German Two-Way Prepositions: Accusative or Dative?
June 9, 2026 • GermanNow • 6 minute read
Table of Contents
- What is a two-way preposition?
- The nine two-way prepositions
- The one rule: wohin? (accusative) vs. wo? (dative)
- It’s about crossing a boundary, not movement
- The verb pairs that give it away
- legen / liegen
- stellen / stehen
- setzen / sitzen
- Spotting the case in the article endings
- Contractions: ins, im, ans, am
- Tricky cases
- Your quick cheat sheet
You know the four German cases, you’ve memorized which prepositions are always accusative and which are always dative — and then a word like in or auf shows up and refuses to pick a side. Suddenly you’re frozen mid-sentence, guessing whether the table is auf dem Tisch or auf den Tisch. Good news: there is exactly one test that resolves every single case, and once it clicks you’ll never guess again.
These nine shape-shifters are the Wechselpräpositionen (“switching prepositions”), and they’re among the most common words in the whole language. Our German cases guide covers what the four cases are and which prepositions are locked to one case. This article fills the gap it leaves open: after a two-way preposition, how do you choose?
What is a two-way preposition?
Most German prepositions are fixed. durch, für, gegen, ohne, and um always take the accusative; aus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, and zu always take the dative. You memorize the list and move on.
The two-way prepositions are different: they govern the accusative or the dative, and the case carries meaning. Pick the wrong one and you don’t make a grammar error so much as say something you didn’t mean — into the school versus inside the school. That’s why they deserve their own rule.
The nine two-way prepositions
There are exactly nine. Learn the set and you’ve drawn a clean boundary around the whole problem.
| German | English | Example |
|---|---|---|
| an | on (vertical), at, to | an der Wand — on the wall |
| auf | on (horizontal), onto | auf dem Tisch — on the table |
| hinter | behind | hinter dem Haus — behind the house |
| in | in, into | in der Schule — in school |
| neben | next to, beside | neben dem Bett — next to the bed |
| über | over, above, across | über dem Sofa — above the sofa |
| unter | under, below, among | unter dem Tisch — under the table |
| vor | in front of, before | vor dem Kino — in front of the cinema |
| zwischen | between | zwischen den Stühlen — between the chairs |
A handy mnemonic is the cat-and-box image: every word here describes where a cat could sit relative to a box — on it, unter it, behind it, beside it, between two of them.
The one rule: wohin? (accusative) vs. wo? (dative)
Here’s the whole thing. The case is chosen by meaning, not by the preposition and not by how energetic the verb feels.
- Ask wohin? (“where to?”). If the phrase answers it — there’s a change of location, a crossing into a new place — use the accusative.
- Ask wo? (“where?”). If the phrase answers it — a fixed position, nothing crossed — use the dative.
| German | English | Case |
|---|---|---|
| Ich gehe in die Schule. | I'm going into the school. | accusative — wohin? |
| Ich bin in der Schule. | I'm in the school. | dative — wo? |
If those question words feel shaky, our guide to wo, wohin, and woher is the perfect warm-up — the entire rule rides on telling them apart.
It’s about crossing a boundary, not movement
The mistake almost every English speaker makes is reading “movement = accusative.” It isn’t. The real question is whether you cross into a new location or stay within one.
| German | English | Case |
|---|---|---|
| Ich jogge in den Park. | I jog into the park. | cross in → accusative |
| Ich jogge im Park. | I jog in the park. | stay inside → dative |
Both sentences have a runner pounding the pavement, but only the first crosses the park’s edge. Jogging, dancing, running around — all full of motion, all dative when they happen inside one place. Ask wohin? versus wo?, never “is anything moving?”
The verb pairs that give it away
German hands you a shortcut: matched verb pairs where one verb is an action (you do something to an object → accusative) and its partner is a state (something simply is somewhere → dative).
| Action (accusative) | State (dative) | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| legen | liegen | lay down ↔ lie |
| stellen | stehen | stand up ↔ be standing |
| setzen | sitzen | sit down ↔ be seated |
legen / liegen
legen is the action (lay something flat); liegen is the resulting state.
| German | English | Case |
|---|---|---|
| Ich lege das Buch auf den Tisch. | I lay the book onto the table. | accusative — wohin? |
| Das Buch liegt auf dem Tisch. | The book is lying on the table. | dative — wo? |
stellen / stehen
stellen places something upright; stehen is its standing state.
| German | English | Case |
|---|---|---|
| Er stellt die Flasche in den Kühlschrank. | He puts the bottle into the fridge. | accusative — wohin? |
| Die Flasche steht im Kühlschrank. | The bottle is in the fridge. | dative — wo? |
setzen / sitzen
setzen sets someone or something down; sitzen is the seated state.
| German | English | Case |
|---|---|---|
| Sie setzt das Kind auf den Stuhl. | She sits the child onto the chair. | accusative — wohin? |
| Das Kind sitzt auf dem Stuhl. | The child is sitting on the chair. | dative — wo? |
A clean tell: the action verbs are usually the weak/regular ones, and the state verbs are usually strong/irregular (liegen–lag–gelegen, stehen–stand–gestanden). And one verb plays both roles — hängen is hang up (accusative: Er hängt das Foto an die Wand) and be hanging (dative: Das Foto hängt an der Wand).

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Spotting the case in the article endings
Once you’ve chosen the case, decline the article — and masculine is where the difference is loud and clear.
| Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accusative (wohin?) | den | die | das | die |
| Dative (wo?) | dem | der | dem | den (+ noun -n) |
The one signal to burn in: masculine den = accusative (movement), dem = dative (location). Er stellt den Stuhl an den Tisch versus Der Stuhl steht an dem Tisch. You can’t pick correctly without knowing the noun’s gender, so if der/die/das is still slippery, keep our noun gender guide handy.
Contractions: ins, im, ans, am
Native speakers contract these constantly — and the contraction quietly reveals the case.
| Full form | Contraction | Case |
|---|---|---|
| in das | ins | accusative — ins Kino gehen |
| in dem | im | dative — im Kino sein |
| an das | ans | accusative — ans Fenster gehen |
| an dem | am | dative — am Fenster stehen |
So ins and ans always mean movement (accusative); im and am always mean location (dative). The one exception: time uses like am Montag and im Oktober are dative too — more on that next.
Tricky cases
A few situations sidestep the wohin/wo logic, so flag them as you go:
- Time is always dative. am Montag (on Monday), im Oktober (in October), in einer Stunde (in an hour). Time never changes location, so there’s no wohin? — it’s reliably dative.
- Governed prepositions ignore the rule. Some verbs marry a preposition to one fixed case no matter the meaning: warten auf + accusative (Ich warte auf den Bus), denken an + accusative (Ich denke an dich), Angst vor + dative (Ich habe Angst vor dem Hund). Learn these as part of the verb, like English phrasal verbs — never apply wohin/wo to them.
- Fixed idioms are lexicalized. In set phrases the case is just memorized: vor allem (above all), in der Regel (as a rule), unter anderem (among other things).
Your quick cheat sheet
When you hit a two-way preposition, run two checks. First, wohin? → accusative, wo? → dative. Second, let the verb confirm it: an action verb placing something (legen, stellen, setzen) points to accusative; a state verb (liegen, stehen, sitzen) points to dative. Watch the masculine article — den for movement, dem for location — and remember the two override switches: time is always dative, and governed prepositions follow the verb, not the rule.
Pick one room you’re sitting in right now and describe five things in it — where they are (wo?) and where you’d move them (wohin?). Say each pair out loud. That single drill turns this rule from a hesitation into a reflex faster than any chart ever will.
Accusative or dative?
5 quick questions to see what stuck.
-
Which sentence means 'I'm going into the cinema'?
Movement across a boundary (wohin?) takes the accusative — in + das contracts to ins.
-
“Das Buch liegt auf dem Tisch” uses the dative because the book is simply resting there.
Wo? (where?) → a fixed position → dative. The masculine 'dem' is the giveaway.
-
Match each verb to what it signals.
Tap a German word, then its English meaning to pair them.
German
English
-
Complete: 'Ich stelle die Flasche in ___ Kühlschrank.' (masculine, movement)
Movement into the fridge → accusative → masculine 'den' (not dative 'dem').
-
Why is 'Ich warte auf den Bus' accusative even though you're standing still?
Governed prepositions ignore the wohin/wo rule — warten auf always takes the accusative.
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