by Jakob Straub
Updated on November 7, 2022
‘Mögen’ as a modal verb in German expresses a wish or desire to do something. The closest equivalent in English is “to like”. We’ll go over the conjugation of ‘mögen’ as well as the modal use and the difference between ‘mögen’ and ‘möchte’.
‘Mögen’ in German is an irregular verb with the forms “mag”, “mochte” and “gemocht”. It uses ‘haben’ as an auxiliary verb, as in “ihr habt gemocht” (you have liked). ‘Mögen’ uses active flection as a modal verb, while the full verb can have a passive voice.
PERSON | PRESENT | PAST | PERFECT |
1st sing. | ich mag | ich mochte | ich habe gemocht |
2nd sing. | du magst | du mochtest | du hast gemocht |
3rd sing. | er/sie/es mag | er/sie/es mochte | er/sie/es hat gemocht |
1st pl. | wir mögen | wir mochten | wir haben gemocht |
2nd. pl. | ihr mögt | ihr mochtet | ihr habt gemocht |
3rd. pl | sie mögen | sie mochten | sie haben gemocht |
PERSON | PAST PERFECT | FUTURE | FUTURE PERFECT |
1st sing. | ich hatte gemocht | ich werde mögen | ich werde gemocht haben |
2nd sing. | du hattest gemocht | du wirst mögen | du wirst gemocht haben |
3rd sing. | er/sie/es hatte gemocht | er/sie/es wird mögen | er/sie/es wird gemocht haben |
1st pl. | wir hatten gemocht | wir werden mögen | wir werden gemocht haben |
2nd. pl. | ihr hattet gemocht | ihr werdet mögen | ihr werdet gemocht haben |
3rd. pl | sie hatten gemocht | sie werden mögen | sie werden gemocht haben |
The best instagram accounts for learning German
PERSON | PRESENT SUBJ. | PAST SUBJ. | PERFECT SUBJ. |
1st sing. | ich möge | ich möchte | ich habe gemocht |
2nd sing. | du mögest | du möchtest | du habest gemocht |
3rd sing. | er/sie/es möge | er/sie/es möchte | er/sie/es habe gemocht |
1st pl. | wir mögen | wir möchten | wir haben gemocht |
2nd. pl. | ihr möget | ihr möchtet | ihr habet gemocht |
3rd. pl | sie mögen | sie möchten | sie haben gemocht |
PERSON | PAST PERFECT SUBJ. | FUTURE SUBJ. | FUTURE PERFECT SUBJ. |
1st sing. | ich hätte gemocht | ich würde mögen | ich würde gemocht haben |
2nd sing. | du hättest gemocht | du würdest mögen | du würdest gemocht haben |
3rd sing. | er/sie/es hätte gemocht | er/sie/es würde mögen | er/sie/es würde gemocht haben |
1st pl. | wir hätten gemocht | wir würden mögen | wir würden gemocht haben |
2nd. pl. | ihr hättet gemocht | ihr würdet mögen | ihr würdet gemocht haben |
3rd. pl | sie hätten gemocht | sie würden mögen | sie würden gemocht haben |
10 ways that German and English are similar
“Mögen” is the infinitive in the present tense whereas “gemocht haben” is the perfect infinitive. The infinitives with ‘to’ are “zu mögen” and “gemocht zu haben”. The participles are “mögend” and “gemocht”.
‘Mögen’ has no imperative per se. However, you can use the present tense either as a question or a statement to tell someone to do something. Note that the subjunctive with ‘möchte’ is the more polite form to do so:
“Magst/möchtest du das bitte tun?” = Would you please do that?
“Du magst/möchtest das bitte tun.” = You should do that, please.
“Mag/möchte er/sie/es das bitte tun?” = Would he/she/it please do that?
“Er/sie/es mag/möchte das bitte tun.” = He/she/it should do that, please.
“Mögt/möchtet ihr das bitte tun?” = Would you please do that?
“Ihr mögt/möchtet das bitte tun.” = You should do that, please.
“Mögen/möchten sie das bitte tun?” = Would they please do that?
“Sie mögen/möchten das bitte tun.” = They should do that, please.
9 things you need to understand about German business culture
You can use ‘mögen with the infinitive of a second verb to express that you like doing something. As in English, this has the meaning that you generally enjoy doing it:
However, you can use ‘mögen’ in the same way to express a wish, though you’d usually add a marker such as “jetzt”, “gleich”, “später” or “heute” to show when exactly you’d like to do something:
Note that you’d more commonly use the subjunctive form ‘möchte’ to express a wish or desire.
Keep in mind that ‘möchte’ is a subjunctive form of ‘mögen’. The main difference between the two is that you can use ‘mögen’ as a full verb also, while ‘möchte’ only has modal use. For expressing a wish, ‘möchte’ is the weakest form to express a wish:
In spoken German, you’ll hear ‘möchte’ being used almost like a full verb. That is because in many situations, you can drop the second verb in modal usage without losing the meaning, according to context. However, this is colloquial:
The best websites to take an online German class
When you use ‘mögen’ as a full verb, its common use is to state that you like something or someone in general:
You can also form concessionary clauses with mögen, though this can appear stilted and you can convey the same meaning with conditional clauses:
Lastly, you can use ‘mögen’ for indirect speech to report a polite request:
Want to learn more about German modals? Here’s how to use and conjugate modal verbs in German!