How to Conjugate Querer in Spanish — All Tenses with Examples

How to Conjugate Querer in Spanish — All Tenses with Examples

How to Conjugate Querer in Spanish — All Tenses with Examples

Querer is one of the most emotionally loaded verbs in Spanish. It means “to want” and “to love” — context determines which. Te quiero. (I love you.) can mean “I love you” in the everyday, warm sense, or “I want you,” depending on the relationship and tone. Quiero un café. (I want a coffee.) is simply about what you want.

It’s also one of the most frequently used verbs in the language — and it’s irregular in several key tenses. That makes it exactly the kind of high-value verb we tell learners to master early. At VerbPal, we focus on getting verbs like querer into active use, not just recognition, because knowing the rule is not the same as producing quiero, quise, and querría correctly when you need them.

Quick facts: querer
Meaningto want; to love TypeIrregular — e→ie stem change (present); special preterite stem (quis-) Common phraseste quiero, ¿qué quieres?, quiero que, no quiero Full tableverbpal.com/conjugations/spanish/querer →

Present Tense — Presente

Querer is a stem-changing verb (e→ie) in the present. The stem changes in all forms except nosotros and vosotros.

PersonFormExample
yoquieroQuiero aprender español. (I want to learn Spanish.)
quieres¿Qué quieres hacer? (What do you want to do?)
él/ellaquiereQuiere venir con nosotros. (He wants to come with us.)
nosotrosqueremosQueremos un café. (We want a coffee.)
vosotrosqueréis¿Queréis postre? (Do you all want dessert?)
ellos/ellasquierenQuieren quedarse. (They want to stay.)

This is one of the first irregular patterns learners need to spot fast: quiero, quieres, quiere, quieren — but queremos and queréis. In VerbPal’s interactive conjugation charts, this pattern is easy to see at a glance, and our custom drills force you to type the forms yourself so the stem change becomes automatic instead of vaguely familiar.

Pro Tip: Practice the present in pairs: quiero / queremos, quieres / queréis, quiere / quieren. That contrast helps you remember where the stem change does and does not happen.


Preterite Tense — Pretérito Indefinido

The preterite is completely irregular with stem quis- and the same strong preterite endings used by venir, poder, and others:

PersonFormExample
yoquiseQuise llamarte antes. (I wanted to call you earlier.)
quisiste¿Por qué no quisiste venir? (Why didn’t you want to come?)
él/ellaquisoNo quiso escuchar. (He refused to listen.)
nosotrosquisimosQuisimos ayudar pero no pudimos. (We wanted to help but couldn’t.)
vosotrosquisisteis¿Quisisteis ir? (Did you all want to go?)
ellos/ellasquisieronQuisieron quedarse más tiempo. (They wanted to stay longer.)

Note: no quiso specifically implies refusal — “he refused to” — not just “he didn’t want to.” This is an important nuance in context.

This tense matters because querer changes meaning depending on context. In the preterite, it often points to a completed moment of wanting, trying, or refusing. That nuance is why we recommend drilling querer in sentence context, not as an isolated list. At VerbPal, we build this into production practice so you learn not just the form quiso, but the kind of meaning it tends to carry.

Action step: Write three short preterite sentences with quise, no quiso, and quisieron. If you hesitate on spelling, that is your cue to review the quis- stem until it comes out cleanly.


Imperfect Tense — Pretérito Imperfecto

The imperfect is regular for querer:

PersonFormExample
yoqueríaQuería ser médico. (I wanted / used to want to be a doctor.)
querías¿Qué querías de niño? (What did you want as a child?)
él/ellaqueríaQuería más tiempo. (He wanted more time.)
nosotrosqueríamosQueríamos ir pero llovía. (We wanted to go but it was raining.)
vosotrosqueríais¿Qué queríais? (What did you all want?)
ellos/ellasqueríanQuerían conocerte. (They wanted to meet you.)

Unlike the preterite, the imperfect describes ongoing, habitual, or background desire. That makes quería especially common in stories, descriptions, and polite softening. Learners often confuse quise and quería because both can translate as “wanted,” but they do different jobs.

Pro Tip: Test yourself with this contrast: Quería hablar contigo. (I wanted to talk to you / I was wanting to talk to you.) versus Quise hablar contigo. (I tried/wanted to talk to you at a specific moment.) If you can explain that difference out loud, you understand more than the chart.


Future Tense — Futuro Simple

The future uses the irregular stem querr-:

PersonFormExample
yoquerréSé que querré volver. (I know I’ll want to come back.)
querrás¿Querrás más después? (Will you want more later?)
él/ellaquerráQuerrá una explicación. (He’ll want an explanation.)
nosotrosquerremosQuerremos más detalles. (We’ll want more details.)
vosotrosquerréis¿Querréis venir? (Will you all want to come?)
ellos/ellasquerránQuerrán saber la verdad. (They’ll want to know the truth.)

The main trap here is spelling: learners know the sound, but under pressure they drop an r and write forms like queré or quería when they mean querré or querría. This is exactly why active recall matters. With spaced repetition based on the SM-2 algorithm, VerbPal keeps resurfacing the forms you are most likely to miss, so irregular stems like querr- stick for the long term instead of disappearing after one study session.

Action step: Say and write the stem trio in order: quier-, quis-, querr-. If you can map each stem to its tense immediately, you’re building the right mental shortcut.

Put it into practice
Knowing the rule is one thing — producing it under pressure is another. That's the gap our drills are built to close. If *quiero*, *quise*, and *querré* still blur together, run a focused querer drill in VerbPal and type every answer in full. Our system covers all tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive, so you train the exact forms that tend to break down in real conversation.

Conditional — Condicional Simple

Same querr- stem:

PersonForm
yoquerría
querrías
él/ellaquerría
nosotrosquerríamos
vosotrosquerríais
ellos/ellasquerrían

Querría hablar contigo. (I would like to speak with you.)

The conditional is often more useful than beginners expect because it softens requests and sounds more polite than the blunt present. It also shares the same irregular stem as the future, so these two tenses are worth studying together.

Pro Tip: Learn future and conditional as a pair: querré / querría, querrás / querrías, querrá / querría. Same stem, different endings.


Present Subjunctive — Presente de Subjuntivo

PersonForm
yoquiera
quieras
él/ellaquiera
nosotrosqueramos
vosotrosqueráis
ellos/ellasquieran

Espero que quieras venir. (I hope you want to come.)

No quiero que se quieran. (I don’t want them to love each other.)

This is one of the most useful subjunctive triggers in Spanish: quiero que… Learners see it constantly, but many still freeze when they have to produce the next verb correctly. We cover this pattern heavily in VerbPal because it sits right at the intersection of frequency and difficulty: common enough to matter every day, irregular enough to need deliberate practice.

Action step: Build three sentences starting with Quiero que…, No quiero que…, and Espero que… Then check whether the following verb is in the subjunctive.


Imperative — Imperativo

FormCommand
tú (affirmative)quiere
tú (negative)no quieras
ustedquiera
nosotrosqueramos
vosotrosquered
ustedesquieran

Quiere más a tu familia. (Love your family more.)

The imperative forms of querer are less common than the present or subjunctive, but they still appear in advice, slogans, and emotional language. Negative commands are especially useful because they connect directly to subjunctive forms: no quieras follows the same pattern you already know.

Pro Tip: If an imperative form feels strange, check whether it’s because the verb is rare as a command, not because the conjugation is wrong.


Non-Finite Forms

FormSpanish
Infinitivequerer
Gerundqueriendo
Past participlequerido

Siendo querido. (Being loved.) Ha querido siempre lo mejor. (He has always wanted the best.)

These forms matter because they show up inside larger structures: progressive forms, perfect tenses, and passive-style expressions. Querido is also common as an adjective or in letters, where context tells you whether it means “loved” or “dear.”

Action step: Add queriendo and querido to your review list even if they seem easy. Non-finite forms are often where small gaps hide.


Querer vs Amar — Two Ways to Say Love

quereramar
RegisterEveryday, warm, naturalMore formal, intense, literary
UsageWith family, friends, partnersDeeper love, often used in writing
ExampleTe quiero, mamá.Te amo con todo mi corazón.

In everyday speech, querer is by far the more common way to express love. Amar sounds more heightened — not wrong, but weightier.

That distinction matters because direct translation can mislead you. English learners often assume one Spanish verb must equal one English verb, but Spanish splits emotional meaning by register and context. Te quiero, mamá. (I love you, Mom.) and Te amo con todo mi corazón. (I love you with all my heart.) are both correct, but they do not land the same way.

Pro Tip: Default to querer for natural everyday speech unless you have a clear reason to choose the stronger tone of amar.


Essential Phrases with Querer

These chunks are worth memorizing as complete units. High-frequency phrases give you immediate speaking payoff, and they also reinforce the conjugations in realistic contexts. If you want one efficient study method, this is it: learn the form, then learn the phrase it lives in. That is why our drills at VerbPal push you to produce full answers rather than just recognize a stem on sight.

Action step: Pick three phrases from this list and use each one in your own sentence today.


Full Conjugation Table

Master querer across every tense
Review the full querer table, then drill it actively with VerbPal until quiero, quise, querría, and quiera come out without hesitation. Start your 7-day free trial and practice on iOS or Android.
Full querer table → Start free on VerbPal → Download for iOS → Download for Android →

Querer rewards careful study — the preterite irregularity trips up many learners, and the double-r in the future and conditional (querré, querría) is easy to spell wrong under pressure. Get these forms locked in and you’ll use querer naturally in every context — from ordering coffee to telling someone you love them.

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