Verb Forms of Tener in Spanish | Clear Tener Conjugations

Tener is an irregular Spanish verb with stem changes and a few special spellings, so patterns beat memorizing every single form.

Tener (“to have”) shows up everywhere. Possession, age, obligation, feelings, idioms—Spanish leans on it hard. That’s why it can feel annoying when the verb refuses to behave.

Good news: it’s not random. Tener follows a small set of repeatable patterns. Once you spot them, you’ll stop guessing and start choosing the right form on purpose.

This article walks you through those patterns, the core tenses people use daily, and the spots where learners slip (like “tuve” vs “tenía,” or “tenga” vs “tengo”). You’ll get clear rules, quick checks, and two tables you can keep open while you practice.

Why Tener Feels Tricky

Tener is irregular in more than one way. It changes its stem in the present tense, it has a unique preterite stem, and it uses that same special stem again in the future and conditional.

That sounds like a lot until you realize it’s the same few pieces repeating:

  • Present stem change: ten- becomes tien- in many present forms.
  • Preterite stem: ten- becomes tuv- in the simple past.
  • Future/conditional stem: tener becomes tendr- for those endings.
  • Subjunctive anchor: present subjunctive comes from the “yo” present (tengo → tenga).

When you learn tener by patterns, you don’t need to brute-force it. You just need to know which “stem package” the tense uses.

Verb Forms of Tener in Spanish With Real-Life Patterns

Here’s the fast mental model. Pick the tense. Grab the right stem. Add the normal endings for that tense.

Present Indicative

The present tense is the one you’ll use constantly: I have, you have, they have, plus lots of everyday phrases (I’m hungry, I’m ___ years old, I have to…).

Tener is a stem-changer here: e → ie. The base is ten-, and it changes to tien- in most forms.

  • yo tengo (special “go” form)
  • tienes
  • él/ella/usted tiene
  • nosotros/nosotras tenemos (no stem change)
  • vosotros/vosotras tenéis (no stem change)
  • ellos/ellas/ustedes tienen

Two things to lock in: “yo” is tengo, and nosotros stays ten-.

Preterite Vs Imperfect

Both tenses talk about the past, but they feel different in Spanish.

Preterite (Pretérito indefinido)

Use the preterite when you’re treating the past as a finished event or completed change. Tener switches to a new stem: tuv-.

  • yo tuve
  • tuviste
  • él/ella/usted tuvo
  • nosotros tuvimos
  • vosotros tuvisteis
  • ellos/ustedes tuvieron

Notice the endings look like other irregular preterites. The stem does the heavy lifting: tuv- tells your brain “preterite.”

Imperfect (Pretérito imperfecto)

Use the imperfect for ongoing past situations, background descriptions, repeated past habits, or “used to.” Tener behaves regularly here:

  • yo tenía
  • tenías
  • él/ella/usted tenía
  • nosotros teníamos
  • vosotros teníais
  • ellos/ustedes tenían

A quick gut-check: if you can translate it as “was having” or “used to have,” imperfect often fits better than preterite.

Present Perfect And Other Compound Tenses

Compound tenses use haber + participio. Tener’s past participle is regular: tenido.

So you get forms like:

  • he tenido (I have had)
  • había tenido (I had had)
  • habré tenido (I will have had)

Keep this clean: the irregularity is usually in haber, not in the participle. Tener keeps tenido across the board.

Future And Conditional

Many Spanish verbs use the full infinitive for future and conditional endings. Tener drops an “e” and uses the stem tendr-.

Future

  • yo tendré
  • tendrás
  • él/ella/usted tendrá
  • nosotros tendremos
  • vosotros tendréis
  • ellos/ustedes tendrán

Conditional

  • yo tendría
  • tendrías
  • él/ella/usted tendría
  • nosotros tendríamos
  • vosotros tendríais
  • ellos/ustedes tendrían

If you know tendr-, you can produce both tenses on command.

For an official reference entry on meanings and usage, you can check the RAE’s dictionary entry for tener in the Diccionario de la lengua española.

Subjunctive Forms That People Actually Use

The subjunctive scares a lot of learners because it’s tied to mood and triggers. The conjugation part is easier than it looks.

Present Subjunctive

Present subjunctive is built from the “yo” present form. Since you already know tengo, you can build the rest.

  • que yo tenga
  • que tú tengas
  • que él/ella/usted tenga
  • que nosotros tengamos
  • que vosotros tengáis
  • que ellos/ustedes tengan

That “g” sticks around because it comes from tengo. If you can say “tengo,” you can say “tenga.”

Imperfect Subjunctive

This one is built from the third-person plural preterite. Tener uses tuvieron. Drop -ron, then add the imperfect subjunctive endings.

You’ll see two sets in Spanish. Both are standard. Pick one set and stick with it in your own writing.

  • que yo tuviera / tuviese
  • que tú tuvieras / tuvieses
  • que él tuviera / tuviese
  • que nosotros tuviéramos / tuviésemos
  • que vosotros tuvierais / tuvieseis
  • que ellos tuvieran / tuviesen

If you want an authoritative note on how tener behaves in usage and certain constructions, the Diccionario panhispánico de dudas entry on tener is a solid checkpoint.

Table 1: Tener Conjugation Map By Tense

This table is built to stop the most common mistake: mixing stems. Read it left to right: tense, sample “yo” form, then the stem cue you should hear in your head.

Tense Or Mood “Yo” Form Stem Cue
Present indicative tengo teng- / tien- in most forms
Imperfect tenía ten- (regular)
Preterite tuve tuv-
Future tendré tendr-
Conditional tendría tendr-
Present subjunctive tenga teng- (from “tengo”)
Imperfect subjunctive tuviera / tuviese tuv- (from “tuvieron”)
Perfect tenses (compound) he tenido tenido stays constant

Imperative Forms You’ll Hear

Commands matter because people use them in quick bursts. Tener has a couple of forms that catch learners off guard.

Affirmative Commands

  • tú: ten
  • usted: tenga
  • nosotros: tengamos
  • vosotros: tened
  • ustedes: tengan

Negative Commands

Negative commands use the present subjunctive:

  • tú: no tengas
  • usted: no tenga
  • nosotros: no tengamos
  • vosotros: no tengáis
  • ustedes: no tengan

A handy check: if your negative command looks like a subjunctive form, you’re on the right track.

Tener With Meanings Beyond “To Have”

If you only treat tener as ownership, you’ll miss a big chunk of real Spanish. Some of its most frequent uses are fixed patterns.

Age And Physical States

Spanish often uses tener where English uses “to be.” A few daily patterns:

  • tener X años (to be X years old)
  • tener hambre (to be hungry)
  • tener sed (to be thirsty)
  • tener sueño (to be sleepy)
  • tener frío / tener calor (to feel cold / hot)

These phrases are why the present tense matters so much. “Tengo hambre” is not a rare classroom line. It’s real life.

Obligation With Tener Que

tener que + infinitive is one of the most common ways to express obligation: “I have to do something.” You conjugate tener, then keep the next verb in the infinitive.

If you want an official grammar reference for Spanish periphrastic verb structures, the RAE’s grammar section on perífrasis de infinitivo is a strong source.

“Have Done” With Tener + Past Participle

Spanish can use tener + past participle to stress a result or a completed state, often with a transitive verb: “Tengo hecha la tarea” (I’ve got the homework done). This is not the same as the compound tenses with haber; it’s a different construction with a different feel.

If you want a usage note that points out this construction and how it relates to other forms, Fundéu’s notes connected to tener usage questions can help you see real editorial guidance in Spanish.

Table 2: High-Frequency Tener Phrases And How They Work

Use this table as a speaking cheat sheet. Conjugate tener. Keep the rest of the pattern stable.

Pattern Meaning In English How To Build It
tener X años to be X years old tener + number + años
tener hambre / sed to be hungry / thirsty tener + noun
tener sueño to be sleepy tener + noun
tener frío / calor to feel cold / hot tener + noun
tener miedo (de) to be afraid (of) tener + noun + optional de
tener razón to be right tener + razón
tener que + infinitivo to have to + verb tener (conjugated) + que + infinitive
tener ganas de + infinitivo to feel like + verb tener + ganas + de + infinitive

Fast Fixes For Common Tener Mistakes

These are the errors that keep showing up in writing and speech. Fixing them gives you a quick jump in accuracy.

Mixing Up “Tuve” And “Tenía”

If you’re telling a story and you mean “I had it at that time” as background, tenía often fits. If you mean “I got it” or “I had it once as a completed event,” tuve often fits.

A quick check: if the sentence feels like a snapshot event, preterite is often your pick. If it feels like a continuous state, imperfect is often your pick.

Forgetting The “G” In Subjunctive

People say “*tea*” instead of “tenga,” or “*tenga*” but then mess up “tengamos.” Don’t overthink it. Present subjunctive is chained to tengo. Keep the g.

Overusing “Tener” For Possession When Spanish Prefers Another Verb

Tener is common, but Spanish sometimes prefers other structures. “I have been” is not “tengo sido.” It’s “he sido” (haber + participle). When you’re building perfect tenses, the helper verb is haber, not tener.

Trying To Stem-Change Nosotros Forms

In the present, learners often say “*tienemos*.” Don’t. Nosotros and vosotros stay ten-: tenemos, tenéis.

A Simple Practice Loop That Works

If you want this to stick, you don’t need long drills. You need tight repetition that forces the correct stem choice.

Step 1: Pick One Stem Package

Pick present (tengo/tienes), preterite (tuve), or future (tendré). Say the full set out loud once.

Step 2: Swap Subjects Fast

Take one mini-sentence and swap subjects:

  • “Tengo tiempo.” → “Tienes tiempo.” → “Tiene tiempo.” → “Tenemos tiempo.”

Step 3: Switch Tenses With The Same Sentence

Keep the meaning stable and shift the time:

  • Present: “Tengo una cita.”
  • Imperfect: “Tenía una cita.”
  • Preterite: “Tuve una cita.”
  • Future: “Tendré una cita.”

That single loop forces your brain to select stems on demand. After a few rounds, tener stops feeling like a trap.

References & Sources