Dutch Daily

Dutch Grammar

Dutch Modal Verbs Explained

Modal verbs like kunnen, mogen, willen and moeten are everywhere in Dutch — and learning them unlocks polite, natural sentences fast. Here's how they work.

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5core modals
endmain verb goes last
dailyhigh-frequency
1key pattern

Why modal verbs matter

Modal verbs express ability, permission, desire and obligation — the backbone of everyday conversation. They also follow one neat structural rule.

The five core modal verbs

What each one means.

Verb Meaning Example
kunnen can / be able to Ik kan zwemmen.
mogen may / be allowed Mag ik binnenkomen?
willen want to Ik wil koffie.
moeten must / have to Ik moet werken.
zullen shall / will Zullen we gaan?

The key pattern

Modal verbs send the main verb to the end of the sentence, in the infinitive: ‘Ik wil vanavond pizza eten.’ The modal is conjugated (wil), the action verb stays infinitive (eten) and goes last. This one pattern makes your Dutch instantly more natural — and modals are the politest way to ask for things: ‘Mag ik…’, ‘Kunt u…’, ‘Zou je…’

Speak naturally with modal verbs

Dutch Daily drills modal verbs in real conversation so polite, natural Dutch comes easily. Free to start.

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Frequently asked questions

What are the Dutch modal verbs?

The five core modals are kunnen (can), mogen (may), willen (want), moeten (must) and zullen (shall/will). They express ability, permission, desire and obligation.

How do modal verbs work in Dutch?

The modal verb is conjugated and the main action verb moves to the end of the sentence in its infinitive form: 'Ik wil pizza eten'.

What's the polite way to ask in Dutch?

Use modal verbs: 'Mag ik…' (may I), 'Kunt u…' (could you), 'Zou je…' (would you). These soften requests and sound much more natural.

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