A personified yak Spanish teacher that explains Spanish word order with clear sentence examples.

Word Order In Spanish Sentences (Without Headaches)

Spanish word order is way more flexible than English… but it’s not chaos. Learn the default pattern, when Spanish “flips” things, and where pronouns/adjectives actually go—with copy-pasteable examples.

The Yak Box: Your One-Sentence Truth

Default Spanish word order is S + V + O (Subject + Verb + Object), but Spanish moves parts around for emphasis, style, and clarity—especially by putting the subject later.

Translation reality check: Spanish sentences often drop the subject because the verb ending already tells you who’s doing it. So yes, the “S” is frequently invisible. Sneaky, but helpful.

The Basic Word Order (The Safe Default)

Default pattern: Subject + Verb + Object. Use this when you’re unsure. It’s totally natural.

S + V + O

Yo como tacos.
(I eat tacos.)

Mi hermana compra pan.
(My sister buys bread.)

Nosotros necesitamos ayuda.
(We need help.)

Verb-First (Subject Often Dropped)

Como tacos.
(I eat tacos.)

Compramos pan.
(We buy bread.)

Necesito ayuda.
(I need help.)

Same meaning, just less “extra” about the subject.

When Spanish Changes the Order (And Why)

Spanish moves word order mainly to answer a vibe question: “What part do you want to spotlight?” The most common shift is putting the subject after the verb.

GoalCommon OrderSpanish ExampleEnglish Meaning
Neutral, everydayS + V + OMi mamá llegó.My mom arrived.
Sounds “news-like” / natural with arrivalsV + SLlegó mi mamá.My mom arrived.
Emphasis on the objectO + V (+ S)Ese libro lo compré yo.That book, I bought it.
Set the scene first (time/place)Time/Place + sentenceHoy trabajo desde casa.Today I’m working from home.

That V + S pattern shows up a lot with things like arriving, appearing, happening, dying (cheery!), and existing.

  • Pasó algo raro. (Something weird happened.)
  • Apareció un perro. (A dog showed up.)
  • Faltan dos sillas. (Two chairs are missing.)

Questions: Do You Have to Flip the Order?

Not always. Spanish can ask yes/no questions with just intonation (and the question marks, please).

Yes/No Questions

¿Tú vienes mañana?
(Are you coming tomorrow?)

¿Vienes mañana?
(Are you coming tomorrow?)

¿Mañana vienes?
(Are you coming tomorrow? / Tomorrow, you’re coming?)

Wh- Questions (The Wh-Word Goes First)

¿Dónde vives?
(Where do you live?)

¿Qué quieres comer?
(What do you want to eat?)

¿Cuándo llega tu hermano?
(When does your brother arrive?)

Notice how the subject often slides later: ¿Cuándo llega tu hermano? is more natural than forcing the subject first.

Adjectives: Why “Green Car” Becomes “Car Green”

Most adjectives go after the noun in Spanish. That’s the default you should trust.

  • un carro verde (a green car)
  • una casa grande (a big house)
  • una comida rica (a tasty meal)

But some adjectives can move before the noun to change the feel—or even the meaning.

Before NounMeaningAfter NounMeaning
un viejo amigoa longtime friendun amigo viejoan elderly friend
una gran ideaa great ideauna idea grandea big (large) idea
mi pobre perromy poor (sad) dogmi perro pobremy dog that is poor

Quick survival tip: when you see an adjective before the noun, it often sounds more emotional, poetic, or “speaker opinion” flavored.

Object Pronouns: The Tiny Words That Cause Big Drama

These are the common object pronouns (the “it / him / her / them / to me” words).

Direct Object (What?)

  • lo (it / him)
  • la (it / her)
  • los / las (them)
  • me / te / nos (me / you / us)

¿Tienes el café?Sí, lo tengo.
(Do you have the coffee? → Yes, I have it.)

Indirect Object (To/For Whom?)

  • le (to him/her/you formal)
  • les (to them/you all formal)
  • me / te / nos (to me / to you / to us)

Le doy el café a mi mamá.
(I give the coffee to my mom.)

Where Pronouns Go (The Real Rule)

SituationPronoun PositionSpanish ExampleEnglish Meaning
Conjugated verbBefore the verbLo quiero.I want it.
Infinitive (two verbs)Before the first verb OR attached to infinitiveLo voy a comprar. / Voy a comprarlo.I’m going to buy it.
Gerund (-ando/-iendo)Before the helper OR attached to gerundTe estoy llamando. / Estoy llamándote.I’m calling you.
Affirmative commandAttach to the commandDímelo.Tell it to me.
Negative commandBefore the verbNo me lo digas.Don’t tell it to me.

And when you have two pronouns (indirect + direct), the usual order is:

(me/te/le/nos/les) + (lo/la/los/las)

Me lo das.
(You give it to me.)

One more rule that pops up a lot in real Mexican Spanish: le/les becomes se before lo/la/los/las.

Le doy el libro → Se lo doy.
(I give him/her the book → I give it to him/her.)

Negation And Adverbs: “No” Has a Favorite Spot

No normally goes right before the verb (or before the helper verb in a two-verb phrase).

  • No tengo tiempo. (I don’t have time.)
  • No voy a salir. (I’m not going to go out.)
  • No he comido. (I haven’t eaten.)

Adverbs (like “always,” “sometimes,” “well”) often go after the verb, but they can move for emphasis.

  • Trabajo mucho. (I work a lot.)
  • Siempre llegas tarde. (You always arrive late.)
  • Hablas muy bien español. (You speak Spanish very well.)

Time And Place: Flexible, But Not Random

Time/place phrases can go at the beginning to set the scene, or at the end to keep things neutral.

Scene First

Hoy voy al gimnasio.
(Today I’m going to the gym.)

En México comemos tacos muy seguido.
(In Mexico we eat tacos very often.)

Neutral Ending

Voy al gimnasio hoy.
(I’m going to the gym today.)

Comemos tacos muy seguido en México.
(We eat tacos very often in Mexico.)

Useful Sentence Patterns You Can Steal

These are high-utility patterns that sound natural in everyday Spanish (including Mexico). Each one shows you a “normal” order you can copy.

  • Me gusta + noun/infinitive = I like…
    Me gusta el café. (I like coffee.)
    Me gusta caminar. (I like walking.)
  • ¿Te puedo + infinitive? = Can I… for you? / Can I…?
    ¿Te puedo ayudar? (Can I help you?)
  • Se me hace + adjective/noun = It seems… to me (common in Mexico)
    Se me hace difícil. (It seems hard to me.)
    Se me hace buena idea. (It seems like a good idea to me.)
  • Acabo de + infinitive = I just…
    Acabo de llegar. (I just arrived.)
  • Tengo que + infinitive = I have to…
    Tengo que estudiar. (I have to study.)
  • Quiero + infinitive = I want to…
    Quiero descansar. (I want to rest.)
  • Lo/la + verb = it/him/her + verb (pronoun before verb)
    Lo necesito. (I need it.)
  • Verb + mucho/poco = a lot/a little
    Trabajo mucho. (I work a lot.)
  • Primero… luego… = first… then…
    Primero comemos, luego salimos. (First we eat, then we go out.)
  • Ya + verb = already / (often: “come on, it’s done”)
    Ya terminé. (I already finished.)
  • Aquí/ahí/allá + verb = here/there + verb (pointing + action)
    Aquí está tu pedido. (Here is your order.)
  • Mejor + verb = better to…
    Mejor vamos mañana. (Better we go tomorrow.)

Practice: Fix The Word Order

Reorder each set into a natural Spanish sentence. (Multiple answers can be correct—aim for the most normal everyday option.)

  1. hoy / voy / al trabajo
  2. mi primo / llegó / ayer
  3. no / lo / encuentro
  4. quiero / comprar / lo
  5. ¿dónde / vives / tú?
  6. una / idea / gran
  7. se / lo / doy
  8. estoy / llamando / te
  9. en la cocina / está / el gato
  10. ese café / lo / hice / yo
Show Suggested Answers

1) Hoy voy al trabajo. (Today I’m going to work.)

2) Mi primo llegó ayer. / Ayer llegó mi primo. (My cousin arrived yesterday.)

3) No lo encuentro. (I can’t find it.)

4) Lo quiero comprar. / Quiero comprarlo. (I want to buy it.)

5) ¿Dónde vives? / ¿Dónde vives tú? (Where do you live?)

6) Una gran idea. (A great idea.)

7) Se lo doy. (I give it to him/her/you.)

8) Te estoy llamando. / Estoy llamándote. (I’m calling you.)

9) El gato está en la cocina. / En la cocina está el gato. (The cat is in the kitchen.)

10) Ese café lo hice yo. (That coffee, I made it.)

Common Mistakes (And Quick Fixes)

  • Mistake: Putting object pronouns after a conjugated verb.
    Not: “Quiero lo.”
    Fix: Lo quiero. / Quiero comprarlo. (I want it. / I want to buy it.)
  • Mistake: Forgetting se before lo/la.
    Not: “Le lo doy.”
    Fix: Se lo doy. (I give it to him/her/you.)
  • Mistake: Using English adjective order every time.
    Not (usually): “una verde casa”
    Fix: una casa verde (a green house)
  • Mistake: Wh-words not in front.
    Not: “Vives dónde?”
    Fix: ¿Dónde vives? (Where do you live?)
  • Mistake: Placing no too late.
    Not: “Tengo no tiempo.”
    Fix: No tengo tiempo. (I don’t have time.)

Quick Reference Summary

What You Want To DoUse This OrderSpanish ExampleEnglish Meaning
Say a normal sentenceS + V + O (or drop S)(Yo) compro frutas.(I) buy fruit.
Sound natural with “arrive/happen/appear”V + SLlegó mi amiga.My friend arrived.
Ask a yes/no questionSame order + question marks¿Vienes hoy?Are you coming today?
Ask a wh- questionWh-word first¿Qué necesitas?What do you need?
Use an adjective normallyNoun + adjectiveun carro nuevoa new car
Use object pronounsPronoun before conjugated verbLo entiendo.I understand it.
Two verbsPronoun before first verb or attachedLo voy a ver. / Voy a verlo.I’m going to see it.
Say “don’t”No + verbNo me digas.Don’t tell me.

Final Yak

If you remember only three things, remember these: (1) SVO is safe, (2) Spanish loves verb-then-subject for lots of natural situations, and (3) tiny pronouns go before conjugated verbs (or get attached to infinitives/gerunds/affirmative commands). That’s basically 80% of the game.