A simple shop chat uses a greeting, a clear request, a price check, and a polite close, all in short, repeatable lines.
You don’t need fancy Spanish to buy what you want. You need a handful of lines that fit real store moments: saying hi, asking for an item, checking the price, paying, and leaving on good terms. That’s it.
This article gives you ready-to-say conversations you can borrow, swap, and practice. You’ll get short dialogues, a phrase bank you can mix, and small tweaks that make your Spanish sound natural without memorizing pages of grammar.
Why store talk feels harder than it is
Stores feel fast. People are waiting. Background noise gets in the way. That pressure can make even simple Spanish slip away.
The fix is to use “safe sentences” you can say in one breath. Short lines beat long ones. If you keep your sentences tight, you’ll be understood even with an accent.
Two habits that help on day one
- Lead with a greeting. It buys you a second and sets a friendly tone.
- Ask one thing at a time. One request, then wait. One price question, then wait.
Conversation between a shopkeeper and a customer in Spanish for daily shopping
This section gives you a full, clean exchange you can reuse in a grocery store, corner shop, or small market stall. Read it once, then practice it out loud with a timer.
Core dialogue you can repeat
Cliente: Hola. ¿Tiene pan integral?
Dependiente: Sí. Está aquí. ¿Cuánto quiere?
Cliente: Uno, por favor. ¿Cuánto cuesta?
Dependiente: Son dos euros con veinte.
Cliente: Perfecto. ¿Puedo pagar con tarjeta?
Dependiente: Sí. Pase la tarjeta aquí.
Cliente: Gracias. ¿Me da el recibo?
Dependiente: Claro. Aquí tiene. Que tenga buen día.
Cliente: Igualmente. Hasta luego.
Easy swaps that keep the same rhythm
Keep the structure. Change only the “thing” and the “amount.” That way your brain runs the same pattern each time.
- ¿Tiene leche sin lactosa?
- ¿Tiene pilas AA?
- ¿Tiene una talla más?
- ¿Cuánto cuesta este?
- Quiero dos, por favor.
Polite openers that sound normal
Spanish shops often start with a greeting plus a small courtesy word. You don’t need long small talk. A clean opener is enough.
Shopkeeper lines you’ll hear
- Hola. ¿En qué puedo ayudarle?
- Buenas. ¿Qué busca?
- Dígame.
Customer openers that keep it smooth
- Hola. Busco café molido.
- Buenas. Quería una botella de agua.
- Perdón, ¿dónde están las galletas?
Asking for items without getting stuck
When you don’t know the word, you can still ask well. Use “¿Tiene…?” plus a short description. If you can point, even better.
Three clean patterns
- Ask if they have it: ¿Tiene té verde?
- Ask where it is: ¿Dónde está el arroz?
- Ask for the one you’re pointing at: Me llevo este, por favor.
If you want extra vocabulary practice, SpanishDict has a focused shopping lesson with common store questions and answers. Shopping in Spanish lists handy lines you’ll hear at the register.
When you need a repeat
Noise happens. Use one short request instead of apologizing a lot.
- Perdón, ¿puede repetir?
- Más despacio, por favor.
- No entendí la última parte.
Quantities, sizes, and “just a bit” language
Stores run on quantities. Learn a few size words and you can buy food, clothes, and small hardware with less stress.
Food and market quantities
- Un kilo / medio kilo
- Un cuarto
- Una docena
- Un poco más / un poco menos
- ¿Me pone dos manzanas?
Clothing sizes
- ¿Tiene esta camiseta en talla M?
- ¿Puedo probarme esto?
- ¿Dónde están los probadores?
Phrase bank you can mix and match
Use this table like a menu. Pick one line from each moment: greeting, request, price, payment, close. The phrases are short so you can combine them on the fly.
| Moment | Spanish line | Plain English meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Greeting | Hola. Buenas. | Hi. Hello. |
| Start | Perdón, una pregunta. | Sorry, a question. |
| Request | ¿Tiene ___? | Do you have ___? |
| Location | ¿Dónde está ___? | Where is ___? |
| Quantity | Quiero dos, por favor. | I want two, please. |
| Price | ¿Cuánto cuesta? | How much is it? |
| Payment | ¿Puedo pagar con tarjeta? | Can I pay by card? |
| Cash change | ¿Tiene cambio? | Do you have change? |
| Bag | ¿Necesito bolsa? / Sí, una. | Do I need a bag? / Yes, one. |
| Receipt | ¿Me da el recibo? | Can I have the receipt? |
| Close | Gracias. Hasta luego. | Thanks. See you. |
| Goodbye | Que tenga buen día. | Have a good day. |
Price talk, discounts, and register lines
Price talk is usually short. The clerk names the total. You confirm payment. Then you’re done.
What “Son…” means at the register
When you hear “Son…”, it’s the total. You can respond with “Perfecto” or “Vale” and move to payment.
Discount words you’ll see on signs
Two common words are descuento and rebajas. If you want the official dictionary meanings, the RAE entry for the term is a solid reference. RAE: “rebaja” shows how it’s used for price reductions and sale periods.
Short register dialogue
Dependiente: Son quince con cincuenta.
Cliente: Vale. Con tarjeta, por favor.
Dependiente: ¿Quiere bolsa?
Cliente: Sí, una.
Dependiente: Aquí tiene el recibo.
Cliente: Gracias. Hasta luego.
When you pay in cash, it helps to know how to check bills quickly. The Bank of Spain explains the “touch, look, tilt” method for euro notes. Bank of Spain: euro banknote security features gives a clear overview.
Fixing common problems without losing the mood
Sometimes the store is out of stock. Sometimes the price surprises you. Sometimes you grab the wrong size. You can handle all of that with calm, simple lines.
Out of stock
Dependiente: No nos queda.
Cliente: Está bien. ¿Cuándo llega?
Dependiente: Mañana por la tarde.
Cliente: Gracias. Vuelvo mañana.
Wrong item or size
Cliente: Perdón, me equivoqué. Quería el otro.
Dependiente: No pasa nada. ¿Cuál?
Cliente: El de arriba, el grande.
Return and exchange basics
Policies vary by store, so keep the language general and ask what they need from you.
- Quiero cambiar esto.
- Quiero devolver esto.
- Tengo el recibo.
- ¿Cómo lo hacemos?
Mini scripts by store type
Each script is short by design. Say it once, then swap the nouns. The tone stays polite and the flow stays steady.
| Store | Customer | Shopkeeper |
|---|---|---|
| Bakery | Hola. Quiero dos croissants, por favor. | Claro. ¿Algo más? |
| Pharmacy | Perdón, ¿tiene algo para el dolor de cabeza? | Sí. ¿Lo quiere en pastillas o en sobres? |
| Clothing | Buenas. ¿Puedo probarme esta chaqueta? | Sí. Los probadores están al fondo. |
| Market stall | ¿Me pone medio kilo de tomates? | Claro. ¿Así está bien? |
| Electronics | Busco un cargador USB-C. ¿Tiene uno? | Sí. Este sirve para móvil y tablet. |
| Bookshop | ¿Tiene este libro? Se llama “___”. | Un momento, lo busco. |
| Hardware | Necesito tornillos pequeños. ¿Dónde están? | En el pasillo tres, a la derecha. |
Usted and tú choices at the counter
In many shops you’ll hear usted forms, even between strangers who are the same age. It’s polite, and it keeps things smooth. You can answer in the same style without sounding stiff.
Listen for these cues:
- ¿En qué puedo ayudarle? and Aquí tiene usually pair with usted.
- ¿En qué te ayudo? and Aquí tienes usually pair with tú.
If you’re unsure, stick to usted in your first line. The grammar stays simple: use ¿Puede…?, ¿Tiene…?, and ¿Me da…?. If the clerk switches to tú, you can keep usted anyway. It won’t sound rude.
Numbers and money phrases that save time
Numbers get easier when you learn the store patterns. Totals often come as “Son…” plus the amount. For prices on tags, you may hear “Está a…” or “Cuesta…”.
Practice these short lines, then swap the number:
- Son tres con diez.
- Son doce euros.
- Cuesta uno con noventa y nueve.
- ¿Tiene monedas?
- No tengo cambio.
When you don’t catch a number, ask for it again in a direct way: ¿Me lo puede decir otra vez? Then check the card reader screen or the register display and repeat the amount back: Son quince con cincuenta, ¿no? That quick echo confirms you heard it right.
Pronunciation shortcuts that boost clarity
You don’t need a perfect accent. You need clear vowels and steady rhythm. Spanish vowels stay consistent: a, e, i, o, u.
When a clerk doesn’t catch your word, slow down the noun, not the whole sentence. Say the item twice if you have to.
Quick sound notes
- Tarjeta: stress on “JE”.
- Recibo: soft “c” sound like “th” in Spain, “s” in much of Latin America.
- ¿Cuánto cuesta?: keep it in three beats: cuán-to cues-ta.
Practice routine that sticks in ten minutes
You’ll learn faster if you drill the same conversation in short rounds. No long sessions needed.
Step-by-step drill
- Read one script out loud twice.
- Hide the English meanings and read only Spanish.
- Swap one noun and repeat.
- Record your voice once, then replay it.
- Do the same script again tomorrow.
One clean rule for polite tone
If you’re unsure, add “por favor” once. Don’t stack it on each line. One “gracias” at the end goes a long way.
If you want official learning resources in one place, the Instituto Cervantes lists a set of online tools for Spanish study. Instituto Cervantes: recursos y servicios can help you pick materials that match your level.
Printable role-play you can reuse
Try this role-play with a friend or a voice note. Switch roles each round. Keep the pace friendly, then speed it up a bit.
Role-play script
Dependiente: Hola. ¿Qué busca?
Cliente: Busco café. ¿Tiene molido?
Dependiente: Sí. ¿De qué tipo?
Cliente: Suave, por favor. ¿Cuánto cuesta este?
Dependiente: Son cinco euros.
Cliente: Me lo llevo. Con tarjeta.
Dependiente: Perfecto. Pase la tarjeta aquí.
Cliente: Gracias. Hasta luego.
References & Sources
- SpanishDict.“Shopping in Spanish.”Phrase list and common store questions used in shopping situations.
- Real Academia Española (RAE).“rebaja.”Dictionary entry that defines the term in pricing and sale contexts.
- Banco de España.“Las medidas de seguridad de los billetes.”Explains how to check euro banknotes using simple visual and touch checks.
- Instituto Cervantes.“Recursos y servicios.”Directory of official online resources for Spanish learning and teaching.