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100+ Free Català A1 Practice Questions

Pass your Certificat de Llengua Catalana A1 (Generalitat de Catalunya) exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

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Question 1
Score: 0/0

A label on a product reads: 'Data de caducitat: 15 de juny de 2026.' What does 'data de caducitat' mean?

A
B
C
D
to track
2026 Statistics

Key Facts: Català A1 Exam

The Catalan A1 certificate from the Generalitat de Catalunya tests very basic reading and listening comprehension at CEFR A1 level. Candidates need 65/100 to pass. The exam covers everyday vocabulary — greetings, signs, menus, numbers, and simple dialogues — through multiple-choice and matching exercises in both written and oral sections.

Sample Català A1 Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your Català A1 exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1A sign on a shop door reads: 'OBERT'. What does this mean? (obert = ?)
A.Closed
B.Open
C.Push
D.Pull
Explanation: 'Obert' means 'open' in Catalan. Its antonym is 'tancat' (closed). These are among the most basic vocabulary items seen on shop doors throughout Catalonia.
2You see the greeting 'BON DIA' on a café banner. When is this greeting used?
A.In the evening
B.At night
C.In the morning
D.When saying goodbye forever
Explanation: 'Bon dia' means 'good morning' in Catalan, used from early morning until roughly midday. 'Bona tarda' is used in the afternoon and 'bona nit' at night.
3A menu lists: 'Cafè, Llet, Suc de taronja, Aigua'. Which item is a hot drink made from beans?
A.Llet
B.Suc de taronja
C.Cafè
D.Aigua
Explanation: 'Cafè' means 'coffee' in Catalan, a hot drink made from roasted coffee beans. 'Llet' is milk, 'suc de taronja' is orange juice, and 'aigua' is water.
4A notice reads: 'TANCAT PER VACANCES. Tornem el dilluns.' What day do they return?
A.Tuesday
B.Wednesday
C.Monday
D.Friday
Explanation: 'Dilluns' is Monday in Catalan. The days of the week in Catalan are: dilluns (Monday), dimarts (Tuesday), dimecres (Wednesday), dijous (Thursday), divendres (Friday), dissabte (Saturday), diumenge (Sunday).
5A sign says: 'Els lavabos són a la primera planta.' Where are the toilets?
A.In the basement
B.On the ground floor
C.On the first floor
D.On the second floor
Explanation: 'Primera planta' means 'first floor' in Catalan. 'Els lavabos' means 'the toilets'. In Catalan (following European convention), the ground floor is 'planta baixa' and the floor above it is 'primera planta'.
6Read this short text: 'La Maria té vint anys i viu a Barcelona.' How old is Maria?
A.Twelve
B.Thirty
C.Twenty
D.Two
Explanation: 'Vint' means 'twenty' in Catalan. The sentence reads: 'Maria is twenty years old and lives in Barcelona.' Numbers to learn: deu (10), vint (20), trenta (30), quaranta (40), cinquanta (50).
7A short text reads: 'El gat és negre i petit.' What colour is the cat?
A.White
B.Big
C.Black
D.Brown
Explanation: 'Negre' means 'black' in Catalan. 'Petit' means 'small'. Common colours in Catalan: negre (black), blanc (white), vermell (red), blau (blue), groc (yellow), verd (green).
8A pharmacy sign reads: 'Obert de 9h a 14h i de 16h a 20h'. At 15:00, is the pharmacy open?
A.Yes, it is open all day
B.Yes, from 14h to 16h
C.No, it is closed between 14h and 16h
D.The sign does not give opening hours
Explanation: The pharmacy is open 9:00–14:00 and 16:00–20:00. At 15:00 (3 pm), it falls in the break between 14h and 16h, so it is closed. This midday break is common in Catalonia.
9Which article is correct for the noun 'taula' (table)? Choose the correct definite article.
A.El taula
B.La taula
C.Les taula
D.Els taula
Explanation: 'Taula' (table) is a feminine noun in Catalan, so it takes the feminine definite article 'la'. The four Catalan definite articles are: el (masc. sing.), la (fem. sing.), els (masc. pl.), les (fem. pl.).
10Which article is correct? 'Tinc ___ gos gran.' (I have a big dog.)
A.un
B.una
C.el
D.la
Explanation: 'Gos' (dog) is a masculine noun in Catalan. The indefinite article for masculine singular nouns is 'un'. 'Una' is used with feminine nouns (e.g., 'una gata' — a female cat).

About the Català A1 Exam

The Certificat de Llengua Catalana A1 is the entry-level official Catalan language proficiency certificate issued by the Generalitat de Catalunya. It corresponds to CEFR level A1 (beginner) and certifies that a candidate can understand very basic Catalan in everyday survival contexts — greetings, simple instructions, short notices, and very common phrases. The exam consists of a written comprehension test and an oral comprehension test with multiple-choice and matching exercises. A minimum of 65 points out of 100 is required to pass and receive the official certificate.

Assessment

Written comprehension (comprensió escrita) and oral comprehension (comprensió oral) sections, both compulsory, scored out of 100 points total

Time Limit

Written test approximately 45–60 minutes; oral test administered separately in shifts on the same day or following Saturdays

Passing Score

Minimum 65 out of 100 to receive 'Apte' (Pass)

Exam Fee

Fee set by the Generalitat de Catalunya; check official portal for current amount (Generalitat de Catalunya — Departament de Cultura)

Català A1 Exam Content Outline

50%

Oral Comprehension (Comprensió Oral)

Three listening exercises: matching dialogues to everyday contexts; understanding simple dialogues and vocabulary involving greetings, requests and basic exchanges; understanding short announcements, notices and voicemail messages. Speech is slow, clear and may be repeated.

50%

Written Comprehension (Comprensió Escrita)

Reading very short and simple Catalan texts including signs, shop notices, menus, form fields, short messages and simple public notices. Items test main idea, key detail, vocabulary in context and basic sentence comprehension at CEFR A1 level.

How to Pass the Català A1 Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: Minimum 65 out of 100 to receive 'Apte' (Pass)
  • Assessment: Written comprehension (comprensió escrita) and oral comprehension (comprensió oral) sections, both compulsory, scored out of 100 points total
  • Time limit: Written test approximately 45–60 minutes; oral test administered separately in shifts on the same day or following Saturdays
  • Exam fee: Fee set by the Generalitat de Catalunya; check official portal for current amount

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

Català A1 Study Tips from Top Performers

1Learn the Catalan greetings and polite phrases first: bon dia, bona tarda, bona nit, gràcies, moltes gràcies, de res, si us plau — these appear in almost every A1 exam exercise.
2Memorise all seven days of the week (dilluns through diumenge) and twelve months (gener through desembre); timetable and schedule questions depend entirely on this vocabulary.
3Practise counting to 100 in Catalan — exam exercises regularly include prices, ages, times and phone numbers read aloud or written on signs.
4Learn the four definite articles (el, la, els, les) and two indefinite articles (un, una) and practise matching them to common nouns; article-noun agreement is tested in written comprehension.
5Study the present tense of the four most important Catalan verbs: ser (to be), estar (to be — state), tenir (to have) and anar (to go). These appear in every short reading text and dialogue.
6For the oral comprehension section, train your ear on very slow, clear Catalan speech — try beginner podcast episodes or CPNL online materials. Focus on recognising individual words rather than full sentences at A1 level.
7When reading signs and notices in the exam, look for cognates (words similar to Spanish, French or Italian) as well as key function words like no (not), i (and), o (or), però (but) and a (at/to) to understand the overall meaning.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Certificat de Llengua Catalana A1?

The Certificat de Llengua Catalana A1 is the entry-level official Catalan language certificate issued by the Generalitat de Catalunya (the Autonomous Government of Catalonia). It corresponds to CEFR level A1 (beginner) and certifies that the holder can understand and use very basic Catalan expressions related to everyday survival needs — greetings, simple notices, numbers, and very common phrases. It is administered by the Departament de Cultura through its language policy body.

What does the A1 Catalan exam test?

The A1 exam tests oral comprehension and written comprehension at CEFR A1 level. The oral section has three exercises: matching short dialogues to contexts, understanding simple everyday conversations, and understanding short announcements or voicemail messages. The written section tests reading of very short, simple texts such as signs, menus, short messages, form fields and notices. Both sections use multiple-choice and matching formats.

What is the passing score for the Catalan A1 exam?

Candidates need a minimum of 65 out of 100 points to receive the rating 'Apte' (Pass). Candidates who score below 65 receive 'No apte' (Fail) and may register for a subsequent exam call. Both the written and oral sections must be taken; scores are combined for the total.

Who can take the Catalan A1 exam?

The A1 exam is open to anyone aged 16 or over who wants to obtain an official Catalan language certificate at the beginner level. There are no formal prerequisite qualifications, but candidates should have completed a basic introductory Catalan course or equivalent self-study covering CEFR A1 content. Registration is done through the official Generalitat de Catalunya portal.

How is the Catalan A1 different from the A2 certificate?

The A1 is the most basic level, testing survival-level comprehension of very simple and short Catalan texts and conversations. The A2 (Certificat de Llengua Catalana A2) tests a slightly wider range of everyday topics, more varied texts, and basic conversational interaction. Both are official Generalitat de Catalunya certificates issued by the same body, but A2 requires a higher level of Catalan proficiency.

Where can I find official sample exams and study materials for the Catalan A1?

Official information, exam structure details and sample materials are available at llengua.gencat.cat — the Generalitat de Catalunya's language policy website. The Consorci per a la Normalització Lingüística (CPNL) also offers Catalan courses and preparatory resources aligned with the A1 level. The exam registration process is handled through tramits.gencat.cat.