In negative statements ‘must’ and ‘have to’ are used differently.
‘Must not’ is a negative obligation, meaning that something is not allowed.
We form negative statements with ‘must not’ like this:
Subject + must not/ mustn’t + the base form of the verb without ‘to’:
Singular | Plural |
I must not (mustn’t) speak
You must not speak He/she/it must not speak |
We must not speak
You must not speak They must not speak |
She must not take this medicine.
You must not smoke in the office.
‘Do not have to’ means there is no need to do something.
We form negative statements with ‘do not have to’ like this:
Subject + do not / don’t / doesn’t have to + the base form of the verb:
Singular | Plural |
I do not (don’t) have to wait
You don’t have to wait He/she/it doesn’t have to wait |
We don’t have to wait
You don’t have to wait They don’t have to wait |
You don’t have to buy me a birthday present.
It’s summertime, and Peter doesn’t have to go to school.
We also use ‘have to’ in questions, for example, to ask if something is necessary. Such questions are formed like this:
Do/Does + subject + have to +the base form of the verb:
Singular | Plural |
Do I have to speak?
Do you have to speak? Does he/she/it have to speak? |
Do we have to speak?
Do you have to speak? Do they have to speak? |
Do I have to get ready now?
Does she have to leave before 12 a.m.?
Note: ‘must’ is possible in questions (Must we finish this today?), but ‘have to‘ is more common. |