Numbers in Spanish 1-10000 | Say Any Number Confidently

Spanish number words follow repeatable patterns, so once tens and hundreds click, you can build almost any number up to ten thousand.

If you’ve ever frozen at a cashier, mumbled a phone number, or misread a price tag in Spanish, you’re not alone. The good news is you don’t need to memorize ten thousand separate words. You need a small set of building blocks, plus a few spelling and usage habits that native speakers expect.

This page gives you those building blocks in a way you can reuse. You’ll learn the core pieces (1–15, tens, hundreds, thousand), the glue words (y), and the spots where Spanish gets picky (uno/un/una, veintiún, accents like dieciséis). Then you’ll practice with real phrases you’ll actually say.

How Spanish Numbers Are Built

Spanish numbers work like Lego. You stack smaller parts in a consistent order. Once you know the order, you can say new numbers on the fly.

Zero To Fifteen: The Must-Memorize Set

These are the roots you’ll use again and again: cero, uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, diez, once, doce, trece, catorce, quince. Put these in your brain first. Everything else leans on them.

Sixteen To Nineteen: One Word, Often With An Accent

Sixteen through nineteen are written as single words: dieciséis, diecisiete, dieciocho, diecinueve. You’ll hear them as “dyeh-see-…” in fast speech. The spelling matters if you write numbers in words, and the accent in dieciséis is part of standard orthography. The RAE’s guidance on how cardinal numerals are written is a useful reference when you want the official spelling rules in one place: Ortografía de los numerales cardinales.

Twenty To Twenty-Nine: One Word In Modern Spelling

Twenty is veinte. From 21 to 29, standard spelling fuses the parts into one word: veintiuno, veintidós, veintitrés, veinticuatro, veinticinco, veintiséis, veintisiete, veintiocho, veintinueve. Those accents in veintidós, veintitrés, veintiséis aren’t decoration. They mark stress the way Spanish spelling expects.

Thirty And Up: Tens + “Y” + Ones

From 30 onward, you usually say the tens, then y, then the ones:

  • 31 = treinta y uno
  • 42 = cuarenta y dos
  • 58 = cincuenta y ocho

No y is used inside 16–29, which is why 22 is veintidós, not *veinte y dos* in standard usage.

Hundreds: One Pattern, With A Few Named Forms

100 is cien when it’s exactly 100. When it’s 101+ and followed by another number, it becomes ciento:

  • 100 = cien
  • 101 = ciento uno
  • 175 = ciento setenta y cinco

Then you have the named hundreds: doscientos (200), trescientos (300), cuatrocientos (400), quinientos (500), seiscientos (600), setecientos (700), ochocientos (800), novecientos (900). After that, you stack tens and ones the same way you already know.

One Thousand And Beyond: “Mil” Does The Heavy Lifting

1,000 is mil. There’s no *un mil* in standard Spanish. You just say mil.

  • 1,000 = mil
  • 1,200 = mil doscientos
  • 3,450 = tres mil cuatrocientos cincuenta
  • 9,999 = nueve mil novecientos noventa y nueve
  • 10,000 = diez mil

Once you’re past 1,000, you’re still using the same set of parts: thousands + hundreds + tens + ones.

Numbers in Spanish 1-10000 For Real-Life Use

You can memorize lists all day and still blank in conversation. What helps is seeing the ranges and the build rules in one view, then practicing the numbers you run into most: prices, dates, addresses, phone numbers, and counts.

If you want a classroom-style drill for 1–100 with practice prompts, the Centro Virtual Cervantes has a focused activity page that’s handy when you want repetition with structure: Los números del 1 al 100.

Now let’s turn the patterns into something you can use without second-guessing yourself.

Build Rules You Can Reuse Anytime

These rules stop you from guessing. Read them once, then test yourself with random numbers you see during the day.

Rule 1: Say Thousands, Then Hundreds, Then The Rest

Spanish keeps a clean order. Start with thousands (mil), then hundreds, then tens and ones. No rearranging.

2,718 becomes dos mil setecientos dieciocho. You don’t need extra words. Just stack the chunks.

Rule 2: Use “Y” Only Between Tens And Ones From 30+

Y shows up in 31, 42, 56, 99. It does not show up in 16–29 in standard spelling. It also doesn’t sit between hundreds and tens.

148 is ciento cuarenta y ocho, not *ciento y cuarenta y ocho*.

Rule 3: “Cien” Vs “Ciento”

This one trips people up in writing and in slow speech. If the number ends at 100, use cien. If anything follows, use ciento.

  • 100 = cien
  • 1000 = mil (not *cien cero cero cero*)
  • 101 = ciento uno
  • 115 = ciento quince

Rule 4: One Word Vs Separate Words

Modern spelling writes 16–19 and 21–29 as single words, and it writes the hundreds as single words too (doscientos, quinientos, etc.). From 30 onward, tens and ones split into separate words with y in the middle.

If you want the formal guidance on when Spanish prefers words in running text, the RAE’s section on writing expressions “with words” lays out the style logic and typical preferences: Escritura con palabras.

Rule 5: Gender Changes Happen In Predictable Spots

Most cardinal numbers don’t change. The main exceptions you’ll feel in daily speech are:

  • Uno shifts to un before a masculine noun: un libro, un café.
  • Uno shifts to una before a feminine noun: una mesa, una casa.
  • Veintiuno often shifts the same way: veintiún años, veintiuna personas.
  • Hundreds agree in gender when they end in -cientos: doscientos libros, doscientas páginas.

The DPD entry on cardinal numerals explains this agreement behavior in a clear, official way if you want to double-check forms like veintiún and doscientas: cardinales.

Reference Table: Patterns From 1 To 10000

This table is meant to save you time. It shows the reusable pattern for each range and a few samples you can imitate. Read down the left column, then try creating a number of your own in each row.

Range Pattern Samples
0–15 Single word roots cero, siete, diez, quince
16–19 dieci- + root (one word) dieciséis, dieciocho
20 Single word veinte
21–29 veinti- + root (one word, some accents) veintiuno, veintidós, veintiséis
30–99 tens (+ y + ones) treinta y uno, sesenta y cinco
100 cien (exactly 100) cien
101–199 ciento + (rest) ciento cinco, ciento noventa
200–999 [hundreds word] + (rest) quinientos dos, setecientos cuarenta y nueve
1,000 mil (no “un”) mil
1,001–9,999 [1–9] mil + (hundreds/tens/ones) tres mil veinte, nueve mil novecientos uno
10,000 diez mil diez mil

Pronunciation Notes That Prevent Mix-Ups

You can say the right words and still be misunderstood if stress lands in the wrong spot. A few small habits fix most issues.

Stress In Sixteen And Twenty-Two

Words like dieciséis, veintidós, veintitrés, veintiséis carry written accents because stress would land wrong without them. When you speak, let your voice lean on the accented syllable: die-ci-séis, vein-ti-dós.

Clear “Ciento” Vs “Cien”

When you speak fast, ciento can shrink. If someone’s writing it down, slow down on the -to. That tiny ending signals that more digits are coming.

Phone Numbers: Say Digits Or Say Chunks

In many settings, people group digits into pairs or triples. You’ll hear both styles. If you’re unsure, say digits one by one and add short pauses so the listener can follow.

Writing Numbers In Words: Clean Style Choices

Sometimes you need to write a number out, like on a form, a receipt note, or a classroom assignment. Style depends on the type of text and how complex the number is. In general writing, Spanish often prefers words for shorter numbers and uses figures for data-heavy contexts. The RAE’s guidance on choosing figures or words in numeric expressions is collected in its style material, which is useful when you want a rule-backed decision: Uso de cifras o palabras.

Two practical habits help a lot:

  • If you write 16–19 or 21–29 in words, use the fused spellings (diecisiete, veintiocho).
  • If you write hundreds in words, match gender only when a noun pushes you to do it (doscientas personas, doscientos kilómetros).

Table: Common Situations And The Number Forms You’ll Say

Use this as a speaking cheat sheet. Pick a row, read the sample line out loud, then swap in a new number. Repetition beats memorizing lists.

Situation Typical Range Sample Line
Prices 1–9,999 Son tres mil doscientos cincuenta euros.
Addresses 1–10,000 Vivo en el número mil ochocientos.
Years 1000–2099 Nací en mil novecientos noventa y ocho.
Time 1–59 Son las ocho y veintidós.
Quantities 1–10,000 Necesito dos mil quinientas unidades.
Scores 0–100 Quedó setenta y cuatro a sesenta y nueve.
Room Numbers 1–9,999 Su habitación es la cuatrocientos doce.

Practice Plan That Doesn’t Feel Like Homework

If you want this to stick, keep practice tied to stuff you already do. Here’s a simple loop you can run in a few minutes a day.

Step 1: Pick Ten Numbers You See Daily

Choose numbers from your receipts, your building, your calendar, your playlist, your transit card balance. Write them as figures. Then say them in Spanish out loud. If you stumble, break the number into chunks: thousands, hundreds, tens, ones.

Step 2: Force The “Chunk Switch”

Take one number and restyle it three ways:

  • As a price: “Son … euros.”
  • As a count: “Hay … personas.”
  • As a label: “El número …”

This pushes you to handle agreement (una/doscientas) and the “un/uno” shift without thinking too hard.

Step 3: Drill The Tricky Set: 16, 22, 23, 26

These carry accents in writing and often get rushed in speech. Say them slowly once, then at normal speed five times: dieciséis, veintidós, veintitrés, veintiséis. Then put each inside a short sentence you’d say in real life.

Step 4: Randomize One Thousand To Ten Thousand

Pick any three-digit number, then stick a thousands digit in front of it. You’ll get numbers like 4,683 or 7,104. Say them out loud. If you can do ten in a row without pausing, you’re in good shape for daily conversation.

Mistakes People Make And Easy Fixes

A few errors pop up again and again. Fix these and you’ll sound natural fast.

Saying “Un Mil”

Standard Spanish uses mil on its own for 1,000. Use mil, then add the rest: mil doscientos, mil treinta y uno.

Adding “Y” After Hundreds

Save y for tens + ones from 30 onward. Say ciento cuarenta y dos, not *ciento y cuarenta y dos*.

Forgetting Gender With Hundreds

If the number ends in -cientos and it’s directly describing a noun, match the noun’s gender: doscientos libros, doscientas páginas. You don’t need to overthink it. If a noun follows, match it.

Writing 21–29 As Separate Words

In standard spelling, 21–29 are fused: veinticuatro, veintinueve. When you write them, stick to that modern form. It’ll match what dictionaries and classroom materials expect.

One-Minute Self-Test

Try these without looking back. Say each out loud, then write it in words if you want an extra challenge:

  • 19
  • 27
  • 35
  • 100
  • 101
  • 586
  • 1,009
  • 2,418
  • 9,999
  • 10,000

If you miss one, don’t spiral. Split it into chunks and rebuild it. That’s the whole skill.

References & Sources