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Negotiating salary in Germany

Level B2 Author: Created by community

Practice polite, confident salary negotiation phrases tailored for a German work context.

What you’ll practice

You will practice stating expectations, asking about compensation bands, and responding to counteroffers respectfully.

Questions

  • What salary range are you targeting, and why?
  • What’s your current compensation, and are you comfortable sharing it?
  • How would you respond to an offer below your expectations?
  • What non-salary benefits matter most to you?

Phrases and vocabulary

Useful phrases

  • “Based on my experience and the responsibilities, I’m aiming for…”
  • “Is there a compensation band for this role?”
  • “If we can’t reach that number, could we discuss…”

Who this is for

  • Learners who need practical spoken English for real situations.
  • Professionals preparing for interviews, meetings, relocation, or networking.
  • Users who want structured prompts before practicing in Eli.

Common mistakes and better alternatives

  • Mistake: “I am agree.” Better: “I agree.”
  • Mistake: “Can you explain me?” Better: “Can you explain it to me?”
  • Mistake: Long, unfocused answers. Better: 2-4 concise sentences with one example.

Ready-to-use phrases by intent

Starting

  • “Let me give you a quick context first.”
  • “From my experience, the key point is…”

Clarifying

  • “Could you clarify what success looks like in this case?”
  • “Do I understand correctly that the priority is…?”

Handling disagreement politely

  • “I see your point. I would suggest an alternative approach…”
  • “That makes sense, and I would add one risk to consider…”

Mini role-play

A: “Can you briefly explain your approach?” B: “Sure. First, I define the goal and constraints. Then I propose 1-2 options and compare trade-offs.” A: “How do you decide between options?” B: “I use impact, effort, and risk, then align with stakeholders.”

Sample answers

Short answer (A2-B1)

“I usually start with the goal. Then I explain steps and risks. I keep my answer short and clear.”

Strong answer (B1-B2)

“I start by clarifying the expected outcome and constraints. Then I present options with trade-offs, recommend one path, and explain how I would validate it with metrics or feedback.”

FAQ

How long should my answer be?

Aim for 30-60 seconds for a first answer, then expand only if asked.

How many phrases should I memorize?

Start with 10-15 high-frequency phrases and reuse them in multiple scenarios.

How to practice with Eli effectively?

Record 3 takes: baseline, improved structure, and final confident version.

Practice

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