HSK 3.0 Band 1 Word List — PDF + Native Audio

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HSK 3.0 Band 1 Word List

PDF · HSK HSK 3.0 🔊 Audio Below 300 words 📄 9 pages

All 300 words of the official HSK 3.0 Band 1 syllabus — the first level of the new HSK — organised by category with characters, pinyin, English meaning, and native pronunciation for every word. Tap any word below to hear it.

⬇ Download PDF (9 pages)
  • All 300 HSK 3.0 Band 1 words
  • Organised across 14 categories for structured study
  • Character + pinyin + English meaning for each word
  • Search + filter by category on the page
  • Native pronunciation audio for every word
🔊 Browse all 300 words

Tap any word to hear it spoken

Search by character, pinyin or English meaning. Filter by category. Tap any card to hear native Mandarin pronunciation.

300 words

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Native voice: Microsoft Xiaoxiao (Beijing-standard Putonghua)

What is HSK 3.0 Band 1?

HSK 3.0 Band 1 (新汉语水平考试一级) is the first level of the new nine-band HSK, whose exams roll out worldwide from 1 July 2026. The official syllabus published by Chinese Testing International in November 2025 sets Band 1 at exactly 300 words — double the old HSK 1 — plus handwriting of around 100 basic characters. This page gives you every one of those 300 words. New to the exam system? Start with our complete guide to the HSK levels.

Band 1 is where Mandarin starts. These 300 words cover greetings, family, numbers, time, food, places, school and the everyday verbs that hold simple sentences together — enough to introduce yourself, order tea, ask prices, and survive a first conversation. They map roughly to the territory of the old HSK 1 and 2 combined, so they’re a meatier first milestone than the old system’s 150-word opener.

Because the new exams begin in July 2026, learning from the Band 1 syllabus now means studying the list your certificate will actually be tested on. And unlike the old HSK 1, Band 1 expects some written characters — around 100 basic ones — so it pays to meet hanzi from day one rather than hiding in pinyin.

This resource gives you all 300 HSK 3.0 Band 1 words in three forms: a downloadable A4 PDF organised by category for offline study and printing, an interactive search-and-filter web grid (above) for quick lookup, and native Mandarin pronunciation audio for every single word powered by Microsoft Xiaoxiao neural TTS.

How to use this Band 1 word list

Don’t try to memorise the entire Band 1 word list at once. Studies of vocabulary acquisition consistently show that spaced repetition + audio + sentence context is what makes words stick — not flashcard cramming. Here’s how to actually learn your first 300 words:

  1. Print the PDF and stick it on your wall or fridge. Passive exposure adds up — you’ll glance at the categories during dead moments throughout the day.
  2. Use the interactive grid above for daily drills. Filter by category, tap each word to hear native pronunciation, repeat aloud. 10 minutes per day beats 1 hour once a week.
  3. Start with the sounds of real life: Greetings & Politeness (10 words), Pronouns & People (28), Family (11) and Numbers (24). With those 73 words you can already meet someone, introduce your family and count to a hundred.
  4. Always learn words in clusters: 爸爸 / 妈妈 / 哥哥 / 姐姐 (the family set) together; 今天 / 明天 / 昨天 (today, tomorrow, yesterday) together — not in isolation. Band 1 is built from natural clusters like these, and related words reinforce each other.
  5. Build a sentence with each new word. Knowing “喜欢 (xǐhuan, to like)” in isolation is useless — knowing “我喜欢喝茶 (wǒ xǐhuan hē chá, I like drinking tea)” is what gets you speaking. Every word in this sentence is on the Band 1 list.
  6. Drill the tone twins early. 买 (mǎi, to buy) and 卖 (mài, to sell) differ only by tone — and mean opposites. And 他, 她 and 它 (he, she, it) are all pronounced tā: identical in speech, separated only in writing. Band 1 teaches you from the start that tones and characters both matter.

If you’re aiming at the new Band 1 exam itself, remember it tests more than recognition — from July 2026 the format includes handwriting of basic characters. Our 1-on-1 HSK Preparation course tracks the new format. For learners who just want to speak, our Basics course covers this vocabulary in conversational context from lesson one.

The 14 categories in this Band 1 word list

This Band 1 word list organises the 300 words into 14 categories grouped by how beginners actually use them — people, family, numbers, time, food, places, school, the body, everyday verbs and the grammar glue. Every category is small enough to learn in a session or two.

  • Pronouns & People (28) — I, you, he, she, everyone, friend, classmate. The cast of your first conversations.
  • Family (11) — Mum, dad, brothers, sisters, children. The people you’ll talk about most.
  • Numbers & Measure Words (24) — One to a thousand, plus the measure words (个, 块, 件) Mandarin counts everything with.
  • Time & Dates (29) — Today, tomorrow, years, weeks, o’clock. Mandarin tells time with vocabulary, not verb tenses.
  • Food & Drink (20) — Tea, rice, dumplings, noodles, apples. Eating is most learners’ first real-world win.
  • Places & Getting Around (25) — Shops, hospitals, stations, here and there, up and down. Getting around, literally.
  • School & Work (27) — Teacher, student, study, work, Chinese itself. The classroom and office words.
  • Body & Health (4) — Mouth, doctor, falling ill, seeing the doctor. Small but essential.
  • Everyday Verbs (43) — Eat, drink, go, come, like, know, buy, sell. At 43 words, the engine room of Band 1.
  • Adjectives & Descriptions (17) — Big, small, hot, cold, pretty, busy, cheap. Your first descriptions.
  • Question Words (12) — Who, what, where, how many. Mandarin questions are vocabulary, not word order.
  • Greetings & Politeness (10) — Hello, thank you, sorry, goodbye, you’re welcome. Politeness from day one.
  • Particles & Function Words (25) — The particles (的, 了, 吗, 吧) and little words that hold sentences together.
  • Things & Objects (25) — Phones, computers, money, clothes, weather. The nouns of daily life.
Will, native Mandarin teacher

Preparing for the new Band 1 exam?

These 300 words are the entire Band 1 syllabus — but the exam also tests listening, reading patterns and grammar. Our 1-on-1 HSK Preparation course drills exam-specific skills with mock papers and pacing technique.

Book a free HSK consultation →

A three-week study plan

Here’s a three-week plan to absorb the entire Band 1 word list at roughly 15 words a day, 15–20 minutes a session — the gentlest on-ramp in the whole HSK system.

  • Week 1: Greetings & Politeness (10) + Pronouns & People (28) + Family (11) + Numbers (24) + Question Words (12) — 85 words. By Sunday you can greet, introduce and count.
  • Week 2: Time & Dates (29) + Food & Drink (20) + Places (25) + School & Work (27) + Body & Health (4) — 105 words. The world around you: order food, tell the time, name your school.
  • Week 3: Everyday Verbs (43) + Adjectives (17) + Particles (25) + Things & Objects (25) — 110 words. The verbs and glue that turn words into sentences. Finish by filtering “All” in the grid and saying every word before the audio plays.

After three weeks you’ll have met all 300 words with native audio — and you’ll be ready for real sentences. The next rung is Band 2 (500 words cumulative): our Band 2 word list is live and ready when you are. In the meantime, the HSK levels guide shows the whole ladder.

FAQs

Yes — these are all 300 words of the official Band 1 syllabus published by Chinese Testing International in November 2025, the list the new HSK exams use worldwide from 1 July 2026. For how the new nine-band system works, see our HSK 3.0 guide.
The old HSK 1 had 150 words; Band 1 doubles that to 300 and includes everyday compounds the old list saved for HSK 2 — so it covers roughly the old HSK 1–2 territory in one level. If you studied the old lists, you already know most of these words; this page shows you the official new set.
Band 1 sits around CEFR A1 — a first-steps user who can introduce themselves, handle numbers, prices and times, and manage simple everyday exchanges. It’s the foundation everything above it builds on.
Most learners can recognise and produce all 300 words in three to five weeks with a daily 15-20 minute session combining audio, speaking aloud and simple sentence-building. The three-week plan above is the fast lane; even at a relaxed pace this is a one-to-two-month milestone.
Under the new exam format, yes — Band 1 includes handwriting of around 100 basic characters, which the old HSK 1 never asked for. Don’t panic: they’re the simplest characters in the language, and our writing practice tool plus the radicals chart make them learnable from week one.
Band 2 takes you to 500 cumulative words — another 200 on top of these — and stretches into longer sentences and more topics. Our Band 2 word list is live, with every new word and native audio.
Yes — the PDF is freely shareable for personal or classroom use. Each page carries WillyChina branding so anyone who finds it knows where the resource came from. We just ask that you don’t repackage or sell it.

Sources: word list from the official HSK 3.0 (November 2025) syllabus via Chinese Testing International; English glosses adapted from CC-CEDICT (CC BY-SA 4.0).

What to study next

Lock in your first 300 words — then build on them. Here’s the order.

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PDF · 9 pages · 300 wordsBand 1 Words
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