How I Passed the Goethe B2 German Exam Using Mostly Comprehensible Input

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I recently passed the Goethe B2 German exam in Chicago.

For a lot of language learners, the B2 level is an important milestone. It’s often considered the point where you can comfortably function in the language, hold conversations, consume native content, and begin using the language in real-world situations.

So how did I get there?

Let’s look back at the journey.

Where I Started

About a year ago, I made the decision that I wanted to take my German seriously.

At the time, I was probably somewhere between an A2 and B1 level. I could understand some German, read simple texts, and hold basic conversations, but I certainly didn’t feel confident saying that I could actually speak the language.

Like many language learners, I didn’t really have a clear plan.

I was using Duolingo here and there. I was reading some German language-learning books. I was studying a little grammar. But nothing felt particularly effective or sustainable.

Then I discovered LingQ.

The Tool That Changed Everything

LingQ became my primary learning platform.

Now, before going any further, I want to make something clear: I do not consider myself fluent in German.

I passed the B2 exam, but I’m still learning every day. I still make mistakes. I still struggle with grammar, cases, and word order.

However, LingQ introduced me to the concept of comprehensible input, and that completely changed my approach to language learning.

Every day I would read. My goal was at least 1,000 words of reading each day which the app would keep track for me.

Sometimes I would listen to podcasts. Sometimes I would watch videos. But the majority of my time was spent reading because I felt that reading was the fastest way for me to build vocabulary.

When I first started using LingQ consistently, I had roughly 1,500 known words.

By the time I took the B2 exam, that number had grown to around 8,000 known words.

I wasn’t memorizing vocabulary lists.

I wasn’t drilling flashcards for hours.

I was simply reading content that interested me and gradually increasing the difficulty over time.

Day after day.

Month after month.

The words started sticking naturally.

The Speaking Problem

About six months before the exam, I realized something important.

My reading ability was improving significantly, but my speaking ability wasn’t keeping pace.

I could understand far more German than I could actually produce.

So I started working with language tutors and conversation partners on italki.

Leading up to the exam, I averaged about 2-3 lessons per month and completed roughly 14–16 lessons in total.

That may not sound like much, but it was enough to get regular speaking practice and become more comfortable expressing myself.

The biggest breakthrough, however, came from something surprisingly simple.

Reading Out Loud

I started reading everything out loud.

This was a game changer.

At first, I was slow and awkward.

But over time, I became faster and more natural.

I got used to hearing myself speak German.

I got used to producing German sounds.

I got used to forming German sentences.

Things that once felt difficult slowly became muscle memory.

Simple phrases like:

  • Es weiß ich nicht.
  • Hallo, mein Name ist Joe.
  • Ich komme aus den USA.
  • Heute ist ein guter Tag.
  • Das Wetter ist gut.

These kinds of phrases became automatic.

The more I read aloud, the less intimidating speaking became.

I wasn’t just learning German anymore.

I was actively using German.

What About Grammar?

This is probably the part that surprises people.

I didn’t spend very much time studying grammar.

Now, that’s not because grammar isn’t important.

I had already taken German courses in college, so I had a foundation. I understood many of the basic concepts already.

I did review grammar occasionally.

I probably completed around ten dedicated grammar study sessions, maybe thirty minutes each.

That’s it.

Most of my improvement came from exposure.

Seeing the same structures over and over again.

Reading thousands of sentences.

Listening to native speakers.

Practicing speaking.

Over time, patterns started to feel natural.

That doesn’t mean I mastered grammar.

Far from it.

I still struggle with German word order.

I still make mistakes with cases.

And let’s be honest: German has four cases and three grammatical genders. Those challenges don’t magically disappear.

But I reached a point where I could communicate effectively despite those imperfections.

And for the Goethe B2 exam, that was enough.

Final Thoughts

If there’s one lesson I learned from this journey, it’s that consistency beats intensity.

I didn’t study eight hours every day.

I didn’t memorize giant grammar charts.

I didn’t have some secret method.

Instead, I spent a year reading, listening, speaking occasionally, and slowly increasing my exposure to German.

Most importantly, I kept showing up.

Day after day.

And eventually, those small efforts added up to a passing score on the Goethe B2 exam.

In the next post, I’ll break down my actual exam scores, which sections surprised me, and what I would do differently if I had to prepare for the B2 exam again.

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