German Phrase
Hast du Fragen an mich?
Meaning
Literally, “Do you have questions to me?” It is the informal way to ask someone if they would like to ask you something, usually after you have explained something or given a presentation.
When to use
Use this phrase after a lecture, a meeting, a tutorial, or any situation where you have just provided information and want to invite the listener to ask for clarification. It works best in informal settings with friends, classmates, or colleagues you address with ‘du’. In formal contexts you would switch to ‘Sie’.
✦Grammar Breakdown
HastduFragenanmich?
Hast (haben)
‘Hast’ is the 2nd‑person singular present of ‘haben’. It is used for informal ‘du’ questions.
du (personal pronoun)
The informal singular pronoun ‘du’ follows the verb in German yes‑no questions.
Fragen (noun, plural)
‘Fragen’ is the plural of ‘die Frage’ (question). Plural nouns do not need an article here because the verb already signals the question.
an (preposition)
‘an’ governs the accusative case when it indicates direction or target, here ‘an mich’ = ‘to me’.
mich (accusative pronoun)
‘mich’ is the accusative form of ‘ich’. It is required after the preposition ‘an’ in this construction.
🗨In Conversation
Hast du Fragen an mich?
Do you have any questions for me?
Ja, ich würde gern wissen, wie das Projektbudget berechnet wird.
Yes, I’d like to know how the project budget is calculated.
✕Common Mistakes
Hast du Fragen zu mich?
‘zu’ would mean ‘questions about me’, not ‘questions for me’. Use ‘an’ to indicate the target of the question.
Hast du Fragen an mir?
‘mir’ is dative; the preposition ‘an’ requires accusative, so ‘mich’ is correct.
Haben du Fragen an mich?
The verb must agree with the subject ‘du’: ‘Hast du’, not ‘Haben du’.
↔Alternatives
Gibt es Fragen an mich?
Are there any questions for me?
Haben Sie Fragen an mich?
Do you have any questions for me? (formal)
Möchtest du etwas fragen?
Would you like to ask something?
Cultural Tip
In German the choice between ‘du’ and ‘Sie’ signals the level of familiarity. In a classroom or business meeting you’ll often hear the formal ‘Haben Sie Fragen an mich?’ Even in informal settings, avoid using ‘zu’ (e.g., *Fragen zu mir*) because it changes the meaning to ‘questions about me’ rather than ‘questions directed at me’.

