What Is the Future Perfect Progressive Tense?
The future perfect progressive tense (also called the future perfect continuous tense) describes actions that will have been continuing for a period of time before a specific moment in the future. It is formed using will have been + verb-ing. Example: By next year, she will have been working here for five years.
Future Perfect Progressive Tense (Future Perfect Continuous)
The future perfect progressive describes the duration of an ongoing action up to a specific moment in the future. It is formed with will have been + the -ing form of the verb. Example: "By next month, I will have been working here for ten years."
- Formula: subject + will + have + been + verb-ing
- Use: duration of an action up to a future point, emphasis on continuous activity, predictions about ongoing future situations
- Signal words: by, by then, by the time, for, all day
- Negative: will + not + have + been + verb-ing
- Question: Will + subject + have + been + verb-ing?
Frequently Asked
- What is the difference between future perfect and future perfect progressive?
- Future perfect focuses on the completion of an action before a future point ("I will have written the book by December"). Future perfect progressive focuses on the duration of an ongoing action up to that future point ("I will have been writing the book for two years by December").
Table of Contents
Structure of the Future Perfect Progressive
Subject + will have been + verb-ing
| Subject | Example |
|---|---|
| I | I will have been working |
| You | You will have been working |
| He / She / It | She will have been working |
| We | We will have been working |
| They | They will have been working |
When to Use the Future Perfect Progressive
Duration Before a Future Time
- By next month, I will have been studying English for three years.
- By 2027, they will have been living in Canada for a decade.
Emphasizing the Length of an Activity
- By tonight, she will have been working for twelve hours.
- By the time the project ends, we will have been researching for months.
Long-Term Future Situations
- By 2030, scientists will have been researching climate change for decades.
- By next year, the company will have been expanding globally for ten years.
Signal Words
- for
- since
- by
- by next year
- by the time
- for many years
Negative Form
Subject + will not (won't) + have been + verb-ing
- I will not have been working here long.
- She won't have been studying for very long.
- They will not have been waiting long.
Question Form
Will + subject + have been + verb-ing?
- Will you have been working here for ten years?
- Will she have been studying long?
- Will they have been traveling for months?
Examples of Future Perfect Progressive Sentences
- By next year, she will have been teaching for ten years.
- They will have been working on the project for months.
- I will have been studying English for a long time.
- He will have been driving all day.
- We will have been living in this city for five years.
- The company will have been growing rapidly.
- She will have been preparing for the exam for weeks.
- They will have been building the bridge for years.
- I will have been practicing the piano.
- He will have been developing the software for months.
Common Mistakes
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| I will have been work here | I will have been working here |
| She will have been study all day | She will have been studying all day |
| They will have been wait for hours | They will have been waiting for hours |
Future Perfect Progressive vs Future Perfect
| Future Perfect Progressive | Future Perfect |
|---|---|
| I will have been studying for three hours | I will have finished three chapters |
| She will have been working all day | She will have completed the report |
Future Perfect Progressive in IELTS Writing
In IELTS Writing and Speaking, the future perfect progressive tense is useful when discussing long-term future trends or continuous developments.
- By 2050, researchers will have been studying renewable energy for decades.
- By the end of the century, scientists will have been monitoring climate change for many years.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the future perfect progressive tense?
The future perfect progressive tense describes actions that will continue for a period of time before a specific future moment.
How do you form the future perfect progressive tense?
Use will have been plus the verb ending in -ing.
When do we use the future perfect progressive tense?
It is used to emphasize the duration of an action before a future time.
By TypoGrammar
TypoGrammar creates clear, accurate grammar guides for English learners worldwide.
Last updated: June 2026