What Are the 20 Basic Spanish Verbs? (With Conjugations and Examples)

What Are the 20 Basic Spanish Verbs? (With Conjugations and Examples)

What Are the 20 Basic Spanish Verbs?

Every language has a core. A small group of verbs that do the heavy lifting in everyday conversation — the ones that appear in virtually every exchange, in every sentence type, across every topic.

In Spanish, these 20 verbs are that core. Get them automatic across the present tense, and you can communicate. Add the past tense, and you can hold real conversations. These are the verbs worth drilling first.

At VerbPal, this is exactly how we want beginners to think: not in terms of memorizing huge vocabulary lists, but in terms of mastering the verbs that let you actually build sentences. Once these forms are in your fingers — not just in your head — the rest of Spanish gets much easier.


The 20 Basic Spanish Verbs

The core 20 — sorted by conversational frequency
ser — to be (permanent)
estar — to be (temporary)
tener — to have
hacer — to do / make
ir — to go
poder — to be able to / can
decir — to say / tell
saber — to know (facts/skills)
querer — to want / love
venir — to come
dar — to give
ver — to see
hablar — to speak / talk
llevar — to carry / take / wear
pasar — to pass / happen / spend (time)
deber — to owe / must
poner — to put / place
salir — to leave / go out
pensar — to think
encontrar — to find / meet

Let’s look at each one in more depth — with present tense conjugations and real usage examples.

Action step: Pick five of these verbs and say them out loud in full today. Then type them from memory. Recognition is a start; production is the goal.


1. Ser — To Be (Permanent / Inherent Qualities)

Used for identity, origin, profession, characteristics that don’t change.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
soyeresessomossoisson

Soy de México. (I am from Mexico.) Ella es médica. (She is a doctor.) Somos amigos. (We are friends.)

When learners confuse ser and estar, the problem usually is not understanding the rule — it is retrieving the right verb quickly enough in context. In VerbPal, we drill these high-confusion pairs through active recall so you have to produce the form yourself instead of just recognizing it.


2. Estar — To Be (Temporary States / Locations)

Used for feelings, conditions, locations — things that can change.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
estoyestásestáestamosestáisestán

Estoy cansado. (I am tired.) ¿Dónde estás? (Where are you?) El libro está en la mesa. (The book is on the table.)


3. Tener — To Have

Possession, age, and many idiomatic expressions (tener hambre, tener miedo).

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
tengotienestienetenemostenéistienen

Tengo dos perros. (I have two dogs.) ¿Tienes tiempo? (Do you have time?) Tenemos que hablar. (We have to talk.)


4. Hacer — To Do / To Make

One of the most versatile verbs in the language.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
hagohaceshacehacemoshacéishacen

¿Qué haces? (What are you doing?) Hace frío. (It is cold.) Hago ejercicio cada mañana. (I exercise every morning.)


5. Ir — To Go

Highly irregular — and essential. Also used for the near future: ir a + infinitive.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
voyvasvavamosvaisvan

Voy al trabajo. (I go to work.) ¿A dónde vas? (Where are you going?) Vamos a comer juntos. (We are going to eat together.)

Pro tip: Learn ir as both a standalone verb and a future-building tool. Practice three quick patterns: voy, vas, vamos a + infinitive. If you can produce those fast, you can say a lot very early.


6. Poder — To Be Able To / Can

Modal verb for ability, possibility, permission.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
puedopuedespuedepodemospodéispueden

No puedo venir. (I can’t come.) ¿Puedes ayudarme? (Can you help me?) Podemos salir más tarde. (We can leave later.)


7. Decir — To Say / To Tell

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
digodicesdicedecimosdecísdicen

Dice que no viene. (He/She says that he/she isn’t coming.) ¿Qué dijiste? (What did you say?) Siempre digo la verdad. (I always tell the truth.)


8. Saber — To Know (Facts, Information, Skills)

Distinct from conocer (to know a person or place).

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
sabessabesabemossabéissaben

No sé la respuesta. (I don’t know the answer.) ¿Sabes cocinar? (Do you know how to cook?) Sabe mucho de historia. (He/She knows a lot about history.)


9. Querer — To Want / To Love

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
quieroquieresquierequeremosqueréisquieren

Quiero un café. (I want a coffee.) Te quiero. (I love you.) ¿Qué quieres hacer? (What do you want to do?)


10. Venir — To Come

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
vengovienesvienevenimosvenísvienen

¿Vienes a la fiesta? (Are you coming to the party?) Vengo del trabajo. (I am coming from work.) Vienen mañana. (They are coming tomorrow.)

Action step: Group these verbs by pattern, not just by meaning. For example: tener / venir share a yo-form change (tengo, vengo), and poder / querer share stem changes. In our VerbPal drills, this kind of pattern grouping helps learners spot irregularity faster and retain it longer.


11. Dar — To Give

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
doydasdadamosdaisdan

Dame el libro. (Give me the book.) Le di las gracias. (I thanked him/her.) Nos da miedo. (It scares us.)


12. Ver — To See

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
veovesvevemosveisven

¿Ves eso? (Do you see that?) Veo la tele. (I watch TV.) Nos vemos mañana. (See you tomorrow.)


13. Hablar — To Speak / To Talk

A regular -ar verb — a good template for learning the pattern.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
hablohablashablahablamoshabláishablan

Hablo español. (I speak Spanish.) ¿Hablas inglés? (Do you speak English?) Hablan muy rápido. (They speak very fast.)

Regular verbs matter because they give you the default pattern. Once you know what “normal” looks like, irregular verbs stand out more clearly. That is why we include both regular templates and irregular high-frequency verbs in VerbPal, across all tenses, reflexives, and even the subjunctive — not as isolated facts, but as production practice.

Put it into practice
Knowing the rule is one thing — producing it under pressure is another. That is the gap our drills are built to close. VerbPal uses spaced repetition with the SM-2 algorithm, so the verbs you struggle with come back at the right time until they stick.
Practice these verbs at verbpal.com →

14. Llevar — To Carry / Take / Wear

Flexible verb with several common uses.

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
llevollevasllevallevamoslleváisllevan

Llevo las bolsas. (I carry the bags.) ¿Qué llevas puesto? (What are you wearing?) Llevo tres años aquí. (I have been here for three years.)


15. Pasar — To Pass / To Happen / To Spend Time

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
pasopasaspasapasamospasáispasan

¿Qué pasó? (What happened?) Paso mucho tiempo en casa. (I spend a lot of time at home.) Pasa por aquí. (Come by here / Pass by here.)


16. Deber — To Must / Should / To Owe

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
debodebesdebedebemosdebéisdeben

Debes estudiar. (You should study.) Debo ir. (I must go.) ¿Cuánto te debo? (How much do I owe you?)


17. Poner — To Put / Place / Set

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
pongoponesponeponemosponéisponen

Pon la mesa. (Set the table.) Pongo la música. (I put on the music.) ¿Dónde pongo esto? (Where do I put this?)


18. Salir — To Leave / Go Out

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
salgosalessalesalimossalíssalen

Salgo a las ocho. (I leave at eight.) ¿A qué hora sales? (What time are you leaving?) Salimos el viernes. (We leave on Friday.)


19. Pensar — To Think

Stem-changing verb (e→ie).

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
piensopiensaspiensapensamospensáispiensan

¿Qué piensas? (What do you think?) Pienso que sí. (I think so.) No pienso en eso. (I don’t think about that.)


20. Encontrar — To Find / To Meet

Stem-changing verb (o→ue).

yoél/ellanosotrosvosotrosellos
encuentroencuentrasencuentraencontramosencontráisencuentran

No lo encuentro. (I can’t find it.) ¿Dónde nos encontramos? (Where are we meeting?) Encontró su pasaporte. (He/She found his/her passport.)

Pro tip: After you learn the present tense, revisit these same 20 verbs in the preterite, imperfect, and near future. High-frequency verbs deserve repeated review. That is why our VerbPal study path keeps recycling them in new contexts instead of letting them disappear after one lesson.


Now Drill Them Until They’re Automatic

Reading this list builds recognition. Drilling it builds fluency.

The difference between knowing these 20 verbs and using them in real conversation comes down to one thing: how fast you can produce the right form on demand. That speed only comes from active, repeated practice.

For serious learners, passive review is not enough. You need to type the answer, retrieve it from memory, and see the same verb again just before you would have forgotten it. That is the logic behind how we built VerbPal: active production first, then smart review scheduling. Start with these 20, then expand into past tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive.

Action step: Build a one-week verb routine. Day 1–2: present tense only. Day 3–4: mix meaning and conjugation. Day 5–7: produce full sentences from memory. If you want that system already built for you, use our drills instead of guessing what to review next.

Master these 20 basic Spanish verbs with daily production practice
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