The Best YouTube Channels for Learning Spanish in 2026
YouTube is a goldmine of free Spanish input — if you know where to look. Here are the best channels for every level, from absolute beginner to advanced, and how to use them properly.
YouTube might be the best free Spanish resource ever created — thousands of hours of comprehensible input, native speech at every level, and content on whatever you actually enjoy. The problem isn't finding Spanish on YouTube; it's finding the right Spanish for your level. Here's our guide, organised from beginner to advanced.
For complete beginners
Dreaming Spanish — the gold standard for comprehensible input. Hundreds of videos where teachers speak slowly and clearly, using gestures and drawings so you understand from context alone, no translation required. The "superbeginner" playlists genuinely work from day one, and the channel's whole philosophy — acquire the language by understanding messages, not by memorising rules — is backed by decades of research.
Spanish Playground and Español con Juan (beginner playlists) — short, structured videos that introduce core vocabulary and phrases at a gentle pace.
Butterfly Spanish — Ana's explanations of pronunciation and beginner grammar are warm, clear and thorough. Ideal when you want something explained rather than just absorbed.
For intermediate learners
This is the level where most people get stuck, and where YouTube shines brightest.
Español con Juan — Juan speaks entirely in Spanish about everyday topics, his life and Spanish culture, with natural humour and constant recycling of useful structures. It feels like listening to a chatty friend rather than taking a class.
Easy Spanish — street interviews with real people in Spain and Latin America, subtitled in both Spanish and English. Brilliant for hearing genuine, unscripted speech at natural speed, complete with fillers, interruptions and regional accents.
Why Not Spanish? — a Colombian teacher and her American husband; conversations that model exactly the kind of exchanges a learner needs, with clear Colombian pronunciation.
Linguriosa — Elena explains Spanish grammar and the history of the language in fast, funny, beautifully produced videos — in Spanish. When you can follow Linguriosa, your Spanish is genuinely progressing.
For advanced learners
At this stage, stop watching "learning Spanish" content and start watching Spanish content.
Documentaries and journalism: DW Español and BBC News Mundo publish serious reporting daily. Interviews and entertainment: La Resistencia clips (rapid-fire Madrid humour — the final boss of listening comprehension) or TED en Español for clearly delivered talks on every subject.
The principle: find the Spanish-language version of whatever you already watch. Cooking, chess, fitness, gaming, history — it all exists in Spanish, and interest is the strongest predictor of sticking with it.
How to actually learn from YouTube
Passive watching is pleasant but slow. Three habits multiply the value:
Use Spanish subtitles, not English. English subtitles turn Spanish audio into background noise — your brain reads and stops listening. Spanish subtitles connect sound to spelling and keep you in the language.
Rewatch. The second viewing of a video teaches more than the first viewing of a new one. Familiarity frees your brain to notice structure and pronunciation.
Steal phrases. Keep a note open. When you hear a phrase you'd like to say, write it down exactly as spoken. Five phrases per video is a sustainable, powerful habit.
The missing ingredient
YouTube gives you unlimited input, but input alone doesn't make you a speaker — at some point, someone needs to listen to you, correct you and push you slightly beyond what's comfortable. That's the one thing no channel can do.
That's where Parlazo comes in: one-to-one video lessons with vetted Spanish tutors, pay-per-lesson with no subscription. Watch the videos all week, then bring what you've stolen to a real conversation.