Just starting Dutch? This is your roadmap — your first words, the sounds that matter, and a simple week-one plan so you never feel lost.
The beginning is the most motivating — and the most fragile — stage. Get the foundations right and momentum carries you. Here's exactly where to start.
Your beginner foundation.
Hallo, goedemorgen, tot ziens, dank je wel — the social basics.
Numbers, days, colours — the building blocks of daily life.
Ordering, asking directions, 'Spreekt u Engels?'
The hard g, ui and eu — start training them now, not later.
Five days to momentum.
Learn 10 greetings and use them out loud.
'Ik heet…', 'Ik kom uit…', 'Ik woon in…'
Count out loud, practise prices and times.
Drill the hard g and the ui sound with audio.
Order a coffee in Dutch, even if you switch to English after.
Three traps stall beginners: 1) Studying only grammar instead of speaking — flip to 60% practice. 2) Waiting to be ‘ready’ to speak — that moment never comes, so start now. 3) Letting Dutch people switch to English — politely ask: “Mag het in het Nederlands?”
Dutch Daily guides absolute beginners step by step — daily lessons, gentle pronunciation practice and friendly AI conversation. Free to start.
Start with greetings and survival phrases, learn to introduce yourself, drill the tricky sounds (g, ui, eu) early, and speak out loud from day one. Build a short daily habit rather than occasional long sessions.
Dutch is one of the easier languages for English speakers — lots of shared vocabulary and simpler grammar than German. The main early challenges are pronunciation and word order, both very learnable.
With daily practice, basic conversations (A2) come in about 6 months; simple exchanges and ordering happen much sooner, often within weeks.