French Phrase
À demain matin.
Meaning
Literally “to tomorrow morning”, it is a friendly way to say you’ll meet or talk again the next morning. It conveys a casual, upbeat tone.
When to use
Use it at the end of a conversation when you know you’ll see the person the following morning – after a coffee, a work meeting, a phone call, or any informal exchange.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Àdemainmatin
À (preposition)
Used to indicate a point in time when something will happen; in this case it means “see you at”.
demain (adverb)
Means “tomorrow”. It can stand alone or be followed by a more precise time of day.
matin (noun, no article)
When talking about a part of the day in a time expression, French drops the article: “matin” not “le matin”.
🗨In Conversation
À demain matin !
See you tomorrow morning!
Parfait, à demain !
Great, see you tomorrow!
✕Common Mistakes
Au demain matin.
“Au” is a contraction of “à le” and is never used before a day or time of day.
À le demain matin.
The article is dropped in this expression; saying “à le demain matin” is ungrammatical.
Demain matin !
When you intend to say “see you tomorrow morning”, you need the preposition “à”.
↔Alternatives
À demain !
See you tomorrow.
On se voit demain matin.
We’ll see each other tomorrow morning.
Rendez‑vous demain matin à 9 h.
Meeting tomorrow morning at 9 a.m.
Cultural Tip
In French, the article “le” is usually omitted before parts of the day in time expressions, so you say “demain matin” not “le demain matin”. Adding “matin” after “à demain” is perfectly natural but a bit more specific; most speakers simply say “à demain”. When you need to be formal or precise, you’ll add the exact hour (e.g., “à demain matin à 8 h”).

