Modals of Obligation, Permission & Prohibition

B2 (Upper-Intermediate)Grammar

Modals of Obligation, Permission & Prohibition

At B2 you handle the finer distinctions between modal verbs of obligation, permission and prohibition — including the difference between external rules and personal opinion, and the tricky contrast between…

At B2 you handle the finer distinctions between modal verbs of obligation, permission and prohibition — including the difference between external rules and personal opinion, and the tricky contrast between mustn’t and don’t have to.

Obligation & necessity

Modal Meaning Example
must strong obligation (often the speaker’s own) I must finish this today.
have to obligation from outside (rules) You have to wear a seatbelt.
have got to informal obligation I‘ve got to go now.
should / ought to advice, weaker obligation You should rest.
be supposed to expected (but maybe not done) We‘re supposed to arrive by 9.

Prohibition vs no obligation

Modal Meaning Example
mustn’t prohibition — it’s not allowed You mustn’t smoke here.
don’t have to no obligation — it’s optional You don’t have to come.
can’t / not allowed to prohibition (rules) You can’t park here.
The classic trap: mustn’t ≠ don’t have to“You mustn’t tell anyone” = it is forbidden. “You don’t have to tell anyone” = you can if you want, but it’s not required. They are almost opposites — never swap them.

Examples from EduCareer

  • Students have to submit homework online. (school rule)
  • You don’t have to buy the book — it’s optional.
  • You mustn’t use a dictionary during the test.
Tutor tip for Arabic speakersFor past obligation, “must” has no past form — use had to: “I had to wait,” not “I must waited.” And remember the negative split: prohibition = mustn’t; absence of obligation = didn’t have to.
Common mistakes

  • You don’t have to smoke here (= forbidden).You mustn’t smoke here.
  • Yesterday I must wait an hour.Yesterday I had to wait an hour.
  • She must to leave early.She must leave early.

Practise with the 20 questions below.

Check your understanding

Answer the questions below. You will see instantly if you are right.

1."You ___ smoke here — it's forbidden."
prohibition → mustn't.
2."You ___ come if you're busy — it's optional."
no obligation → don't have to.
3."Drivers ___ wear a seatbelt." (law)
external rule → have to / must.
4.Past of 'must' (obligation) is:
had to.
5."Yesterday I ___ wait an hour."
past obligation → had to.
6.Which is correct?
must + base verb, no 'to'.
7."We ___ arrive by 9, but we're often late."
expectation → be supposed to.
8."You ___ use your phone in the exam." (banned)
prohibition → mustn't.
9.'have got to' is mainly:
informal obligation.
10."You ___ see a doctor about that cough." (advice)
advice → should/ought to.
11."I ___ pay for the ticket — my friend treated me."
no obligation (past) → didn't have to.
12.'mustn't' and 'don't have to' are:
forbidden vs optional.
13."Guests ___ check out by 11am." (hotel rule)
external rule → have to.
14."You ___ to apologise; it wasn't your fault."
no obligation → don't have to.
15."Visitors ___ feed the animals." (forbidden sign)
prohibition → must not.
16."He ___ work last weekend." (was obliged)
past obligation → had to.
17."Strictly, you ___ be 18 to enter."
rule → have to.
18."You ___ worry — everything's handled."
reassurance, no need → don't have to (or needn't).
19.'be supposed to' suggests:
expectation that may not be met.
20."Candidates ___ talk during the test." (rule, forbidden)
prohibition → must not.

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