Past tense: Past Perfect / Plusquamperfekt

The Plusquamperfekt (Past Perfect) is a German past tense used to describe an action that happened before another action in the past.

It is essentially the “past before the past”.

How the Plusquamperfekt Is Formed

The Plusquamperfekt is formed with:

  • the Präteritum of “haben” or “sein”
  • plus the past participle of the main verb

Formation with “haben”

PronounExample
ichhatte gemacht
duhattest gemacht
er/sie/eshatte gemacht
wirhatten gemacht
ihrhattet gemacht
sie/Siehatten gemacht

Formation with “sein”

PronounExample
ichwar gegangen
duwarst gegangen
er/sie/eswar gegangen
wirwaren gegangen
ihrwart gegangen
sie/Siewaren gegangen

When to Use the Plusquamperfekt

The Plusquamperfekt is used when:

  • two events happened in the past
  • and one happened earlier than the other

Example:

→ „Ich hatte gegessen, bevor er gekommen ist.“
(“I had eaten before he arrived.”)

The eating happened first.
The arriving happened later.

More Examples

→ „Sie war schon gegangen, als ich angekommen bin.“
(“She had already left when I arrived.”)

→ „Wir hatten den Film gesehen, bevor wir das Buch gelesen haben.“
(“We had seen the movie before we read the book.”)

→ „Er hatte gearbeitet, bevor er nach Hause gegangen ist.“
(“He had worked before he went home.”)

Important Notes

The Plusquamperfekt is mainly used:

  • in storytelling
  • in written German
  • when describing sequences of past events

In everyday spoken German, it is less common than the Perfekt and Präteritum, but still very important for expressing chronological order clearly.