Venir in Spanish

A personified yak Spanish teacher that explains venir in Spanish, present tense conjugation, and everyday uses.

Venir In Spanish: Easy Guide To Meanings, Present Tense, And Everyday Uses

Learn how venir works in Spanish, when it means to come, when it means something else, and how to stop mixing it up with ir. That little chaos gremlin of a verb gets much easier once you see the patterns.

Venir is one of the most useful Spanish verbs for daily life. You need it to say things like I’m coming, Where are you coming from?, and That works for me.

In beginner Spanish, the big win is this: venir usually points toward the speaker or the place they see as “here.” Once that clicks, a lot of confusion quietly packs its bags and leaves.

Yak Tip: Think “Come Toward Here”

If your point of view is here, use venir. If the movement goes there, use ir. Spanish loves this difference. English is looser and likes to be unhelpful about it.

¿Vienes a mi casa? = Are you coming to my house?

Voy a tu casa. = I’m going to your house.

What Venir Means In Spanish

Most of the time, venir means to come. But it also shows up in a few other very common patterns, especially venir de and venir + gerundio.

PatternEnglish MeaningExample 1Example 2
venirto comeÉl viene a las dos.
He’s coming at two.
¿Vienes conmigo?
Are you coming with me?
venir deto come fromVengo de la oficina.
I’m coming from the office.
Venimos de Monterrey.
We come from Monterrey.
venir + gerundioto have been doingVengo estudiando mucho.
I’ve been studying a lot.
¿Qué vienes haciendo?
What have you been doing?
venir bien / venir malto suit / to work well or badlyEl martes me viene bien.
Tuesday works well for me.
Hoy no me viene bien.
Today doesn’t work well for me.

Present Tense Conjugation Of Venir

Venir is irregular in the present tense. It changes in two ways: yo = vengo, and the stem changes from e → ie in most forms. Very polite of it to make things just a little dramatic.

SubjectFormEnglish MeaningExample
yovengoI come / I’m comingVengo ahora.
I’m coming now.
vienesyou come / you’re comingTú vienes temprano.
You’re coming early.
él / ella / ustedvienehe / she / you come(s)Usted viene mañana.
You’re coming tomorrow.
nosotros / nosotrasvenimoswe come / we’re comingVenimos en taxi.
We’re coming by taxi.
vosotros / vosotrasvenísyou all come / you’re comingVosotros venís conmigo.
You all are coming with me.
ellos / ellas / ustedesvienenthey / you all comeUstedes vienen después.
You all are coming later.

In Mexican Spanish, you will mostly use , usted, and ustedes. The vosotros form is mainly used in Spain, so learn it for recognition, but do not stress about using it in Mexico.

The Two Irregular Bits You Actually Need

Rule: The yo form is vengo, not veno. Spanish said no and moved on.

Example: Yo vengo de la tienda. = I’m coming from the store.

Rule: The stem changes from e to ie in vienes, viene, vienen, but not in venimos or venís.

Example: Ella viene hoy, pero nosotros venimos mañana. = She’s coming today, but we’re coming tomorrow.

Venir Vs Ir

This is the most common beginner problem, so let’s make it clean.

Use Venir

Use it when movement is toward the speaker or toward the place treated as “here.”

¿Vienes a la fiesta?
Are you coming to the party?

Mi mamá viene mañana.
My mom is coming tomorrow.

Use Ir

Use it when movement is away from the speaker or toward another place seen as “there.”

Voy a la fiesta.
I’m going to the party.

Mi mamá va al banco.
My mom is going to the bank.

Venir De = To Come From

Venir de is one of the first useful patterns to memorize because it appears everywhere in real speech.

  • ¿De dónde vienes? = Where are you coming from?
    Example: ¿De dónde vienes tan tarde? = Where are you coming from so late?
  • Vengo de casa. = I’m coming from home.
    Example: Vengo de casa de mi abuela. = I’m coming from my grandmother’s house.
  • Venimos de México. = We come from Mexico.
    Example: Venimos de México, pero vivimos en Texas. = We come from Mexico, but we live in Texas.

Venir + Gerundio = Have Been Doing

This pattern is not the very first thing beginners learn, but it is extremely useful once you start talking about ongoing actions over time.

Rule: Use venir + gerundio to talk about something that has been happening little by little or over a period of time.

Example: Vengo estudiando español desde enero. = I’ve been studying Spanish since January.

Example: La ciudad viene creciendo mucho. = The city has been growing a lot.

Useful Everyday Phrases With Venir

These are the phrases worth grabbing first because they show up in normal conversation all the time.

  • ¿Vienes conmigo? = Are you coming with me?
    Example: ¿Vienes conmigo al mercado? = Are you coming with me to the market?
  • Ya vengo. = I’m coming right back.
    Example: Espérame, ya vengo. = Wait for me, I’ll be right back.
  • Ven aquí. = Come here.
    Example: Ven aquí un momento, por favor. = Come here for a moment, please.
  • Vengo en cinco minutos. = I’ll be there in five minutes / I’m coming in five minutes.
    Example: No salgas; vengo en cinco minutos. = Don’t leave; I’ll be there in five minutes.
  • ¿Quién viene? = Who’s coming?
    Example: ¿Quién viene a cenar esta noche? = Who’s coming to dinner tonight?
  • ¿Te vienes? = Are you coming along?
    Example: Vamos por tacos. ¿Te vienes? = We’re going for tacos. Are you coming along?
  • Me viene bien. = That works well for me.
    Example: El jueves me viene bien. = Thursday works well for me.
  • No me viene bien. = That doesn’t work well for me.
    Example: Hoy no me viene bien salir. = Today doesn’t work well for me to go out.
  • ¿Qué viene después? = What comes next? / What happens next?
    Example: Terminé el ejercicio. ¿Qué viene después? = I finished the exercise. What comes next?
  • Se me vino una idea. = An idea came to me.
    Example: De repente se me vino una idea genial. = Suddenly a great idea came to me.
  • Vengo de trabajar. = I’m coming from work / I just got off work.
    Example: No puedo salir; vengo de trabajar y estoy cansado. = I can’t go out; I’m coming from work and I’m tired.
  • Viene lloviendo desde la mañana. = It’s been raining since the morning.
    Example: Trae paraguas; viene lloviendo desde temprano. = Bring an umbrella; it’s been raining since early.

Practice With Venir

Try these before peeking at the answers. Your brain deserves at least a tiny workout.

  1. Complete the sentence: Yo ___ de la escuela.
  2. Choose the correct verb: ¿___ a mi casa mañana? (vienes / vas)
  3. Translate: We’re coming now.
  4. Translate: Where are you coming from?
  5. Complete the sentence: Ustedes ___ tarde.
  6. Translate: Tuesday works for me.
Check The Answers
  1. vengoYo vengo de la escuela.
  2. vienes¿Vienes a mi casa mañana?
  3. Venimos ahora.
  4. ¿De dónde vienes?
  5. vienenUstedes vienen tarde.
  6. El martes me viene bien.

Common Mistakes And Fast Fixes

MistakeWhy It’s WrongFix
yo venoThe yo form is irregular.yo vengo
Vengo ahora. = I’m coming now.
Using ir when the meaning is “come here”Spanish separates come and go more clearly than English.Ven aquí. = Come here.
Not Ve aquí.
nosotros vienemosThe stem change does not happen in nosotros.nosotros venimos
Venimos mañana. = We’re coming tomorrow.
Forgetting de in “come from”Spanish needs the preposition.Vengo de Guadalajara. = I come from Guadalajara.
Using vosotros in Mexico by accidentIn Mexican Spanish, ustedes is the normal plural “you.”Ustedes vienen temprano. = You all are coming early.

Quick Reference Summary

  • venir usually means to come.
  • Use it for movement toward here.
  • Present tense: vengo, vienes, viene, venimos, venís, vienen.
  • The two main irregular bits are yo vengo and the e → ie change.
  • venir de = to come from.
    Vengo de casa. = I’m coming from home.
  • venir + gerundio = to have been doing.
    Vengo leyendo mucho. = I’ve been reading a lot.
  • me viene bien = that works for me.
    El lunes me viene bien. = Monday works for me.

Final Yak

If you remember only one thing, remember this: venir = come toward here. Then lock in vengo and venimos, and you already have the backbone of the verb. The rest is just repetition, examples, and a little patience with Spanish being Spanish.

Mini recap sentence: Vengo de casa y vengo estudiando español todos los días.
I’m coming from home, and I’ve been studying Spanish every day.