Present Tenses for the Future | Unit 19 | PrepMyEnglish
PrepMyEnglish
Accueil English Grammar Unit 19 — Present Tenses for the Future
Unit 19 · Grammar Lesson
Unité 19 · Leçon de Grammaire

Present Tenses for the Future
(I Am Doing / I Do) — Arrangements & Timetables
Les Temps Présents pour le Futur
(I Am Doing / I Do) — Arrangements et Horaires

Master when to use the present continuous for fixed personal plans and arrangements, and the present simple for timetables and programmes

Maîtrisez quand utiliser le présent continu pour les plans personnels et le présent simple pour les horaires et programmes fixés

B1 – B2 2 Rules · 4 Exercises · 200-Q Quiz · PDF 2 Règles · 4 Exercices · Quiz 200 Q · PDF 🇬🇧 EN / 🇫🇷 FR

We often use present tenses when we talk about the future. The key is understanding which present tense to use. If you have already decided and arranged to do something, use the present continuous (I'm going, we're meeting). If you are talking about a fixed schedule, timetable or programme — like a train time or a cinema showing — use the present simple (the train leaves, the film starts).

On utilise souvent les temps présents pour parler du futur. La clé est de comprendre lequel utiliser. Si vous avez déjà décidé et organisé quelque chose, utilisez le présent continu (I'm going, we're meeting). Pour un horaire ou programme fixé — comme l'heure d'un train ou d'un film — utilisez le présent simple (the train leaves, the film starts).

A

Present Continuous (I am doing) — Fixed Personal Arrangements

Présent Continu (I am doing) — Arrangements personnels fixés

Use I'm doing something (tomorrow, next week, etc.) when you have already decided and arranged to do it. The plan is made — it's in the diary.

Utilisez I'm doing something (demain, la semaine prochaine, etc.) quand vous avez déjà décidé et organisé quelque chose. Le plan est fait — c'est dans l'agenda.

Present continuous for the future = already decided + arranged → action is in your diary
NOT "will" for arrangements: use continuous, not will
Ben's diary
MondayTennis 2:00 pm
TuesdayDentist 10:10 am
FridayKate — 8:00 pm

In all these examples, Ben has already decided and arranged to do these things:

Dans tous ces exemples, Ben a déjà décidé et organisé ces choses :

He is playing tennis on Monday afternoon.
He is going to the dentist on Tuesday morning.
He is meeting Kate on Friday.

Present Continuous ✓

Présent Continu ✓

arranged / in the diary
arrangé / dans l'agenda
What are you doing on Saturday evening?
I'm going to the cinema.
What time is Katherine arriving tomorrow?
We're meeting her at the station.
I'm not working tomorrow — want to meet?
Alex is getting married next month.

Avoid "will" for arrangements

Évitez "will" pour les arrangements

❌ not used for personal plans
❌ non utilisé pour les plans personnels
What will you do on Saturday? ✗
I will go to the cinema. ✗
What time will Katherine arrive? ✗
We will meet her at the station. ✗
Alex will get married next month. ✗
(Will is used for predictions and decisions at the moment of speaking — not for pre-arranged plans)
💡
Just before doing something: Juste avant de faire quelque chose : We also use the present continuous for an action just before you start to do it — especially with verbs of movement (go / come / leave): I'm tired. I'm going to bed now. / 'Are you ready?' 'Yes, I'm coming.' On utilise aussi le présent continu pour une action qu'on est sur le point de commencer — surtout avec les verbes de mouvement : I'm tired. I'm going to bed now. / 'Are you ready?' 'Yes, I'm coming.'

B

Present Simple (I do) — Timetables and Fixed Programmes

Présent Simple (I do) — Horaires et programmes fixés

Use the present simple when you talk about timetables and programmes — things like transport schedules, cinema times, or official start times. These are fixed by an external organisation, not by you personally.

Utilisez le présent simple pour les horaires et programmes — transports, séances de cinéma, horaires officiels. Ces éléments sont fixés par une organisation externe, pas par vous personnellement.

Timetable / schedulepresent simple (train leaves, film starts, meeting is at...)
Personal arrangementpresent continuous (I'm going, we're meeting)
I have to go. My train leaves at 11.30.
→ Fixed train timetable — not a personal decision → present simple.
→ Horaire de train fixé — pas une décision personnelle → présent simple.
What time does the film start tonight?
→ Cinema programme — fixed external schedule → present simple.
→ Programme de cinéma — horaire externe fixé → présent simple.
The meeting is at nine o'clock tomorrow.
→ Scheduled/fixed event → present simple.
→ Événement planifié/fixé → présent simple.
I start my new job on Monday.
→ Personal plan fixed like a timetable (start date is set) → present simple also possible here.
→ Plan personnel fixé comme un horaire → présent simple aussi possible ici.

Present Continuous — personal arrangement

Présent Continu — arrangement personnel

What time are you arriving?
I'm going to the cinema this evening.
What time are you meeting Kate tomorrow?

Present Simple — timetable / schedule

Présent Simple — horaire / programme

What time does the train arrive?
The film starts at 8.15.
What time do you finish work tomorrow?
💡
Appointments, lessons and exams: Rendez-vous, cours et examens : When talking about appointments, lessons or exams, you can use I have or I've got: I have an exam next week. / I've got a dentist appointment on Friday. Pour parler de rendez-vous, de cours ou d'examens, vous pouvez utiliser I have ou I've got : I have an exam next week. / I've got a dentist appointment on Friday.
⚠️
What time do you meet vs are you meeting? What time do you meet vs are you meeting ? For a personal meeting you arranged yourself, use continuous: What time are you meeting Kate? (not do you meet). For asking about someone's regular schedule or timetable, use simple: What time do you finish work tomorrow? Pour une réunion que vous avez organisée personnellement, utilisez le continu : What time are you meeting Kate ? Pour l'horaire officiel, utilisez le simple : What time do you finish work tomorrow ?

Present Tenses for Future — Exercises with AnswersPrésents pour le Futur — Exercices avec Corrigé

Put each rule into practice — check your answers instantly

Mettez chaque règle en pratique — vérifiez vos réponses instantanément

✈️

Exercise 1 — Ask Anna about her holiday plans

Exercice 1 — Posez des questions à Anna sur ses vacances

Write the question using the present continuous.

Écrivez la question en utilisant le présent continu.

Anna:Scotland · Ten days · Next Friday · No, with a friend · No, by train · In a hotel
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Answers:Réponses : 1. Where are you going?  ·  2. How long are you going for?  ·  3. When are you leaving?  ·  4. Are you going alone?  ·  5. Are you travelling by car?  ·  6. Where are you staying?
EX 2

Exercise 2 — Complete the sentences (present continuous for the future)

Exercice 2 — Complétez les phrases (présent continu pour le futur)

Use the verb in brackets in the present continuous.

Utilisez le verbe entre parenthèses au présent continu.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Answers:Réponses : 2. We're having  ·  3. I'm not working  ·  4. I'm leaving  ·  5. are you going  ·  6. Laura isn't coming  ·  7. I'm going  ·  8. He's working
EX 3

Exercise 3 — Present continuous or present simple? (mixed dialogues)

Exercice 3 — Présent continu ou simple ? (dialogues variés)

Put the verb into the correct form.

Mettez le verbe à la bonne forme.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Answers:Réponses : 1. I'm coming  ·  2. Are you going  ·  3. he's moving  ·  4. I'm going / does it start  ·  5. we're meeting  ·  6. Are you doing  ·  7. does this term end / starts  ·  8. We're going / Who's getting  ·  9. Are you watching  ·  10. leaves / arrives  ·  11. It finishes  ·  12. I'm not using
EX 4

Exercise 4 — Write about yourself: your plans for the next few days

Exercice 4 — Écrivez sur vous-même : vos plans pour les prochains jours

Write a sentence for each time. Use the present continuous if you have an arrangement, or write "I'm not doing anything" if you have no plans.

Écrivez une phrase pour chaque moment. Utilisez le présent continu si vous avez quelque chose de prévu, ou écrivez "I'm not doing anything" si vous n'avez rien de prévu.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Model answers:Réponses modèles : These are open answers — yours are correct as long as you used the present continuous (I'm + -ing) or "I'm not doing anything". Example: 1. I'm meeting a friend this evening.  ·  2. I'm not doing anything tomorrow morning.  ·  3. I'm going to the gym tomorrow evening.  ·  4. I'm staying at home next Sunday.  ·  5. On Saturday I'm having lunch with my family. Ces réponses sont ouvertes — les vôtres sont correctes du moment que vous avez utilisé le présent continu (I'm + -ing) ou "I'm not doing anything".

Frequently Asked Questions — Present Tenses for the Future

Questions fréquentes — Présents pour le Futur

In English, the present continuous can describe the future when an action is already arranged and decided. You are not predicting — the event is in your diary, the plan is made. Think of it as: the arrangement exists now, even though the action happens later. Example: I'm meeting Sarah tomorrow — the meeting is already scheduled.

En anglais, le présent continu peut décrire le futur quand une action est déjà arrangée et décidée. Vous ne faites pas de prédiction — l'événement est dans votre agenda. L'arrangement existe maintenant, même si l'action aura lieu plus tard.

I'm doing (present continuous) = a fixed arrangement — you have a time, place or person involved: I'm meeting Tom at 7. I'm going to do = a general intention or plan, but not necessarily arranged: I'm going to learn Spanish one day. Both can sometimes be used for the same situation, but the continuous implies more specific arrangements.

I'm doing (présent continu) = un arrangement fixé — vous avez une heure, un lieu ou une personne : I'm meeting Tom at 7. I'm going to do = une intention générale, pas forcément organisée : I'm going to learn Spanish one day.

Use the present simple for timetables and programmes — fixed schedules set by an organisation, not by you personally. This includes transport (trains, flights, buses), cinema and event times, and official schedules. Example: The train leaves at 8.30. The film starts at 9.

Utilisez le présent simple pour les horaires et programmes — plannings fixés par une organisation, pas par vous personnellement. Cela inclut les transports, les horaires de cinéma et les programmes officiels : The train leaves at 8.30. The film starts at 9.

Both can be correct depending on context. "What time is your friend arriving?" (continuous) treats it as a personal arrangement — you are asking about their travel plans. "What time does the train arrive?" (simple) asks about a fixed timetable. For a person's own plans, the continuous is generally preferred: What time is Katherine arriving?

Les deux peuvent être corrects selon le contexte. "What time is your friend arriving?" (continu) traite cela comme un arrangement personnel. "What time does the train arrive?" (simple) concerne un horaire fixé. Pour les plans personnels d'une personne, on préfère généralement le continu.

🎯 Unit 19 · MCQ QuizUnité 19 · Quiz QCM

Present Tenses for the Future — Quiz

Présents pour le Futur — Quiz

200-question bank · 10–40 questions per session · instant feedback · printable PDF

Banque de 200 questions · 10 à 40 questions par session · correction immédiate · PDF

200 Questions 5 Topics B1 · B1+ · B2 PDF ✓

⚙️ Quiz SettingsParamètres du Quiz

Filter by topic Filtrer par thème
All topics Arrangements (Cont.) Timetables (Simple) Continuous vs Simple Spot the Error Mixed

Present Tenses for the Future Quiz

Quiz — Présents pour le Futur

20 questions

out ofsur 20 questionsquestions
Correct
Correctes
Wrong
Incorrectes
Skipped
Non répondues

PrepMyEnglish™

Learn and speak better English

Apprenez et parlez un meilleur anglais

To use reCAPTCHA, you need to add the API Key and complete the setup process in Dashboard > Elementor > Settings > Integrations > reCAPTCHA.