About

About LëtzPass

How the LëtzPass Method works and who built it.

LëtzPass exists because off-the-shelf Sproochentest prep wastes adult learners’ time on low-leverage material. Our platform is the opposite: ruthlessly curated, validated by native Luxembourgish tutors, and designed by people who have passed the exam themselves, including learners who prepared in under two months with no prior Luxembourgish.

The team

A small group with backgrounds in mathematics, engineering, and language teaching. We have all prepared for the Sproochentest. We built the platform we wished we had had.

Validated by native tutors

The curriculum has been reviewed by experienced native Luxembourgish tutors with deep experience preparing students for the exam. Their feedback shaped the 17-topic curation in Chapter 3, the picture-description framework in Chapter 4, and the seven test-day strategies in Chapter 5. Every chapter that ships to you has been read by a native speaker.

The LëtzPass Method

Adult learners have limited time. The goal is to pass, not to learn everything about Luxembourgish. The 17 topics in our playbook are the ones that recur most often in recent test-taker reports, narrowed by the 80/20 principle. The picture-description framework gives you a repeatable structure for any image. The test-day strategies come from people who have sat the exam.

If you prepare these 17 thoroughly, the vocabulary and answer patterns transfer to whatever you face. Confidence on test day comes from depth on the few, not breadth across many.

Methodology and sources

  • Pass rate: ~70% over the past 10 years (INLL data, published 2022).
  • The 17 topics: curated from recent test-taker reports through 2026. The INLL does not publish an official topic list. See the playbook for our curation rationale.
  • Test-day strategies: summarised on the printable Test-Day Card and reviewed by native tutors.

Have a question? See the support page for common answers, or email contact@letzpass.com. Ready to try the platform? Take a free mock exam.

Credits

Luxembourgish speech is synthesized locally using Piper with voices created by Marc Barnig (mbarnig), under the CC-BY-4.0 license.