native

How do I say 'what's up'?

The universal 'what's up' — works for both casual greeting and genuine concern, distinguished by tone.

怎么了

zěnme le

What's up / what's wrong / what happened.

LITERAL

What's the matter / how come.

WHAT IT REALLY MEANS

What's up / what's wrong / what happened.

WHEN IT FITS

Casually asking what someone is doingNoticing something is wrong with someoneResponding to being called

怎么了 is one of the most versatile phrases in everyday Chinese — it covers casual check-ins, genuine concern, and startled reactions, all distinguished by tone:

  • Light tone — “What’s up?” / “What’s going on?” A casual opener, equivalent to checking in on someone. 最近怎么了?= What have you been up to lately?
  • Concerned tone — “What’s wrong?” You notice someone looks upset, quiet, or not themselves. The same words now carry worry.
  • Sharp tone — “What happened?!” Something is clearly wrong and you need an explanation immediately.

The northern colloquial 咋了 (zǎ le) is worth knowing because it is everywhere online and in northern speech. 咋 replaces 怎么 in casual contexts: 咋办?(what to do?), 咋回事?(what’s going on?). Southern Chinese speakers may not use it but understand it perfectly.

怎么回事 is the fuller “what happened / what’s the situation.” It is what you ask when something obviously went wrong — a crashed car, a crying friend, a sudden silence. It expects a narrative answer, not a one-word response.

HOW PEOPLE ACTUALLY SAY IT

嘿,最近怎么了?好久没见你发朋友圈了。

Hēi, zuìjìn zěnme le? Hǎo jiǔ méi jiàn nǐ fā péngyouquān le.

Hey, what's up? Haven't seen you post on Moments in ages.

Casual check-in
你的脸色不太好,怎么了?

Nǐ de liǎnsè bú tài hǎo, zěnme le?

You don't look well — what's wrong?

Concerned observation

CHOOSE BY SITUATION

咋了

zǎ le

What's up / what's going on (northern).

Very casual — northern Chinese, but widely understood through the internet

怎么回事

zěnme huí shì

What's going on / what happened.

Something clearly happened and you want the full story