100,000 in German
100,000 in Other Languages
About 100,000 in German
100,000 translates to hunderttausend.
100,000 divides evenly by two. 100,000 is a number worth knowing in German — it appears in real-world contexts like ages, distances, prices, and time expressions.
Building fluency with numbers like 100,000 in German pays dividends quickly. Numbers are among the first things you use in a new language — for shopping, directions, introductions, and understanding announcements.
Learning Numbers in German
What makes German numbers challenging
The ones-before-tens inversion means hearing "sechsundfünfzig" (56) and needing to not write 65 — the first digit you hear is actually the last digit of the number. Long compound numbers written as single words (dreihundertsechsundfünfzig = 356) can look intimidating on paper. In phone contexts, the "zwei" vs "drei" confusion led to the convention of saying "zwo" for 2, which learners might not expect. German area codes vary from 2 to 5 digits, making number structure unpredictable.
Tips for learning German numbers
Train yourself to hold the first digit you hear and wait for the tens place. Write numbers as you hear them: jot the ones digit, leave a space, then fill in the tens when you hear it. Learn "zwo" as the phone-standard for 2 early on. Practice with German radio or podcast ads that include phone numbers. German number words are long but completely regular — once you know the pattern, even large numbers are just combination.