You see “B2 required” on a job posting, or an app promises to take you “to B1.” But what do those codes actually mean? The CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) is the international standard for describing language ability. Created by the Council of Europe, it splits proficiency into six levels, from A1 (beginner) to C2 (mastery).
In this guide, you will find the CEFR levels explained in plain language: what you can actually do at each one, how many study hours each takes, how exams and apps map to the scale, and free ways to test yourself.
CEFR levels explained: how the scale works
The official CEFR descriptors define each level through “can-do” statements, not grammar checklists. In other words, your level is what you can do in real situations: order food, follow a meeting, write a complaint email. The framework covers listening, reading, speaking, and writing, and it applies to any language, not just European ones.
The six levels group into three bands: Basic User (A1, A2), Independent User (B1, B2), and Proficient User (C1, C2). Here is the full scale at a glance.
| Level | Band | What you can do | Cumulative study hours* |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | Basic | Introduce yourself, handle slow, simple exchanges | 90-100 |
| A2 | Basic | Manage routine tasks: shopping, directions, small talk | 180-200 |
| B1 | Independent | Travel comfortably, hold everyday conversations | 350-400 |
| B2 | Independent | Work or study in the language, debate familiar topics | 500-600 |
| C1 | Proficient | Speak fluently in professional and academic settings | 700-800 |
| C2 | Proficient | Understand virtually everything, near-native precision | 1,000-1,200 |
*Guided learning hours for English, based on Cambridge English estimates. Harder language pairings take longer (see the hours section below).
A1: you can survive, slowly
At A1, you can introduce yourself, say where you are from, and ask simple personal questions. Conversations work only if the other person speaks slowly and helps you along.
Concretely, an A1 learner can order a coffee, read a simple menu, and fill in a hotel form. However, a phone call or a fast native conversation is still out of reach. Most learners reach A1 in two to three months of regular study.
A2: you can handle daily routines
At A2, you can talk about your family, your job, and your daily life in short sentences. You start using past and future tenses, so you can describe last weekend or next week’s plans.
In real life, that means asking for directions and understanding the answer, catching the gist of a train announcement, or writing a short message to a friend. Nevertheless, unfamiliar topics still push you back into gestures and dictionary lookups.
B1: you become independent
B1 is the threshold level, and it feels like a breakthrough. You can handle most situations that come up while travelling: booking a room, seeing a doctor, chatting with a host. You can also explain opinions and describe experiences, even if you still search for words.
For example, a B1 learner can follow the plot of a series with subtitles, read straightforward news articles, and hold a 15-minute conversation about familiar topics. Many learners also hit their first serious stall around here; our guide on breaking a language learning plateau covers how to push through it.
B2: you can work and study in the language
B2 is what most people mean by “fluent enough.” You can interact with native speakers spontaneously, without either side straining. Moreover, you can follow complex arguments, defend a viewpoint in a discussion, and write clear, detailed text.
In practice, B2 opens doors. Most European universities accept B2 for bachelor’s programmes, and many employers set it as their minimum for working in the language. You can watch films in standard dialect, read contemporary novels with some effort, and handle meetings on familiar subjects.
C1: you use the language effectively
At C1, you express yourself fluently without visibly searching for words. You catch implied meaning, jokes, and register shifts. Consequently, you can write a well-structured report, give a presentation, or study for a degree without the language itself being the obstacle.
C1 is the common requirement for demanding contexts: medicine, law, postgraduate study, or teaching. The gap between B2 and C1 is mostly nuance and stamina, not new grammar.
C2: mastery, not native
C2 means you understand virtually everything you hear or read. You summarise arguments from multiple sources and express fine shades of meaning with precision. Occasional slips remain, but they resemble those of an educated native speaker.
Importantly, C2 does not mean “native.” It is an exam standard for near-perfect control, and few learners genuinely need it. For most goals, including citizenship, work, and study, B2 or C1 is the practical target.
How many hours does each level take?
The hours in the table above assume English and a motivated adult learner. The distance between your native language and your target language changes everything. The US Foreign Service Institute (FSI language rankings) groups languages by difficulty for English speakers. Category I languages like Spanish or French take roughly 600-750 class hours to reach professional working proficiency, around B2/C1. Category IV languages like Japanese, Arabic, or Mandarin take around 2,200 hours for the same result.
Two takeaways follow. First, each level takes roughly twice as long as the one before it. Second, “how long to learn a language” depends more on the language and your weekly hours than on any method. We break down realistic timelines in our guide on how long it takes to learn a language.
How official exams map to CEFR levels
Employers and universities rarely accept “I’m B2” on your word. Instead, they ask for an exam certificate. Here are the main equivalences, as of July 2026.
| Language | A2 | B1 | B2 | C1 | C2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English (Cambridge) | KET | PET | FCE | CAE | CPE |
| English (IELTS, approx.) | 3.5 | 4.0-5.0 | 5.5-6.5 | 7.0-8.0 | 8.5-9.0 |
| English (Duolingo English Test, approx.) | 60-85 | 85-100 | 105-125 | 130-150 | 155-160 |
| French | DELF A2 | DELF B1 | DELF B2 | DALF C1 | DALF C2 |
| German | Goethe A2 | Goethe B1 | Goethe B2 | Goethe C1 | Goethe C2 |
| Spanish | DELE A2 | DELE B1 | DELE B2 | DELE C1 | DELE C2 |
Score bands for IELTS and the Duolingo English Test are approximate; institutions publish their own cut-offs, so always check the requirement you are targeting. Official exams typically cost between $100 and $250 per sitting.
How far do apps actually take you?
App marketing and CEFR reality do not always match. Here is an honest map of where popular tools sit on the scale, based on their published course content as of July 2026.
- Duolingo: its biggest courses (Spanish, French) now cover material up to B2, but most other courses stop around A2-B1. Fine for A1-A2 foundations.
- Babbel: structured courses aligned to CEFR, mostly A1 to B2 depending on the language. Strong for A2-B1 grammar.
- Busuu: CEFR-aligned paths from A1 to B2, with C1 content for English. It also issues level completion certificates.
- LingQ: no fixed ceiling, because you learn from native content. Best from B1 upward, when apps with fixed courses run out.
- Anki: level-agnostic. Spaced repetition supports vocabulary growth at every stage but teaches no skills on its own.
The pattern is clear. Apps carry you efficiently through A1 to B1. Beyond that, however, progress comes from native content, real conversation, and feedback. Tutoring platforms like iTalki cover the speaking practice that B2 and C1 demand. Our guide on choosing a language learning app goes deeper on matching tools to your level.
How to test your CEFR level for free
You do not need to pay for an official exam just to know where you stand. Three free options work well:
- EF SET: a free 50-minute English test that reports a CEFR level for reading and listening. The most rigorous free option, and the score is shareable on LinkedIn.
- Publisher placement tests: Cambridge English offers a free online test that suggests a level. Similarly, the official DELF, Goethe, and Cervantes sites publish sample papers for self-assessment.
- App placement tests: Duolingo, Babbel, and Busuu all place you on their scale at signup. Treat these as rough estimates; they mostly test reading and recognition.
One warning applies to every self-test: they measure receptive skills, not speaking. Most learners who self-assess at B2 perform at B1 in live conversation. Therefore, if the level matters for a job or visa, book a mock speaking session with a tutor before the real exam.
The bottom line
CEFR levels describe what you can do, not what grammar you have memorised. A1 and A2 get you through daily routines, B1 makes you independent, B2 lets you work and study in the language, and C1-C2 add professional polish. For most real-world goals, B2 is the milestone worth aiming at.
Our recommendation: take the free EF SET (or a sample paper for your language) this week, set the next level up as your target, and match your tools to that gap. To find the right resource for your level, browse our directory of language learning tools.