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Future perfect continuous (I will have been working here ten years)

Future perfect continuous: form

We use will/shall + have + been + the -ing form of the verb.

We use shall only for future time reference with I and we. Shall is more formal and less common than will.


singular and plural

+I, weshe, he, it, you, they(full form)will or shallwillhave been working
I, she, he, it, you, we, they(short form)’ll
I, weshe, he, it, you, they(full form)will not or shall notwill nothave been working
I, weshe, he, it, you, they(short form)won’t or shan’twon’t
? + Will? − Won’tI, she, he, it, you, we, they
have been working?

Note: Shall I, shall we and shan’t I, shan’t we in future perfect continuous questions are rare.

Future perfect continuous: use

Emphasising the length of an event at a time in the future

We use the future perfect continuous form when we are looking back to the past from a point in the future and we want to emphasise the length or duration of an activity or event:

  • In September the head teacher will have been teaching at the school for 20 years.
  • In September, she will have been living in France for a year.
  • I will have been studying English for three years by the end of this course.
  • We’re late. I think they*’ll have been waiting** for us. We’d better go.*
See also
  • Future: will and shall
  • Shall
  • Will