Here are 20 nations where Spanish is an official language, with capitals written in Spanish.
You’ll see lists of capitals all over the place. The snag comes when you try to write them the way Spanish writers do. Accents pop up, “City of” shows up in front of a name, and some places keep an older spelling that English drops.
This page gives you a clean set of 20 Spanish-speaking countries and their capitals in Spanish, then shows you the small spelling rules that stop most mistakes. If you’re building a quiz, filling a worksheet, checking homework, or labeling a map, you can copy, paste, and move on.
What Counts As Spanish-Speaking Here
For this list, “Spanish-speaking country” means Spanish has official status at the national level. That keeps the set tidy and avoids endless debates about how many people use Spanish in daily life.
One outlier surprises some readers: Equatorial Guinea. Spanish is an official language there, alongside other national languages. The list below still lands on 20 sovereign states.
How Capital Names Shift Between English And Spanish
Many capital names match across both languages. Others change for three common reasons.
Accent Marks Carry Meaning
Spanish uses accent marks to mark stress and clear up look-alike words. Capitals like Bogotá and Asunción nearly always lose those marks in English text, then they return in Spanish writing.
“Ciudad De” Shows Up In Official Use
Some capitals are written with Ciudad de in Spanish in many contexts. Two you’ll meet all the time are Ciudad de México and Ciudad de Panamá. On maps you may see the shorter form too, yet the longer form is common in Spanish prose.
Old Spellings Stick Around
A few names keep spellings that look unusual to English readers, like Tegucigalpa. The fix is simple: copy the standard form once, then reuse it.
Quick Checks Before You Copy A Capital
- Check accents first. If you’re typing, add them right away so you don’t forget.
- Watch “de” in city names. In Spanish it stays lowercase: Ciudad de México, not “Ciudad De México.”
- Pick one Bolivia format and stay consistent. Spain and Latin American sources often list Sucre as the constitutional capital and La Paz as the seat of government.
- Use Spanish punctuation rules. Country and city names don’t take quotation marks in normal writing.
Country Names In Spanish You’ll Actually See
If you’re writing capitals in Spanish, country names often show up on the same line. Many match English closely, yet a few change enough to cause typos.
Spanish uses accent marks in some country names, just like it does in city names. That’s why México and Panamá look “missing” something when they’re typed without accents. In classwork, those accents can be the difference between a clean paper and a marked error.
There’s also the question of articles. La República Dominicana often appears with an article in Spanish writing, while English usually drops it. You’ll also see El Salvador keep its article as part of the country name, which matches how it’s written on many Spanish maps.
Here’s a fast set of country names in Spanish for the same 20 states in this list. If you only need capitals, skip this. If you’re labeling maps, it saves time.
- Spain: España
- Mexico: México
- Guatemala: Guatemala
- Honduras: Honduras
- El Salvador: El Salvador
- Nicaragua: Nicaragua
- Costa Rica: Costa Rica
- Panama: Panamá
- Cuba: Cuba
- Dominican Republic: República Dominicana
- Colombia: Colombia
- Venezuela: Venezuela
- Ecuador: Ecuador
- Peru: Perú
- Bolivia: Bolivia
- Chile: Chile
- Argentina: Argentina
- Paraguay: Paraguay
- Uruguay: Uruguay
- Equatorial Guinea: Guinea Ecuatorial
If you’re typing on a phone, long-press the vowel to pick the accented version (á, é, í, ó, ú). On Windows, the US-International layout can do accents with shortcut presses. On Mac, Option + vowel then the vowel types the accented form.
Spanish-Speaking Countries And Capitals In Spanish For Maps And Study
If you want to cross-check official spellings, two handy reference points are the CIA World Factbook archive pages for the capital field listing and the languages field listing. For how widely Spanish is used across the globe, Instituto Cervantes compiles annual reporting in El español: una lengua viva. Spanish also ranks among the UN’s official languages, listed on the UN page for Official Languages.
The table gives the country name in English for fast scanning, plus the capital written in Spanish. The third column helps when you’re sorting by region for a worksheet.
| Country | Capital In Spanish | Region |
|---|---|---|
| Spain | Madrid | Europe |
| Mexico | Ciudad de México | North America |
| Guatemala | Ciudad de Guatemala | Central America |
| Honduras | Tegucigalpa | Central America |
| El Salvador | San Salvador | Central America |
| Nicaragua | Managua | Central America |
| Costa Rica | San José | Central America |
| Panama | Ciudad de Panamá | Central America |
| Cuba | La Habana | Caribbean |
| Dominican Republic | Santo Domingo | Caribbean |
| Colombia | Bogotá | South America |
| Venezuela | Caracas | South America |
| Ecuador | Quito | South America |
| Peru | Lima | South America |
| Bolivia | Sucre (La Paz) | South America |
| Chile | Santiago | South America |
| Argentina | Buenos Aires | South America |
| Paraguay | Asunción | South America |
| Uruguay | Montevideo | South America |
| Equatorial Guinea | Malabo | Africa |
How To Type Accents Fast Without Slowing Down
Typing accents can feel fiddly at first, then it turns into muscle memory. A small setup step pays off if you type Spanish more than once a week.
Phone And Tablet Tricks
On iOS and Android layouts, press and hold a vowel, then slide to the accented character. Do the same for ñ by long-pressing n. If your layout is set to Spanish, it often suggests the accented word as you type.
Desktop Shortcuts
On Windows, a US-International layout lets you type an accent by pressing the apostrophe button, then the vowel. On Mac, Option + e then the vowel types é, á, í, ó, ú depending on the vowel you hit. If you’re on a Chromebook, you can add a Spanish layout and switch with a shortcut combo.
If you can’t change settings on a school device, copy the accented word from the table once, then paste it where you need it. That keeps spelling consistent across a whole page.
Notes That Help You Use The List Without Second-Guessing
Copying a table is easy. Using it in real writing is where small choices matter. Here are the ones that trip people up most often.
Bolivia Has Two Capital References In Daily Use
Many civics books teach Sucre as Bolivia’s capital. At the same time, many government offices sit in La Paz. That’s why you’ll see both names together in reference works. If your worksheet expects one answer, choose the one your source uses and stick with it for the whole set.
Panama Uses The Same Word For Country And Capital
In Spanish, Panamá takes an accent mark. When you mean the capital in Spanish, Ciudad de Panamá avoids confusion and matches common usage in Spanish text.
Mexico’s Capital Name Often Appears As A Phrase
Spanish writing frequently uses Ciudad de México in full. You may also see México, D. F. in older material. If you’re writing for a class today, the full city name is the safer pick.
“La” In La Habana Is Part Of The Name
La Habana keeps the article as part of the standard Spanish form. That means it’s not a throwaway “the.” Treat it like a fixed name.
Accent Marks Are Not Decoration
If you’re typing Spanish, accents change stress and can change meaning. In names, they also show respect for the standard spelling. If you can’t type accents on your device, copy the capital from the table and paste it as-is.
Common Spelling Patterns You’ll See Again And Again
Once you spot a few patterns, you’ll stop rechecking each line. This section gives you quick rules you can use while proofreading.
Stress Often Falls On The Last Syllable When There’s An Accent
In Bogotá and Asunción, the accent marks where the voice lands. Readers expect them in Spanish text.
“San” And “Santo” Stay Plain
San José needs the accent on José, while San Salvador stays accent-free. Santo Domingo also stays plain.
Multiword Capitals Keep Lowercase Prepositions
In Spanish, de stays lowercase inside a name: Ciudad de México, Ciudad de Panamá, Ciudad de Guatemala.
Diacritics Matter For Panamá And México
Panamá and México take accents in Spanish. When you write the capital forms with Ciudad de, keep the accents too.
| Pattern | What To Type | Seen In |
|---|---|---|
| Accent on final vowel | Add the accent to mark stress | Bogotá, Panamá |
| Accent on “o” in José | San José | Costa Rica |
| Lowercase “de” | Ciudad de … | México, Guatemala, Panamá |
| Article kept in name | La Habana | Cuba |
| Two-name capital note | Sucre (La Paz) | Bolivia |
| Silent “h” still written | La Habana | Cuba |
| Double word capital | Buenos Aires | Argentina |
| Accent on “ó” | Asunción | Paraguay |
Ways To Practice Without Making It A Chore
If you’re studying, it helps to practice in short bursts. Ten minutes beats an hour of staring at a page.
Use A Blank Map With A Two-Pass Method
- First pass: write the country names from memory.
- Second pass: add capitals, copying accents from the table.
- Check your work, then rewrite only the ones you missed.
Turn The Table Into Flash Cards
Put the country on one side and the capital in Spanish on the other. Read the capital out loud when you flip it. Your brain links sound and spelling, which helps accents stick.
Test Capitals By Region
Group Central America together, then the Caribbean, then South America. Spain and Equatorial Guinea sit alone in this set, which makes them easy to review at the end.
A Copy-Paste Checklist For Your Next Worksheet
- Use accents on Bogotá, Asunción, Panamá, México, José.
- Write Ciudad de México, Ciudad de Guatemala, Ciudad de Panamá when you want the long form.
- Keep “de” lowercase inside city names.
- Decide how you’ll handle Bolivia before you start.
References & Sources
- CIA.“Capital – The World Factbook (Archives).”Capital spellings and notes used for cross-checking.
- CIA.“Languages – The World Factbook (Archives).”Reference for official-language listings and country language notes.
- Instituto Cervantes.“El español: una lengua viva.”Annual reporting on Spanish use worldwide.
- United Nations.“Official Languages.”Lists Spanish among the UN’s official languages.