500 Most Common Spanish Words: The Vocabulary That Unlocks Real Conversation
Around 500 words cover the vast majority of everyday spoken Spanish. Here they are, organised by category, with a strategy for actually learning them.
Here's the most encouraging statistic in language learning: the 1,000 most frequent words in Spanish cover roughly 85% of everyday speech â and the first 500 do most of that work. Learn them and you can follow conversations, read messages and make yourself understood almost anywhere Spanish is spoken.
This guide organises those high-frequency words by category, so you can learn them in useful clusters rather than as an alphabetical slog. (If you're just starting, our post on the 100 most common Spanish words is the gentler on-ramp â this is the full toolkit.)
The core function words
These little words are the glue of every sentence. You'll meet them constantly, so they learn themselves â but it helps to see them once, clearly.
Articles and pronouns: el, la, los, las, un, una, yo, tĂș, Ă©l, ella, usted, nosotros, ellos, ellas, me, te, se, le, lo, nos, mi, tu, su, este, ese, aquel, esto, eso, algo, nada, alguien, nadie, todo, cada, otro, mismo, quien, cual.
Connectors and prepositions: y, o, pero, porque, que, si, cuando, como, donde, aunque, mientras, de, en, a, por, para, con, sin, sobre, entre, hasta, desde, hacia, segĂșn, contra, durante.
Question words: qué, quién, cómo, cuåndo, dónde, cuånto, por qué, cuål.
The 50 verbs that run the language
Spanish conversation leans heavily on a small set of verbs. Master these in the present and simple past and you're functional:
ser, estar, haber, tener, hacer, poder, decir, ir, ver, dar, saber, querer, llegar, pasar, deber, poner, parecer, quedar, creer, hablar, llevar, dejar, seguir, encontrar, llamar, venir, pensar, salir, volver, tomar, conocer, vivir, sentir, mirar, contar, empezar, esperar, buscar, entrar, trabajar, escribir, perder, comer, beber, entender, pedir, recibir, recordar, terminar, necesitar.
Two of these deserve special attention: ser and estar both mean "to be" but are not interchangeable â we'll publish a full guide to that distinction soon.
People and relationships
hombre, mujer, niño, niña, amigo, amiga, familia, padre, madre, hijo, hija, hermano, hermana, abuelo, abuela, esposo, esposa, gente, persona, señor, señora, chico, chica, compañero, vecino, jefe.
Time
dĂa, noche, mañana, tarde, hora, minuto, semana, mes, año, hoy, ayer, ahora, despuĂ©s, antes, luego, pronto, tarde (adv.), temprano, siempre, nunca, a veces, momento, vez, tiempo, fin de semana, lunes, martes, miĂ©rcoles, jueves, viernes, sĂĄbado, domingo.
Places and things
casa, ciudad, paĂs, mundo, calle, lugar, tienda, escuela, trabajo, oficina, restaurante, hotel, playa, campo, coche, tren, aviĂłn, puerta, ventana, mesa, silla, cama, cocina, baño, agua, comida, pan, cafĂ©, leche, dinero, cosa, libro, telĂ©fono, ropa, zapato.
Descriptions
bueno, malo, grande, pequeño, nuevo, viejo, joven, alto, bajo, largo, corto, fĂĄcil, difĂcil, importante, posible, mejor, peor, bonito, feo, caro, barato, rĂĄpido, lento, feliz, triste, cansado, enfermo, caliente, frĂo, abierto, cerrado, lleno, vacĂo, primero, Ășltimo, prĂłximo.
Everyday essentials
sĂ, no, gracias, por favor, perdĂłn, hola, adiĂłs, bien, mal, muy, mĂĄs, menos, mucho, poco, tambiĂ©n, tampoco, aquĂ, allĂ, cerca, lejos, arriba, abajo, dentro, fuera, claro, vale, bueno (as a filler), entonces, ademĂĄs, quizĂĄs, casi, ya, todavĂa, sĂłlo.
Add numbers 1â100, colours, months and basic food vocabulary and you're at roughly 500 words â the working core of the language.
How to actually learn them
Reading a list teaches you very little; frequency lists are a map, not the journey. What works:
Learn in sentences, not in isolation. Don't memorise llevar â memorise llevo dos años aquĂ ("I've been here two years"). Context carries meaning and grammar for free.
Use spaced repetition. Ten minutes a day with flashcards (Anki or paper) beats a two-hour Sunday session. Review a word just before you'd forget it and it moves to long-term memory.
Prioritise recognition first, production second. Understanding these 500 words when heard is the fast route to following conversation. Producing them fluently comes with speaking practice.
Speak early. Vocabulary that you've used out loud in a real exchange sticks at a completely different rate to vocabulary you've only reviewed. Even one conversation a week transforms retention.
That last point is where most self-taught learners stall â lists and apps can't talk back. A tutor can. Parlazo connects you with vetted Spanish tutors for one-to-one video lessons, pay-per-lesson with no subscription, so you can put your first 500 words to work in real conversation this week.