Goethe A2 Lesen (Reading) – Format, Task Guide, and Scoring Tips 2026

The Goethe-Zertifikat A2 Lesen module tests your ability to read and understand short, everyday German texts — notices, advertisements, emails, signs, and simple articles. At A2 level, you are expected to find specific information in familiar, concrete contexts. This guide covers every task in the A2 Lesen module, how marks are allocated, and the most effective strategies to maximise your score.

Goethe A2 Lesen: At a Glance

FeatureDetail
Module nameLesen (Reading Comprehension)
CEFR levelA2 — Elementary
Total marks15 points (out of 60 for the full A2 exam)
Pass markMinimum 60% overall (36/60); no individual module minimum at A2
DurationApproximately 30 minutes
Number of tasks4 tasks
Text typesNotices, advertisements, short emails, signs, short articles, forms
Answer formatMultiple choice (a/b/c), matching, true/false/not mentioned

The Four Tasks in Goethe A2 Lesen

Task 1 — Matching Notices to People or Situations (5 items, 1 point each)

You are given five short notices or advertisements (e.g., a course advertisement, a shop notice, a community bulletin board post) and five people or situations. You must match each person to the most relevant notice.

What it tests: Ability to scan multiple short texts for specific relevant information; matching reader needs to available information

Text types: Community centre course listings, holiday apartment ads, shop opening hour signs, service notices

StrategyWhy It Helps
Read the person descriptions first, then scan notices for keywordsSaves time — you are searching with a purpose rather than reading everything first
One notice can be correct for multiple people; one may be correct for noneDo not assume each notice matches exactly one person — read the task instructions carefully
Cross out notices you have already used if the task allows only one use per noticeReduces options and speeds up elimination

Task 2 — Reading a Short Article or Report (5 items, 1 point each)

You read a short informational text (approximately 150–200 words) — a simple magazine article, a newspaper snippet, or a factual report — and answer five multiple-choice questions.

What it tests: Detailed reading comprehension; distinguishing between similar-sounding details; understanding the main idea and specific facts

Common topics: A person’s job or hobby, a local event, a travel description, a simple product review, a school or community programme

Key strategy: Read the questions before the article. This tells you exactly what details to look for. Answer as you read — do not try to remember the whole text.

Task 3 — True / False / Not Mentioned (3 items, 1 point each)

You read a short text and decide for each of three statements whether it is Richtig (true), Falsch (false), or Nicht im Text (not mentioned).

Critical distinction: “Not mentioned” means the text contains no information on this point — neither confirming nor denying it. This is different from “false.”

Statement TypeHow to IdentifyCommon Error
Richtig (True)Text directly confirms the claim (even in different words)Accepting paraphrases that change the meaning
Falsch (False)Text directly contradicts the claimConfusing absence of information with contradiction
Nicht im Text (Not mentioned)Topic is not addressed anywhere in the textMarking as false when the text simply does not cover it

Task 4 — Reading Short Practical Texts (2 items, 1 point each)

You read two very short texts — SMS messages, chat messages, short signs, or brief instructions — and answer one multiple-choice question about each.

What it tests: Understanding the communicative purpose of very short, practical written messages

Key strategy: The answer is almost always embedded in one or two specific words or phrases. Identify what the sender wants, what the sign instructs, or what the message is about — the question tests this directly.

Full Task Map with Marks

TaskText TypeItemsMarksFormat
1Notices / advertisements (matching)55Matching
2Short article or report55MCQ (a/b/c)
3Short factual text33True/False/Not mentioned
4SMS / sign / short message22MCQ (a/b/c)
Total1515

A2-Level Vocabulary Areas for Reading

Topic AreaKey Vocabulary Examples
Daily routineaufstehen, fruehstuecken, zur Arbeit gehen, Mittagspause, einkaufen, schlafen
Shopping and servicesOeffnungszeiten, Sonderangebot, ausverkauft, Kasse, Preisschild, bestellen
Health and appointmentsTermin, Arztpraxis, Rezept, Wartezimmer, Krankenversicherung, Sprechstunde
Housing and neighbourhoodWohnung, mieten, Vermieter, Nachbar, Klingel, Hausordnung, Muell
Transport and travelAbfahrt, Ankunft, Verspaetung, Gleis, umsteigen, Fahrkarte, Reservierung

Common Errors in Goethe A2 Lesen

ErrorFix
Confusing “Falsch” with “Nicht im Text”Ask yourself: does the text say anything about this? If no — it’s not mentioned. If yes but differently — it may be false.
Reading the full text before the questionsAlways read questions first — it saves time and focuses your reading
Choosing the option with the most familiar wordsDistractors deliberately repeat vocabulary from the text in misleading combinations
Running out of time on Task 2Budget 10 minutes for Task 2 — it is the longest text. Spend 5 min on Tasks 1, 3, 4 each.

Preparation Plan: 4 Weeks to A2 Lesen

WeekFocusDaily Activity
4A2 reading vocabulary by topicRead 1 short German text per day (DW Learn German, Schubert Verlag A2)
3Task 1 matching and Task 3 T/F/NM drillsOfficial Goethe A2 sample Lesen tasks (goethe.de)
2Full timed Lesen module mocksComplete one full Lesen module in 30 min; review errors
1Error consolidationRe-read all wrong Task 2 answers; practise T/F/NM judgement

-> Goethe A2 Horen (Listening) – Format, Task Guide, and Scoring Tips 2026

-> Goethe A2 Schreiben (Writing) – Format, Task Guide, and Scoring Tips 2026

-> Goethe A2 Sprechen (Speaking) – Format, Task Guide, and Scoring Tips 2026

The Goethe A2 Lesen rewards candidates who read with purpose. By reading the questions first, focusing on specific information, and understanding the critical distinction between “false” and “not mentioned,” you can consistently score above the minimum required. Systematic practice with official sample tests and an A2-level vocabulary base built around everyday topics is all you need.

Ready to practice?

Buy a Mock Test Follow on LinkedIn

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Buy a Mock Test Follow on LinkedIn