100 Most Common Spanish Words (and How to Actually Learn Them)
The 100 highest-frequency Spanish words, grouped by type, with a practical method for making them stick — not just memorising a list.
Around 1,000 words account for roughly 80% of everyday Spanish conversation — and the first 100 do a surprising amount of that work. Learn these and you'll start recognising the skeleton of almost every sentence you hear.
This isn't a list to memorise in one sitting. It's a map. Below you'll find the 100 most common Spanish words grouped by type, followed by a method for actually learning them — because a list you read once is a list you forget.
Articles and determiners
- el / la — the (masculine / feminine)
- un / una — a, an
- los / las — the (plural)
- este / esta — this
- ese / esa — that
- mi — my
- tu — your
- su — his, her, their, your (formal)
- todo — all, everything
- cada — each, every
Pronouns
- yo — I
- tú — you (informal)
- él — he
- ella — she
- usted — you (formal)
- nosotros — we
- ellos / ellas — they
- me — me, myself
- te — you (object)
- lo / la — it, him / her
- le — to him, to her, to you
- se — oneself, himself, herself
- nos — us
- algo — something
- nada — nothing
- alguien — someone
- nadie — no one
- esto — this (neutral)
- eso — that (neutral)
- qué — what
The essential verbs
These ten verbs appear constantly. Learn their present tense first and worry about the rest later.
- ser — to be (permanent)
- estar — to be (temporary, location)
- haber — to have (auxiliary); hay = there is
- tener — to have
- hacer — to do, to make
- ir — to go
- poder — to be able to, can
- decir — to say
- querer — to want
- saber — to know (facts)
More high-frequency verbs
- ver — to see
- dar — to give
- venir — to come
- hablar — to speak
- llevar — to carry, to wear
- dejar — to leave, to let
- pasar — to pass, to happen
- deber — must, to owe
- poner — to put
- creer — to believe
- llegar — to arrive
- tomar — to take, to drink
- vivir — to live
- sentir — to feel
- trabajar — to work
- necesitar — to need
- gustar — to like (literally: to please)
- encontrar — to find
- pensar — to think
- salir — to go out, to leave
Prepositions and connectors
Small words, enormous workload.
- de — of, from
- en — in, on
- a — to, at
- por — for, by, through
- para — for, in order to
- con — with
- sin — without
- sobre — about, on top of
- entre — between
- hasta — until
- y — and
- o — or
- pero — but
- porque — because
- si — if
- como — like, as
- cuando — when
- donde — where
- que — that, which
- también — also
Adverbs and everyday essentials
- no — no, not
- sí — yes
- muy — very
- más — more
- menos — less
- bien — well
- mal — badly
- aquí — here
- allí — there
- ahora — now
- después — after, later
- antes — before
- siempre — always
- nunca — never
- hoy — today
- mañana — tomorrow
- ayer — yesterday
- mucho — a lot
- poco — a little
- otro — other, another
How to actually learn these (not just read them)
Reading a list feels productive. It isn't — not on its own. Here's what works:
Learn in chunks of ten. Ten words a day for ten days beats a hundred in one sitting. Frequency words are abstract — "de", "que", "se" — so they need repeated exposure in context, not brute-force memorisation.
Meet them in sentences, not isolation. "Quiero un café" teaches you querer, un and a noun in one go. Every word above becomes far easier to remember once you've seen it doing its job.
Prioritise the verbs. The ten essential verbs (31–40) unlock more Spanish than any other ten words on this list. If you learn just their yo / tú / él forms in the present tense, you can already build hundreds of sentences.
Say them out loud. Silent reading builds recognition; speaking builds recall. They're different skills, and conversation needs the second one.
Use them with a real person. This is the step most self-learners skip, and it's why so many people can read Spanish but freeze when speaking. A conversation partner forces retrieval under mild pressure — which is exactly what makes vocabulary stick.
Where to go from here
Once these 100 feel familiar, the next milestone is around 500 words — enough to hold simple conversations about daily life. The fastest route between the two isn't another list: it's regular speaking practice, where high-frequency words come up naturally dozens of times per session.
If you'd like to put these words to work in real conversation, Parlazo connects you with vetted Spanish tutors for one-to-one video lessons — pay per lesson, no subscription. Your first hundred words are waiting to be used.