Spanish Preterite Tense For Beginners
Easy rules, clear charts, and real-life examples so you can talk about finished past actions without the usual tense panic.
You will also hear this tense called el pretérito, pretérito indefinido, or pretérito perfecto simple. For normal human purposes, we are talking about the same beginner-friendly idea here: the Spanish tense for actions you see as finished in the past.
The first time I tried to tell a friend in Mexico City about my Saturday, I said things like iba al mercado and compraba tacos when I really meant one finished little weekend errand run. My Spanish did not sound dramatic or poetic. It sounded like I lived inside an endless time loop of tortillas. That rude little moment is exactly why the preterite matters: it helps you show that something happened and ended.
Once you get the basic logic, the preterite stops feeling like a grammar trap and starts feeling useful. You need it for things like “I arrived,” “we ate,” “she called,” “they left,” and “I finally found my keys,” which, frankly, is the kind of life Spanish learners actually want to talk about.
Yak Box: The Core Idea
Use the preterite when you see the action as finished. Think: I bought it, we arrived, she slept, they left. The action is done. Curtains closed. Tiny grammatical mic drop.
Finished action = preterite. Background, habit, or ongoing past action = usually imperfect.
When To Use The Preterite
A Completed Action
Compré pan. = “I bought bread.” One finished event.
Terminamos el proyecto. = “We finished the project.” Also finished, also blessedly over.
A Specific Time
Llegué a las ocho. = “I arrived at eight.” A clear point in time.
Vivimos allí por dos años. = “We lived there for two years.” A finished time period.
A Sequence Of Events
Me levanté, me bañé y salí. = “I got up, showered, and left.” One action after another.
Storytelling loves the preterite because stories keep moving.
A Beginning Or End
Empezó a llover. = “It started to rain.”
La clase terminó tarde. = “The class ended late.”
A Counted Action
Fuimos al banco tres veces. = “We went to the bank three times.”
A specific number usually pushes you toward the preterite.
A Main Event In A Story
Ayer vi a Laura y me dio la noticia. = “Yesterday I saw Laura and she gave me the news.”
Main plot events usually go in the preterite. The scene-setting stuff often does not.
A fast shortcut: if you can imagine the action as one whole block with a beginning and an end, the preterite is probably your friend.
Preterite Vs. Imperfect In One Minute
| Use | Focus | Spanish Example | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preterite | Finished action | Compré tortillas. | I bought tortillas. |
| Imperfect | Habit or repeated past action | Compraba tortillas los sábados. | I used to buy tortillas on Saturdays. |
| Preterite | Main event | Salí de la casa. | I left the house. |
| Imperfect | Background or ongoing action | Salía de la casa cuando me llamaste. | I was leaving the house when you called me. |
One useful mental image: the preterite is the action that the camera zooms in on, while the imperfect is the background, description, habit, or ongoing action around it.
Regular Preterite Endings
Regular verbs are actually pretty kind here. You get one set of endings for -ar verbs and one set for -er and -ir verbs.
| Subject | Hablar (to talk) | Comer (to eat) | Vivir (to live) |
|---|---|---|---|
| yo | hablé | comí | viví |
| tú | hablaste | comiste | viviste |
| él / ella / usted | habló | comió | vivió |
| nosotros / nosotras | hablamos | comimos | vivimos |
| ellos / ellas / ustedes | hablaron | comieron | vivieron |
Two Important Beginner Notes
- Watch the accents. In regular preterite forms, yo and él/ella/usted need them: hablé, habló, comí, comió. One missing little accent can make your sentence look like the present tense instead.
- Nosotros can look identical to the present tense in regular -ar and -ir verbs: hablamos can mean “we talk” or “we talked,” and vivimos can mean “we live” or “we lived.” Context does the heavy lifting.
Quick examples: Ayer hablé con mi hermana. = “Yesterday I talked with my sister.” / Comimos muy tarde. = “We ate very late.” / Vivieron en Guadalajara por un año. = “They lived in Guadalajara for a year.”
Spelling Changes You Actually Need
Some verbs look a little dramatic in the preterite, but usually they are just protecting pronunciation. Spanish is fussy about how words sound. Honestly, fair enough.
1) -Car, -Gar, And -Zar Verbs In The Yo Form
| Pattern | Change | English Meaning | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| buscar | busqué | to look for | Ayer busqué mis llaves por toda la casa. = Yesterday I looked for my keys all over the house. |
| llegar | llegué | to arrive | Llegué tarde porque hubo tráfico. = I arrived late because there was traffic. |
| almorzar | almorcé | to have lunch | Almorcé con mis compañeros. = I had lunch with my coworkers. |
The pattern is simple: c → qu, g → gu, and z → c, and it happens only in the yo form in the preterite.
2) Verbs Like Leer, Oír, Caer, And Construir
These verbs often change to y in the third person forms.
| Verb | English Meaning | Key Forms | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| leer | to read | leyó / leyeron | Leyó el mensaje y respondió de inmediato. = She read the message and answered right away. |
| oír | to hear | oyó / oyeron | Oyeron un ruido en la cocina. = They heard a noise in the kitchen. |
| caer | to fall | cayó / cayeron | Mi teléfono cayó al piso. = My phone fell to the floor. |
| construir | to build | construyó / construyeron | Construyeron una casa pequeña. = They built a small house. |
Notice that the weirdness lives in the third person forms: él/ella/usted and ellos/ellas/ustedes. Not everywhere. Spanish is selective with its chaos.
Stem-Changing -Ir Verbs In The Preterite
Here is the rule that saves a lot of beginner frustration: in the preterite, -ar and -er stem-changing verbs usually go back to normal, but -ir stem-changing verbs still change in the third person only.
| Verb | English Meaning | Él / Ella / Usted | Ellos / Ellas / Ustedes | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pedir | to ask for / to order | pidió | pidieron | Ella pidió café sin azúcar. = She ordered coffee without sugar. |
| dormir | to sleep | durmió | durmieron | Los niños durmieron temprano. = The children slept early. |
| sentir | to feel | sintió | sintieron | Sentí frío en la mañana, pero ella sintió calor. = I felt cold in the morning, but she felt hot. |
| vestirse | to get dressed | se vistió | se vistieron | Se vistió rápido y salió. = She got dressed quickly and left. |
| reír | to laugh | rió | rieron | Se rieron del chiste. = They laughed at the joke. |
Important: do not spread the stem change to every form. It is pedí, not pidí. It is dormimos, not durmimos. That little mistake shows up a lot.
The High-Frequency Irregular Verbs
If you learn the preterite and skip the common irregulars, you will understand the charts but still freeze in a real conversation. So let’s not do that to ourselves.
The Ones You Will See Constantly
| Verb | English Meaning | Key Forms | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| ser / ir | to be / to go | fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fueron | Ayer fui al centro. = Yesterday I went downtown. / La fiesta fue increíble. = The party was incredible. |
| dar | to give | di, diste, dio, dimos, dieron | Mi jefe me dio un consejo útil. = My boss gave me useful advice. |
| ver | to see | vi, viste, vio, vimos, vieron | Vi una película mexicana anoche. = I saw a Mexican movie last night. |
| hacer | to do / to make | hice, hiciste, hizo, hicimos, hicieron | Hice la tarea antes de cenar. = I did my homework before dinner. |
Ser and ir have the same preterite forms. Context tells you which one is meant. If there is a destination, movement, or a place after it, it is often ir: Fui a Oaxaca. If the sentence describes identity or a state, it is usually ser: La reunión fue corta.
Irregular Stem Families
Many irregular verbs share the same endings: -e, -iste, -o, -imos, -ieron. The main thing you memorize is the stem.
| Verb | English Meaning | Stem | Useful Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| tener | to have | tuv- | Tuve una idea mejor. = I had / got a better idea. |
| estar | to be | estuv- | Estuvimos en casa toda la tarde. = We were at home all afternoon. |
| poder | to be able to | pud- | No pude abrir la puerta. = I couldn’t manage to open the door. |
| poner | to put | pus- | Puse las llaves en la mesa. = I put the keys on the table. |
| saber | to know | sup- | Supe la verdad ayer. = I found out the truth yesterday. |
| venir | to come | vin- | Vinieron muy temprano. = They came very early. |
| querer | to want | quis- | Quise llamarte. = I tried / wanted to call you. |
| andar | to walk / to go around | anduv- | Anduvimos por el centro. = We walked around downtown. |
Then you get the j-stem verbs like decir → dij-, traer → traj-, and many -ducir verbs like conducir → conduj-. Their ellos/ellas/ustedes forms end in -eron, not -ieron: dijeron, trajeron, condujeron.
Examples: Me dijeron la verdad. = “They told me the truth.” / Trajeron postre. = “They brought dessert.” / Condujo hasta Puebla. = “He drove to Puebla.”
Meaning Changes That Surprise Beginners
Some verbs in the preterite do not just look different. They also feel different. This is one of those areas where learners stare at the sentence and wonder why Spanish decided to become philosophical. Here is the practical version.
| Verb | Imperfect Idea | Preterite Idea | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| poder | could / was able to | managed to / failed to manage | No podía abrirla = I couldn’t open it. / No pude abrirla = I didn’t manage to open it. |
| querer | wanted | tried to / refused (negative) | Quería salir = I wanted to leave. / No quiso salir = He refused to leave. |
| saber | knew | found out | Sabía su nombre = I knew his name. / Supe su nombre ayer = I found out his name yesterday. |
| conocer | knew / was acquainted with | met | Conocía a Marta = I knew Marta. / Conocí a Marta en Monterrey = I met Marta in Monterrey. |
| tener | had | got / received | Tenía una carta = He had a letter. / Tuvo una carta = He got a letter. |
You do not need to memorize every nuance on day one. Just remember the four big ones that show up all the time: poder, querer, saber, conocer.
Helpful Time Words And Story Words
These words and phrases often show up with the preterite because they point to finished events, sequence, or a specific moment. They are not magical grammar buttons, but they are useful clues.
| Spanish | English Meaning | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|
| ayer | yesterday | Ayer compré café. = Yesterday I bought coffee. |
| anoche | last night | Anoche vimos una serie. = Last night we watched a series. |
| anteayer | the day before yesterday | Anteayer hablé con mi primo. = The day before yesterday I talked with my cousin. |
| la semana pasada | last week | La semana pasada terminé el libro. = Last week I finished the book. |
| el año pasado | last year | El año pasado fui a Oaxaca. = Last year I went to Oaxaca. |
| hace dos días | two days ago | Hace dos días llegó el paquete. = The package arrived two days ago. |
| una vez | one time / once | Solo lo vi una vez. = I only saw him once. |
| entonces | then | Entonces entró el maestro. = Then the teacher came in. |
| primero | first | Primero cerré la ventana. = First I closed the window. |
| luego | then / later | Luego llamé a mi mamá. = Then I called my mom. |
| finalmente | finally | Finalmente encontramos un taxi. = Finally we found a taxi. |
| de repente | suddenly | De repente sonó el teléfono. = Suddenly the phone rang. |
One useful warning: a time word does not force the preterite every single time. You can still say Ayer llovía cuando salí if you are describing the background action “it was raining” while another finished action happened.
Practice The Preterite
Fill in each blank with the correct preterite form.
- Ayer yo __________ al trabajo a las ocho. (llegar)
- Mis amigos __________ tacos después de clase. (comer)
- Ella __________ un café y luego __________ de la cafetería. (pedir / salir)
- Nosotros __________ una película mexicana anoche. (ver)
- Yo __________ mis audífonos y finalmente los __________ debajo del sofá. (buscar / encontrar)
- El año pasado mis padres __________ a Puebla. (ir)
- Ellos no __________ responder el correo. (querer)
- De repente se fue la luz y nosotros no __________ ver nada. (poder)
- El paquete __________ ayer por la tarde. (llegar)
- ¿Tú __________ la verdad esa noche? (saber)
Check The Answers
- llegué — Ayer yo llegué al trabajo a las ocho.
- comieron — Mis amigos comieron tacos después de clase.
- pidió / salió — Ella pidió un café y luego salió de la cafetería.
- vimos — Nosotros vimos una película mexicana anoche.
- busqué / encontré — Yo busqué mis audífonos y finalmente los encontré debajo del sofá.
- fueron — El año pasado mis padres fueron a Puebla.
- quisieron or no quisieron if you say the full sentence as refusal — Ellos no quisieron responder el correo.
- pudimos — De repente se fue la luz y nosotros no pudimos ver nada.
- llegó — El paquete llegó ayer por la tarde.
- supiste — ¿Tú supiste la verdad esa noche? = “Did you find out the truth that night?”
Common Mistakes And Fast Fixes
- Mistake: using the imperfect for one finished event. Fix: If it happened and ended, choose the preterite. Ayer compré pan, not compraba pan, unless you mean “I used to buy bread.”
- Mistake: forgetting the accent in regular forms. Fix: Remember hablé, habló, comí, comió.
- Mistake: changing stem-changing -ir verbs in every form. Fix: Third person only: pidió, pidieron, but pedí, pediste, pedimos.
- Mistake: using leyó-style y changes everywhere. Fix: Keep them in the third person forms: leí, leíste, leyó, leyeron.
- Mistake: forgetting that ser and ir share forms. Fix: Use context. Fue divertido = “It was fun.” / Fue al cine = “He went to the movies.”
- Mistake: treating every past-time word as an automatic preterite trigger. Fix: Ask what the sentence is doing: finished event or background description?
Quick Reference Summary
| Need | Use This Idea | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Talk about one finished action | Preterite | Compré un libro. = I bought a book. |
| Talk about a repeated habit in the past | Imperfect | Compraba libros cada mes. = I used to buy books every month. |
| Tell a story step by step | Preterite | Entré, saludé y me senté. = I came in, greeted everyone, and sat down. |
| Set the scene or describe what was happening | Imperfect | Llovía y hacía frío. = It was raining and it was cold. |
| Use regular endings | -é, -aste, -ó / -í, -iste, -ió | hablé, hablaste, habló / comí, comiste, comió |
| Remember the weird but common ones | ser/ir, dar, ver, hacer, tener, poder, saber, querer | fui, dio, vi, hizo, tuve, pude, supe, quise |
Three Fast FAQs
Do I always use the preterite with ayer?
No. Ayer estudié is a finished action, so it uses the preterite. But Ayer estudiaba cuando me llamaste uses the imperfect for the background action estudiaba.
Why does hablamos mean both “we speak” and “we spoke”?
Because the present and preterite forms match in regular -ar verbs for nosotros. Context tells you the tense.
Do I need to learn every irregular verb at once?
No. Start with the most common ones you actually use: fui, hice, tuve, pude, dije, vi, dio, quise. That already covers a lot of real Spanish.
Final Yak
The preterite is not the “fancy past.” It is the finished past. Learn to spot one completed event, one clear timeline, or one chain of actions, and the tense becomes much less mysterious. Then memorize the common irregulars, keep an eye on accents, and practice with real sentences instead of just staring at charts like they personally betrayed you.
If the past action feels complete, box it up and use the preterite.





