A personified yak Spanish teacher that teaches traer in Spanish, conjugation, and traer vs llevar.

Traer In Spanish: Meaning, Conjugation, And Traer Vs Llevar

Learn how to use traer in real-life Spanish, from “bring” to the very Mexican “wear,” without turning every sentence into a tiny grammar crime.

The first time I heard ¿Qué traes puesto? in Mexico, my brain did a full dramatic collapse. I knew traer as “to bring,” so for one embarrassing second I basically translated it as “What are you bringing on your body?” Not my sharpest bilingual moment.

That is exactly why traer trips people up. It usually means to bring, yes. But in everyday Spanish, and especially in Mexican Spanish, it can also mean to have on you, to be carrying, or to be wearing. Add llevar into the mix and things get messy fast.

This guide clears it up with simple rules, useful conjugation, real examples, and the meanings adults actually run into in restaurants, offices, airports, family chats, and normal life. Wild concept, I know.

Yak Box: The Fast Answer

Traer usually means to bring something toward the speaker or destination in focus. Think of it like venir, but for things or people you are bringing.

In Mexican Spanish, traer also commonly means to have with you or to have on / be wearing: No traigo efectivo = “I don’t have cash on me,” and ¿Qué traes puesto? = “What are you wearing?”

What Traer Means In Spanish

To Bring

English meaning: to bring, to bring over, to bring back

Example: ¿Me traes un café?
Will you bring me a coffee?

To Have On You

English meaning: to have with you, to be carrying

Example: No traigo mi cartera.
I don’t have my wallet with me.

To Wear

English meaning: to be wearing, to have on

Example: Hoy traigo una chamarra negra.
Today I’m wearing a black jacket.

To Cause

English meaning: to bring about, to cause

Example: Esa decisión trae problemas.
That decision causes problems.

So yes, traer is one of those verbs that starts out looking friendly and then quietly collects extra jobs. Very efficient. Slightly rude.

The Big Rule: Bring Here, Take There

The easiest way to stop confusing traer and llevar is this: focus on direction and perspective.

Traer points toward here. Llevar points away from here.

Another useful trick: traer works a lot like venir, and llevar works a lot like ir. If the destination feels like “here” from the speaker’s point of view, traer usually wins.

VerbCore IdeaSpanish ExampleEnglish Meaning
traertoward hereTe traigo tu laptop.I’m bringing you your laptop.
llevarfrom here to thereLlevo la laptop a la oficina.I’m taking the laptop to the office.
venircome here¿Vienes mañana?Are you coming tomorrow?
irgo thereVoy mañana.I’m going tomorrow.

Traer Vs Llevar In Real-Life Spanish

These side-by-side examples are where the fog usually clears. Read them slowly and picture the destination each time.

SituationSpanishEnglish Meaning
You are going to a friend’s house with dessert.Voy a llevar un pastel a tu casa.I’m going to take a cake to your house.
Your friend is already at home and wants dessert there.Perfecto, trae un pastel.Perfect, bring a cake.
You drop the kids off at school.Voy a llevar a los niños a la escuela.I’m going to take the kids to school.
You bring them back home later.Después los traigo a la casa.I’ll bring them home afterward.
You take boxes to another office.Llevé las cajas a la otra oficina.I took the boxes to the other office.
You bring towels to someone where they are.Te traigo las toallas en un minuto.I’ll bring you the towels in a minute.

Rule → Example

If the destination is where the speaker is, use traer.
¿Me traes hielo? = Will you bring me ice?

If the destination is somewhere else, use llevar.
Lleva hielo a la fiesta. = Take ice to the party.

Traer As “Wear” In Mexican Spanish

This is the meaning that surprises many learners. In Mexican Spanish, traer often means to have something on or to be wearing it. You will hear this with clothes, accessories, makeup, perfume, even things like a backpack or keys.

That does not mean llevar is wrong. Llevar is also common for “to wear,” and in many places it sounds more neutral. But in Mexico, traer and especially traer puesto are very natural in daily speech.

PatternEnglish MeaningExample Sentence
traer + clothingto be wearingHoy traigo botas. = Today I’m wearing boots.
traer puestoto have on¿Qué traes puesto? = What are you wearing?
no traer + itemnot to have on youNo traigo efectivo. = I don’t have cash on me.
traer + accessoryto have / be wearingElla trae unos aretes plateados. = She’s wearing silver earrings.

A few high-value examples:

  • Traigo una camisa azul. = I’m wearing a blue shirt.
  • No traigo lentes hoy. = I’m not wearing glasses today.
  • ¿Traes paraguas? = Do you have an umbrella with you?
  • Traía perfume muy fuerte. = She was wearing very strong perfume.

Traer Conjugation: The Forms You Actually Need

Traer is irregular, but not in a random chaos goblin way. There are a few forms you really need to know, and the rest become much less scary.

Tense / FormKey ConjugationExample Sentence
Presenttraigo, traes, trae, traemos, traenSiempre traigo agua al trabajo. = I always bring water to work.
Preteritetraje, trajiste, trajo, trajimos, trajeronAyer traje tacos. = Yesterday I brought tacos.
Imperfecttraía, traías, traía, traíamos, traíanDe niño siempre traía dulces. = As a kid, I always had candy on me.
Futuretraeré, traerás, traerá, traeremos, traeránMañana te traeré los documentos. = Tomorrow I’ll bring you the documents.
Present Subjunctivetraiga, traigas, traiga, traigamos, traiganQuiero que traigas hielo. = I want you to bring ice.
Imperativetrae, traiga, traigan, no traigasTrae tu identificación. = Bring your ID.
GerundtrayendoEstoy trayendo las cajas. = I’m bringing the boxes.
Past ParticipletraídoHe traído pan. = I’ve brought bread.

Form To Memorize

Yo traigo is the big present-tense form. If you know that one, the present already looks much friendlier.

Preterite Trap

Trajeron is correct. Trajieron is not. That extra i tries to sneak in and ruin your day.

Accent Note That Saves Face

Traía and traído both keep the written accent. Those little marks matter. Tiny, yes. Optional, no.

Useful Phrases You’ll Actually Hear

These are the kinds of traer phrases that show up in daily adult Spanish, not just in suspiciously cheerful textbook kitchens.

Everyday Bringing, Carrying, And Wearing

Spanish PhraseEnglish MeaningExample Sentence
¿Me traes…?Will you bring me…?¿Me traes otro café, por favor? = Will you bring me another coffee, please?
traer algo a alguiento bring something to someoneLe traje unos chocolates a mi jefa. = I brought my boss some chocolates.
traer de vueltato bring backNo olvides traer de vuelta las llaves. = Don’t forget to bring the keys back.
traer consigoto bring with youHay que traer consigo una identificación oficial. = You have to bring an official ID with you.
no traer efectivonot to have cash on youPerdón, no traigo efectivo; ¿aceptan tarjeta? = Sorry, I don’t have cash on me; do you take cards?
traer puestoto have on / to be wearingHoy traigo puesto un saco gris. = Today I’m wearing a gray blazer.

Extended Meanings And Useful Expressions

Spanish PhraseEnglish MeaningExample Sentence
traer problemasto cause problemsMentir siempre trae problemas. = Lying always causes problems.
traer consecuenciasto bring consequencesEsa decisión puede traer consecuencias serias. = That decision can bring serious consequences.
traer ganas deto feel like doing somethingHoy traigo ganas de sushi. = I’m in the mood for sushi today.
traer prisato be in a hurryNo puedo quedarme; traigo prisa. = I can’t stay; I’m in a hurry.
traer a alguiento bring someoneVoy a traer a un amigo a la cena. = I’m going to bring a friend to dinner.
¿Qué traes?What do you have with you? / What are you carrying?¿Qué traes en esa mochila tan pesada? = What are you carrying in that heavy backpack?

Restaurant And Everyday Service Spanish

One of the most useful real-life uses of traer is asking for things in bars, cafés, and restaurants. It sounds natural, direct, and polite when you soften it with por favor or me puede.

Mesero, ¿me trae la cuenta, por favor?
Waiter, could you bring me the bill, please?

¿Nos puede traer otra cuchara?
Could you bring us another spoon?

Tráigame un vaso de agua, por favor.
Please bring me a glass of water.

This pattern is gold because it teaches you more than one thing at once: the meaning of traer, object pronouns like me and nos, and the kind of Spanish people actually use when they want something now and preferably before they die of thirst.

Practice Section

Try these before peeking at the answers.

  1. Translate: “Can you bring me my phone?”
  2. Choose the better verb: Mañana voy a traer / llevar estos documentos a la oficina.
  3. Translate: “I’m not wearing a jacket today.”
  4. Choose the better verb: Cuando llegues, trae / lleva hielo. The speaker is already at the party.
  5. Fill in the blank: Ayer yo _____ un postre a la cena.
  6. Translate: “That change will bring a lot of problems.”
  7. Translate: “What are you wearing?” using a natural Mexican Spanish phrase.
  8. Fill in the blank: Quiero que _____ tu pasaporte.
Check Your Answers
  1. ¿Me puedes traer mi teléfono?
  2. llevar, because the documents are going from here to the office there.
  3. Hoy no traigo chamarra. or Hoy no traigo saco.
  4. trae, because the destination is where the speaker already is.
  5. traje
  6. Ese cambio traerá muchos problemas.
  7. ¿Qué traes puesto?
  8. traigas

Common Mistakes And Fixes

  • Mistake: using traer for movement away from the speaker.
    Fix: use llevar when it is from here to there. Llevo los papeles a la oficina.
  • Mistake: forgetting the irregular present form yo traigo.
    Fix: memorize it as a set piece. Yo traigo, tú traes, él trae.
  • Mistake: writing trajieron.
    Fix: the correct preterite plural is trajeron.
  • Mistake: translating every “wear” as usar.
    Fix: for current clothing, llevar, traer, or traer puesto often sound more natural.
  • Mistake: dropping the accent in traía or traído.
    Fix: keep the accent mark. Your spellchecker is not being dramatic.

Quick Reference Summary

If You Want To Say…UseExample
bring something heretraerTrae pan.
take something therellevarLleva pan a su casa.
have something with youtraerNo traigo llaves.
be wearing something in Mexican Spanishtraer / traer puestoTraigo botas.
ask someone to bring you something¿Me traes…?¿Me traes agua?
cause a resulttraerEso trae consecuencias.
present tense first persontraigoYo traigo el postre.
preterite first persontrajeYo traje el postre.

Final Yak

If you remember just two ideas, make them these: traer = toward here, and in Mexican Spanish traer can also mean to have on you or to be wearing. That one little shift explains a huge amount of real Spanish.

So the next time someone says ¿Qué traes puesto?, your brain does not need to panic, guess wildly, and invent a new grammar system out of stress. Growth.