To say 5:00 in Spanish, use “son las cinco” for the current time and “a las cinco” for a scheduled time.
You’ll hear “five o’clock” in Spanish a lot: meeting times, school pick-ups, café plans, train boards, gym classes. The good news is that Spanish has a clean pattern for telling time. Once you nail the two main forms, 5:00 becomes automatic.
This article gives you the exact phrases people use, when to use each one, and the small choices that make you sound natural. You’ll also get ready-to-use lines for calls, texts, and plans.
What Spanish speakers say for 5:00
If you want the time right now, the standard phrasing is:
- Son las cinco. (It’s five o’clock.)
If you’re talking about a time on the schedule, the standard phrasing is:
- A las cinco. (At five o’clock.)
That’s the core. “Son las cinco” answers the question “What time is it?” “A las cinco” answers “At what time?”
Why “son” and why “las”
Spanish tells time with ser. For hours from 2 through 12, the language treats the hour as plural, so it uses son plus las:
- Son las cinco.
- Son las seis.
- Son las once.
For 1:00, Spanish treats it as singular:
- Es la una.
That plural pattern is one reason you’ll also see the question in plural. The Centro Virtual Cervantes notes that when you ask ¿Qué hora es?, the answer for most hours is plural: son las tres, and only 1:00 takes singular. ¿Qué hora es? / ¿Qué horas son? explains that usage.
How Do You Say 5 O’Clock In Spanish?
Use son las cinco when you mean “It’s 5:00.” Use a las cinco when you mean “at 5:00.” If you want to add clarity, you can tack on the part of day: de la tarde for 5 p.m., de la mañana for 5 a.m.
Here are natural, full lines you can copy:
- ¿Qué hora es? — Son las cinco.
- La reunión es a las cinco.
- Quedamos a las cinco de la tarde.
- Son las cinco en punto.
Pick the right meaning: “now” vs “at”
A simple trick: if you could replace “five o’clock” with “at five,” you want a las cinco. If you could replace it with “it’s five,” you want son las cinco.
These two forms stay stable across countries. Accent and rhythm change, but the structure stays familiar.
Saying 5 o’clock in Spanish in texts and plans
When people text, they often shorten time phrases. In chat, you may see the time itself plus “a las,” or just the hour when the context is clear:
- Nos vemos a las 5.
- A las cinco, ¿te va?
- Tipo cinco. (Around five, casual)
Writing style changes by country and by person. For formal writing, Spanish style guides often prefer writing the whole time in words in regular text, or using a clean numeric format in schedules. The RAE’s guidance on writing the hour lays out those preferences. Uso de palabras o cifras en la escritura de la hora is the reference.
5:00 vs 17:00 in Spanish
Spanish uses both the 12-hour and 24-hour clock. Daily speech often sticks with 12-hour time plus the part of day:
- Son las cinco de la tarde. (5 p.m.)
- Son las cinco de la mañana. (5 a.m.)
Schedules and transport signs often use the 24-hour clock. In that case, 5 p.m. is 17:00, and people may read it as:
- Son las diecisiete.
- Son las diecisiete horas. (more formal)
If you work with international timestamps, ISO 8601 is the widely used standard format for unambiguous date and time representation. ISO 8601 — Date and time format shows the ordering and time formatting conventions that many systems follow.
Common add-ons that make 5:00 sound natural
Once you can say 5:00, the next step is sounding like someone who uses the language daily. These small add-ons do most of the work.
Add “en punto” for “on the dot”
- Son las cinco en punto. (It’s exactly five.)
- Quedamos a las cinco en punto. (Let’s meet at exactly five.)
“En punto” is clean and common. Use it when precision matters.
Add the part of day when clarity matters
Spanish can be clear without “a.m.” and “p.m.” by using part-of-day phrases. The most common are:
- de la mañana (morning)
- de la tarde (afternoon)
- de la noche (evening/night)
So “at 5” becomes:
- A las cinco de la tarde.
- A las cinco de la mañana.
Use “sobre” when you mean “around”
If you don’t mean an exact minute, Spanish has easy options:
- Sobre las cinco. (Around five.)
- A eso de las cinco. (Around five, casual)
These are handy for arrivals, pick-ups, and anything that runs loose on time.
Time phrases you’ll use with 5:00
Many time conversations aren’t just “It’s five.” They’re “I can’t at five,” “Before five,” “After five,” “At five sharp.” Here are the patterns that show up everywhere:
Before, after, and between
- Antes de las cinco. (Before five.)
- Después de las cinco. (After five.)
- Entre las cuatro y las cinco. (Between four and five.)
From five onward
- A partir de las cinco. (From five onward.)
- Desde las cinco. (Since five / from five.)
At five, I’m…
Spanish often places the time phrase early when it frames the whole plan:
- A las cinco estoy libre. (At five I’m free.)
- A las cinco salgo del trabajo. (I get off work at five.)
- A las cinco te llamo. (I’ll call you at five.)
The RAE’s entry on hora also documents common patterns for expressing the hour, including forms used after the half hour in different regions (like “menos” in Spain and “para” in much of the Americas). hora (Diccionario panhispánico de dudas) is the academic reference.
Quick cheat sheet: 5:00 in the real world
Here’s a broad set of “5 o’clock” phrases you can slot into daily life. Pick the row that matches what you mean and you’ll be right almost every time.
| Situation | Spanish you can say | How it lands |
|---|---|---|
| You’re stating the current time | Son las cinco. | Direct, standard |
| You’re naming a meeting time | Es a las cinco. | Natural for schedules |
| You’re meeting someone at 5 p.m. | Quedamos a las cinco de la tarde. | Clear on the day part |
| You mean exactly 5:00 | Son las cinco en punto. | Precise |
| You mean “around five” | Sobre las cinco. | Relaxed timing |
| You’re answering “What time is it?” politely | Son las cinco. | Neutral tone |
| You’re writing a formal schedule (12-hour) | A las cinco de la tarde. | Readable in text |
| You’re reading a timetable (24-hour) | 17:00 / diecisiete horas | Common on boards |
| You’re setting a call time | Te llamo a las cinco. | Friendly, everyday |
Pronunciation that stops you sounding “textbook”
You can say the right words and still sound stiff if the rhythm is off. With time phrases, the fix is simple: connect the small words and keep the stress where Spanish wants it.
“Son las cinco” rhythm
Most speakers run it together: sonlas-CIN-co. The strongest beat lands on cin-. If you over-stress son or pause between son and las, it can sound forced.
“A las cinco” rhythm
This one often glides: a-las-CIN-co. Again, the beat lands on cin-. The “a” is light.
Keep “de la tarde” light
de la TAR-de carries the beat on tar-. Don’t hit each word equally. Let it flow as one unit.
Small mistakes that trip people up at 5:00
These are the common slips learners make when telling time. Fix them once and you’ll stop second-guessing yourself.
Using “es” with five
Es las cinco is the classic mistake. Five is plural in Spanish time phrasing, so you want son las cinco.
Mixing “now” and “at”
People sometimes say son las cinco when they mean a scheduled time. If you mean “at five,” use a las cinco. If you mean “it’s five,” use son las cinco.
Leaving out context when it matters
In many plans, “at five” is enough. In travel, work shifts, and anything that crosses morning and afternoon, add the day part:
- A las cinco de la mañana.
- A las cinco de la tarde.
Practice lines you can use right away
Say these out loud. Then swap in your own verb: llego (I arrive), salgo (I leave), empieza (it starts), termina (it ends). Time phrasing becomes muscle memory fast when you practice it in full sentences.
| What you mean | Spanish line | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Ask the time | ¿Qué hora es? | Say it as one smooth question |
| Answer: it’s 5:00 | Son las cinco. | Stress cin- |
| Set a plan for 5:00 | Quedamos a las cinco. | Keep a light |
| Make it 5 p.m. | Quedamos a las cinco de la tarde. | Stress tar- |
| Say “at 5 sharp” | A las cinco en punto. | Clip “punto” cleanly |
| Say “around 5” | Sobre las cinco. | Relax the timing feel |
| Move it later than 5 | Después de las cinco me va mejor. | Link de-las |
| Move it earlier than 5 | Antes de las cinco puedo. | Keep the phrase tight |
A final mental model that makes 5:00 effortless
Hold two rails in your head and you’re set:
- Son las cinco = the clock says 5:00 right now.
- A las cinco = the plan is set for 5:00.
Then add only what your listener needs: en punto for precision, de la tarde for clarity, sobre for loose timing. That’s it.
References & Sources
- Centro Virtual Cervantes.“¿Qué hora es? / ¿Qué horas son?”Explains common question forms and why most hour answers use plural (son las…).
- Real Academia Española (RAE) & ASALE.“hora (Diccionario panhispánico de dudas).”Academic guidance on expressing time, including regional patterns after the half hour and formal writing notes.
- Real Academia Española (RAE) & ASALE.“Uso de palabras o cifras en la escritura de la hora.”Style guidance on writing time with words or numerals and avoiding mixed forms in running text.
- International Organization for Standardization (ISO).“ISO 8601 — Date and time format.”Overview of the ISO 8601 ordering and formatting conventions used for unambiguous date/time representation.