Skip to content
Library
Games
Courses
Level Test
Word of the Day
Conjugation
Chat
Printables
ConlangHub
Blog.txt
Talk to Us
Linguarudo Chat
Level: Beginner

Practice Taking a Taxi in Hebrew

Taxi rides are short, transactional, and full of opportunities to be overcharged or sent the wrong way if your Hebrew isn't sharp. This guided scenario rehearses the entire interaction: hailing a cab, stating your destination clearly, asking for an estimate, requesting a receipt, and managing the small talk drivers often try to make. You'll learn to ask 'How much will it be roughly?' before getting in, and to politely refuse a longer scenic route. Practise these Hebrew taxi phrases and you'll arrive at your destination without paying the tourist tax.

Sign in to start practicingFree account — no credit card required

Sample Hebrew conversation

Sample conversation
  1. שלום! לאן תרצה לנסוע?

    Hello! Where would you like to go?
  2. לתחנת הרכבת, בבקשה.

    To the train station, please.
  3. הבנתי! בערך 15 דקות נסיעה. יש לך מסלול מועדף?

    Got it! That's about a 15-minute drive. Do you have a preferred route?
  4. המסלול הכי מהיר, בבקשה.

    The fastest route, please.
  5. בדרך! זו הפעם הראשונה שלך בעיר?

    We're on our way! Is this your first time in the city?
  6. כן, פעם ראשונה! עיר יפהפייה.

    Yes, it's my first time! It's a beautiful city.

What you'll learn

  • State a destination clearly with street names and landmarks
  • Ask for a price estimate before the meter starts
  • Negotiate or confirm whether the meter will be used
  • Ask the driver to stop, wait, or take a different route
  • Request a receipt at the end of the ride

Frequently asked questions

How do I ask 'how much?' in Hebrew without sounding rude?

Use the conditional form — the Hebrew equivalent of 'how much would it be roughly?' is softer than the bare 'how much?' and signals you understand it's an estimate.

What's the Hebrew word for 'meter' (taxi)?

It's a specific term that varies slightly by country. We use the common variant in this scenario, and the vocabulary list includes it with a translation.

Should I tip a Hebrew-speaking taxi driver?

Tipping conventions vary widely. The scenario doesn't take a stance — it teaches you the phrases to round up the fare politely if you choose to.

How do I tell a driver to stop in Hebrew?

There's a short imperative form — 'Stop here, please' — that's polite enough for any context. We rehearse it in the scenario.

Sign in to start practicingFree account — no credit card required