List of Pronouns in Spanish | Stop Guessing Who Means Who

Spanish pronouns replace names and nouns, letting you point to people, things, and ideas with fewer repeats and cleaner sentences.

Spanish pronouns feel simple until a sentence has two people, two objects, and a verb that drags everything around it. Then you hit the real question: which little word points to which person or thing?

This page fixes that. You’ll get a clear map of Spanish pronoun types, the forms you’ll meet most, and the spots where learners trip. You’ll finish with a set of choices you can trust when you speak and when you write.

What Spanish pronouns do in real sentences

A pronoun stands in for a noun. That’s the textbook line. In daily Spanish, pronouns do more: they keep a conversation flowing and prevent clunky repeats.

Spanish also lets you drop many subject pronouns because the verb ending already signals the person. That’s why hablo can stand alone without yo. The pronoun shows up when you need contrast, clarity, or emphasis.

Pronouns come in sets, and each set answers a different job: who acts, who receives, who owns, which one you mean, the one you asked about, and the one you don’t want to name at all.

List of Pronouns in Spanish for everyday speech

Spanish pronouns group into a few practical families. If you learn the family first, each form makes more sense. Start with personal pronouns, since they run most conversations.

Personal pronouns for subjects

These can be the subject of a verb. You won’t always say them, yet you must recognize them.

  • yo (I), (you, informal), él/ella (he/she), usted (you, formal)
  • nosotros/nosotras (we), vosotros/vosotras (you all, informal in Spain), ellos/ellas (they), ustedes (you all, formal in Spain; standard in most of Latin America)

Two details matter right away. First, usted and ustedes use third-person verb forms. Second, vosotros is regional, so you’ll hear ustedes in many places even in casual talk.

Personal pronouns after prepositions

After a preposition, Spanish uses tonic (stressed) forms. A few look familiar, and a few change.

  • (me), ti (you), él/ella/usted, nosotros/nosotras, vosotros/vosotras, ellos/ellas/ustedes

Watch the special pair: conmigo and contigo. Spanish doesn’t say con mí or con ti in standard use.

Object pronouns that attach to verbs

These are the small forms that sit next to a verb, either before it or stuck onto the end. You’ll hear them constantly.

  • Direct object: me, te, lo, la, nos, os, los, las
  • Indirect object: me, te, le, nos, os, les

“Direct” receives the action. “Indirect” receives the result or benefit. In Te lo doy, lo is the thing and te is the person receiving it.

When you want the official forms in one place, the RAE’s entry on pronombres personales lays out the categories and the person system clearly.

Reflexive pronouns

Reflexive forms point back to the subject. They often appear with daily routines and feelings.

  • me, te, se, nos, os, se

Me levanto means the action returns to the speaker. The same se covers third-person singular and plural, so context carries the load.

Pronoun families beyond personal pronouns

Once you’ve got personal pronouns under control, the rest feel less wild. Many look like adjectives you already know, yet they work as stand-alone noun replacements.

Possessive pronouns

These replace a noun that belongs to someone. They agree in gender and number with the thing owned, not the owner.

  • mío/mía/míos/mías
  • tuyo/tuya/tuyos/tuyas
  • suyo/suya/suyos/suyas
  • nuestro/nuestra/nuestros/nuestras
  • vuestro/vuestra/vuestros/vuestras
  • suyo/suya/suyos/suyas (for ellos/ellas/ustedes too)

Es mi libro uses a possessive adjective. Es mío uses a possessive pronoun. That switch is one of the fastest ways to sound natural.

Demonstrative pronouns

These point: this, that, those. In Spanish, the same forms can act as adjectives or pronouns based on whether a noun follows.

  • este/esta/estos/estas
  • ese/esa/esos/esas
  • aquel/aquella/aquellos/aquellas
  • neuter: esto, eso, aquello (always pronouns)

Many learners worry about accent marks on demonstratives. Modern standard guidance recommends writing them without an accent mark even when they work as pronouns, and the neuter forms never take an accent mark. If you want the official wording, the RAE note on solo and demonstratives without tilde is the clean reference.

Relative pronouns

Relative pronouns link a clause to a noun: “the person who…”, “the thing that…”. Spanish leans hard on a few workhorses.

  • que (most common)
  • quien/quienes (often for people, often after prepositions)
  • el que/la que/los que/las que (more specific, often after prepositions)
  • el cual/la cual/los cuales/las cuales (more formal, clear in long sentences)
  • cuyo/cuya/cuyos/cuyas (whose; agrees with the owned noun)
  • lo que (what, the thing that)

Pick que when it works. Use the longer forms when you need clarity after a preposition or when a sentence stacks too many clauses.

Interrogative and exclamative pronouns

These ask or exclaim. They carry accent marks to signal the question or exclamation function.

  • qué, quién, cuál, cuánto

You’ll see them in indirect questions too: No sé qué quiere. The accent stays because the sense is still interrogative.

Indefinite pronouns

These keep things vague on purpose: someone, nobody, something, several, many.

  • alguien, nadie
  • algo, nada
  • alguno/alguna/algunos/algunas
  • ninguno/ninguna
  • mucho/mucha/muchos/muchas
  • poco/poca/pocos/pocas
  • varios/varias
  • otro/otra/otros/otras
  • todo/toda/todos/todas
  • cada (invariable)

Many of these double as adjectives. The clue is whether a noun follows. Muchos llegaron is pronoun. Muchos libros is adjective.

How to choose the right pronoun fast

When you’re mid-sentence, you don’t want a grammar lecture in your head. You want a short decision path.

Step 1: Ask what the pronoun replaces

Is it a person speaking, a person being addressed, a third person, or a thing? That narrows the set fast.

Step 2: Ask where it sits

Subject position? After a preposition? Next to a verb? Each slot has its own forms. This is why yo turns into after a preposition, and why me sits next to the verb instead of standing alone.

Step 3: Watch gender and number when the form changes

Not every pronoun changes. Many do. Lo/la/los/las care about gender and number. Le/les care about number. Esto/eso/aquello don’t change.

Step 4: Check if you’re using two object pronouns

Spanish can stack them: indirect + direct. The order stays steady: indirect first, direct second.

  • me/te/le/nos/os/les + lo/la/los/las

One famous switch: le and les become se before lo/la/los/las. So you get Se lo doy, not Le lo doy.

If you want a teaching-focused inventory of early-level pronoun forms and uses, the Instituto Cervantes Plan Curricular has a practical grammar list you can cross-check: grammar inventory (A1–A2).

Pronoun type Main forms What to watch
Subject personal yo, tú, él/ella, usted, nosotros/as, vosotros/as, ellos/ellas, ustedes Often omitted; used for contrast, clarity, emphasis
Prepositional personal mí, ti, él/ella/usted, nosotros/as, vosotros/as, ellos/ellas/ustedes Special forms: conmigo, contigo
Direct object me, te, lo, la, nos, os, los, las Gender/number match the thing replaced
Indirect object me, te, le, nos, os, les Le/les → se before lo/la/los/las
Reflexive me, te, se, nos, os, se Points back to the subject; common with routines
Possessive pronouns mío/a, tuyo/a, suyo/a, nuestro/a, vuestro/a (with plurals) Agree with the owned thing, not the owner
Demonstrative pronouns este/esta, ese/esa, aquel/aquella (with plurals), esto/eso/aquello Neuter forms are always pronouns
Relative pronouns que, quien(es), el que/la que, el cual/la cual, cuyo/a Longer forms help in long sentences or after prepositions
Interrogative pronouns qué, quién, cuál, cuánto Accent marks signal interrogative/exclamative use
Indefinite pronouns alguien, nadie, algo, nada, alguno/a, ninguno/a, varios/as, otro/a, todo/a Many double as adjectives when a noun follows

Placement rules that make object pronouns click

Object pronouns cause most “I know the word but I freeze” moments. The good news: Spanish placement is consistent once you see the patterns.

Before a conjugated verb

With a normal conjugated verb, place the object pronoun right before the verb.

  • Lo veo.
  • Te llamo.
  • Se lo digo.

Attached to an infinitive, gerund, or affirmative command

When the verb is an infinitive or a gerund, you can attach the pronoun to the end. With affirmative commands, attachment is standard.

  • Quiero verlo.
  • Estoy viéndolo.
  • Dímelo.

Accent marks may appear to keep the original stress when you attach pronouns, as in dímelo.

The RAE entry on pronombres personales átonos spells out the “attached vs. before” behavior and treats the pronoun + verb unit as a single stress group.

Two-verb structures

When you have a conjugated verb plus an infinitive or gerund, you usually have two natural placements:

  • Before the conjugated verb: Lo quiero ver.
  • Attached to the infinitive/gerund: Quiero verlo.

Both can be correct. The choice often comes down to rhythm and what you want to stress.

Common trouble spots and clean fixes

Some pronoun issues show up again and again. Fixing them early saves you a lot of backtracking.

Tú vs usted

signals closeness or casual speech. Usted signals formality or distance. In many regions, speakers switch based on age, setting, and relationship. The verb form tells the listener what you chose: tú hablas vs usted habla.

Leísmo, laísmo, loísmo

This is the mess around le, la, and lo. Some uses are regional. Some are frowned on in standard writing. If you’re aiming for widely accepted Spanish, the safe base rule is:

  • lo/la for direct object (the person or thing directly affected)
  • le for indirect object (the recipient)

If you want a plain, official explanation with examples of what counts as incorrect in standard use, the RAE’s Leísmo, laísmo y loísmo page is the best anchor.

Lo as “the idea”

Lo can stand for an idea or a whole situation. It doesn’t mean “it” in the object sense only.

  • Lo sé. (I know it / I know that.)
  • No lo entiendo. (I don’t get it.)

This use is one reason learners over-translate and end up searching for a noun that Spanish doesn’t need.

Se that isn’t reflexive

Se can be reflexive, yet it can also be the “swap form” when le/les comes before lo/la/los/las. That’s the Se lo dije pattern. Context tells you which se you’re hearing.

Situation Pronoun choice Model sentence
Clarify who did it Use a subject pronoun Yo lo hice, no él.
Speak formally to one person Use usted + 3rd-person verb ¿Usted lo necesita?
Direct object is masculine singular lo Lo compré ayer.
Direct object is feminine plural las Las vi en la mesa.
Give something to someone Indirect + direct (swap to se) Se lo doy mañana.
Action returns to the subject Reflexive (me/te/se…) Me siento mejor.
Refer to an idea or situation Neuter lo No lo sabía.
Point to “this/that” without naming it esto/eso/aquello Eso no funciona.

A quick self-check you can run while speaking

Use this mini check when you’re about to pick a pronoun out loud.

  1. Say the sentence with the noun. Who or what is it?
  2. Decide the slot: subject, after preposition, next to verb.
  3. If it sits next to the verb, decide: direct or indirect.
  4. If you have two object pronouns, put indirect first, then direct. Swap le/les to se before lo/la/los/las.
  5. Read it once for clarity. If two people could match the same pronoun, add a name or reorder the clause.

Do this a few times and it turns into instinct. Your brain stops treating pronouns as tiny random words and starts treating them as slots with rules.

Practice lines you can recycle

These short lines cover the pronoun moves you’ll use most. Swap the nouns to fit your life.

  • Te lo mando hoy.
  • Se la di a Marta.
  • Quiero verlo otra vez.
  • Estoy haciéndolo ahora.
  • Esto es mío.
  • La persona que viene es mi amiga.

If a line feels odd, slow down and name what each pronoun replaces. That single habit fixes most errors faster than memorizing more charts.

References & Sources