna and the Rhine Valley annually, and German phrases earn genuine appreciation from locals. The text-to-speech feature helps English speakers master the umlauts, compound noun stress and precise consonant articulation that define spoken German.
Germany has the largest economy in Europe and the fourth largest globally, with over 100 million German-speaking consumers who strongly prefer native-language content over English.
German grammar adds layers of complexity that English has shed over the centuries. Four grammatical cases (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive) change article, adjective and sometimes noun forms. Three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) must be tracked for every noun. Compound nouns pack multiple concepts into single words that can stretch across entire lines (Rindfleischetikettierungsgesetz = beef labeling law). Separable verbs split across sentences. Subordinate clauses push the verb to the end.
The translator handles all of this: case endings are applied correctly to articles and adjectives, gender is assigned for every noun, compounds are formed following German conventions, separable verbs are split and reassembled as needed, and subordinate clause word order follows German rules. The four-case system produces German that sounds properly educated rather than the caseless pidgin that word-for-word substitution generates. The output reads as grammatically correct German that a native speaker would accept without hesitation.
German pronunciation is more regular than English but includes sounds that English speakers find challenging: the umlauted vowels (the u in Muller, the o in schon, the a in Madchen), the ch sounds (which differ depending on the preceding vowel: ich vs. ach), the pf and kn clusters at the beginning of words, and the precise stress patterns in compound words where the wrong stress changes meaning or sounds immediately foreign.
The text-to-speech models all of these in natural speech. Compound noun stress (the first element typically carries primary stress) is correctly placed. Umlauts are pronounced with their proper vowel quality. The ich-laut and ach-laut distinction is maintained. For English speakers preparing to present in German, negotiate with German partners, study at German universities or travel through German-speaking countries, the audio output provides a pronunciation model that written text with pronunciation guides cannot match.
International businesses download German audio for trade fair presentations, product demonstrations, client pitches and investor communications targeting the German market. Engineering firms prepare German technical vocabulary for factory visits and supplier meetings. Students build pronunciation libraries for Goethe-Institut exam preparation. Expats compile audio phrasebooks for apartment hunting, banking, healthcare and daily life in German cities. Academic researchers prepare German conference presentations.
Every file is free, permanent and unrestricted. No watermarks, no daily limits, no registration. The German market is one of the most commercially valuable in the world, and this tool provides audio-enhanced translation for everyone targeting it, from multinational corporations to solo entrepreneurs and independent travelers.
Standard written English produces excellent German output. The four-case system is applied correctly throughout. German compound nouns are formed following standard conventions. Formal English generates Sie-form German; casual English produces du-form output. The Konjunktiv II (subjunctive) is used where German convention requires it. For long texts, paragraph-by-paragraph translation maintains the best consistency.
English passive constructions are converted to German passive using werden + past participle. Modal verbs are mapped onto German equivalents with correct sentence structure. English relative clauses are restructured with the verb at the end as German requires. Technical terminology follows German compound formation rules. The output reads as polished, well-formed German suitable for business, academic, legal and personal contexts.
For legal contracts under German law, patent filings, pharmaceutical regulatory submissions, automotive technical documentation, marketing campaigns targeting specific German-speaking markets (German, Austrian and Swiss German carry different cultural registers), certified translations, literary translation or EU regulatory documents, work with a professional translator. The stakes in German business translation are high, and the regional variation matters.
This translator handles everyday communication, business drafting, travel, study and general reference with excellent results. A professional handles everything with legal standing, industry-specific certification, publication standards or market-specific cultural adaptation requirements.
English enters, German returns with full case endings and umlauts, everything is permanently erased. No copies, no logs, no cookies, no user profiles. Every session receives identical total privacy.
This architectural guarantee cannot be changed. Your text passes through once and leaves no trace on our systems. Whether you translate confidential business content or casual travel phrases, the privacy commitment is absolute and permanent.
German is spoken by about 95 million native speakers across Germany, Austria and Switzerland, which makes it the most widely spoken first language in Europe. People translate English to German for work, study, travel and family.
German is a West Germanic language and a close relative of English, so many words rhyme across the two. Nouns carry one of three genders, marked by der, die or das, and every noun is capitalized. The language joins words into long compounds, and the verb often moves to the end in longer sentences. The letters ä, ö, ü and ß round out the spelling.
| English | German | Say it |
|---|---|---|
| Hello | Hallo | HAH-loh |
| Thank you | Danke | DAHN-kuh |
| Please | Bitte | BIT-tuh |
| Yes / No | Ja / Nein | yah / nine |
| Good morning | Guten Morgen | GOO-ten MOR-gen |
| Goodbye | Auf Wiedersehen | owf VEE-der-zayn |
German has a formal “Sie” and an informal “du”, so pick the one your reader expects and keep it consistent. Capitalize nouns and keep the letters ä, ö, ü and ß, since they carry meaning. A single German compound can replace two or three English words, so the result may look denser.
Yes. This English to German translator is free with no limit on how many translations you make and no sign-up.
Yes. After the translation is read aloud, use the download button to save the German audio as an MP3 file you can keep.
No. You can translate English into German right away, with no registration, no login and no email.
No. Your text is processed, returned to your screen and then discarded. It is not saved, shared or used to build a profile.