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How to Learn a Language Before You Move Abroad (2026 Guide)

By the SettleBuddy editorial teamUpdated 18 July 202615 min read

Moving to a new country is the single strongest reason anyone ever learns a language — and also the one with a hard deadline. This guide lays out a realistic, situation-first system for going from zero to functional in the months before you land, so day one doesn't happen in silence.

Quick answer

To learn a language before moving abroad, aim for CEFR A2 (a survival level) before you land — realistically 3–6 months of short daily practice. Study situation-first: address registration, housing, banking, the pharmacy and doctor, and transport, in that order — not tourist phrases. Reach a functional B1 level over 6–12 months. Speak out loud from week one, learn whole phrases rather than word lists, and rehearse the exact scenarios your first month abroad will create.

In this guide
  1. Why "moving" language is different
  2. How long it actually takes
  3. The four skills — and which to prioritise
  4. What to learn first (and what to skip)
  5. A month-by-month plan
  6. Building a daily routine that survives real life
  7. Tools, resources and how to combine them
  8. Mistakes that waste your months
  9. FAQ

Why learning a language to move is different

Learning a language to move abroad is different from learning one for a holiday because you have a deadline, a fixed list of official appointments, and real consequences for not understanding. That single fact should reshape your whole approach.

Most language products are built for holidays. They teach you to order a coffee, ask for the beach, and count to ten — pleasant, low-stakes, optional. Relocation is the opposite. You have a deadline, a list of bureaucratic appointments, and situations where not understanding has real cost: a rejected form, a lease you didn't fully read, a prescription you got wrong.

That changes the whole strategy. When you're moving, you don't need to discuss the weather — you need to survive the town hall, the landlord, the bank and the doctor, in that order. The right preparation is situation-first: you work backwards from the moments your first month will actually throw at you and learn the language those moments require.

The goal before you move isn't fluency. It's functional independence: handling your own bureaucracy, housing and health without needing someone to translate for you.

How long it actually takes

For a motivated adult with focused daily practice, a survival level (A2) takes 3–6 months and a functional, independent level (B1) takes 6–12 months. Here is the full CEFR breakdown so you can set a realistic target for your move date.

LevelTime (daily practice)What you can do
A14–8 weeksGreetings, numbers, filling in a form, "I don't understand, more slowly please."
A23–6 monthsPredictable transactions: shops, transport, a simple appointment.
B16–12 monthsMost everyday situations, follow the gist, hold a slow conversation. The bar for many residence permits.
B2+1–2 yearsWork, nuance, and the argument with your landlord you actually win.

Two things stretch or shrink these numbers dramatically. First, language distance: if you already speak a related language, expect to move much faster. Second, hours per day: 20 focused minutes daily beats a three-hour cram once a week, because language lives in frequency, not marathons. For which level different countries require, see our guide on the language level you actually need to immigrate.

The four skills — and which to prioritise

A language is really four skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing. For a move, prioritise listening and speaking — they are what fail you first at a real counter — then reading, then writing. Here's why the order matters and how much of each to do.

What to learn first (and what to skip)

With a deadline, prioritisation is the entire game. Front-load the vocabulary and phrases tied to your first weeks, and defer everything else.

Learn first

Safe to defer

A month-by-month plan (for a 3–6 month runway)

Adapt the pace to your timeline, but keep the order: foundations, then bureaucracy, then housing and health, then expansion.

Month 1 — foundations + survival kit

Learn the sound system and the 300 or so highest-frequency words. Memorise a fixed set of "control phrases" — asking to repeat, to slow down, to spell, to write it down. These buy you time in every real conversation. Do a little every single day; consistency now compounds later.

Month 2 — the bureaucracy block

Shift to scenario practice: the registration office, the bank, the mobile shop. Practise them as full dialogues, out loud, until they're automatic. This is where a tool built around real relocation scenarios — like Language Lab, which teaches through the exact moments a move throws at you — saves weeks over generic courses.

Month 3 — housing, health + speaking under pressure

Run the apartment-viewing and doctor's-visit scenarios. Start speaking with a real person weekly — a tutor or exchange partner — because comprehension collapses the first time a stranger talks at natural speed, and you want that shock to happen before you land.

Months 4–6 (if you have them) — expand + drill listening

Widen your vocabulary, add a past and future tense properly, and drown yourself in listening. This is also the window to sit a recognised exam if your visa route needs a certificate — book early, as dates fill months ahead.

Skip the guesswork on scenarios

Language Lab teaches 50 languages through real relocation situations — the doctor, the landlord, the government counter — so you practise the exact conversations before they happen for real.

Start with Language Lab →

Building a daily routine that survives real life

The best routine is the one you'll actually keep, so make it small, fixed and tied to something you already do every day. Twenty minutes daily beats two hours on Sunday because languages consolidate through repetition and sleep, not cramming. Here's a routine that survives a busy move:

  1. Anchor it. Attach practice to an existing habit — morning coffee, the commute, brushing your teeth. The habit triggers the practice.
  2. Split it. 10 minutes of new material (a scenario, some phrases) plus 10 minutes of listening you enjoy. Input plus output.
  3. Protect a weekly speaking slot. One live conversation a week is worth more than any amount of tapping.
  4. Miss a day gracefully. A missed day is normal; two in a row is the danger. The goal is a streak of weeks, not a perfect chain.

Tools, resources and how to combine them

No single tool does everything, so combine three types: a scenario/speaking app for the situations you'll face, a listening source for comprehension, and a human for feedback. Used together they cover every skill.

Mistakes that waste your precious months

FAQ

How long does it take to learn a language before moving abroad?

For a survival level (A2), most focused learners need 3–6 months. For a functional, conversational level (B1), plan on 6–12 months. Closely related languages and more daily hours shorten this considerably.

What should I learn first?

The situations of your first weeks: address registration, renting, banking, the pharmacy and doctor, transport, and introducing yourself. Learn those scenarios before general grammar.

Can I learn a language in 3 months?

To a survival A2 level, yes, with focused daily practice. That's enough to handle predictable everyday transactions and make your first weeks manageable — full fluency takes longer.

Can I just learn the language after I arrive?

You'll keep learning either way — but arriving at zero means your hardest, highest-stakes appointments happen while you understand nothing. Getting to A2 first turns those weeks from a crisis into a manageable challenge.

Which app is best for learning a language to move abroad?

One built around real relocation scenarios rather than tourism. We compare the options in language apps for moving abroad vs. vacation. Language Lab is built specifically for movers, across 50 languages.

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