Preterite or Imperfect in Spanish | Pick The Right Past

Use preterite for finished past events and imperfect for background, habits, and “was/were ___-ing” scenes.

These two past tenses feel like a coin toss until you stop treating them as “two ways to say the past.” They’re more like two camera modes. One snaps a completed event. The other keeps the scene running so you can describe what was going on.

This article gives you a clean set of decision rules, the signal words that help (and the ones that trick you), and practice patterns you can reuse in real conversations and writing.

What Each Tense Claims About Time

Start with one idea: Spanish past tense choice is about viewpoint. You’re telling the listener how to see the action.

Preterite Frames A Past Event As Completed

Preterite (often taught as pretérito indefinido or pretérito perfecto simple) marks an event as done inside the story timeline. It can be a quick action, a series, or a chunk with clear edges.

  • One-time events: Ayer compré pan.
  • Series of actions: Entré, vi a Ana y salí.
  • Beginnings and endings: Empezó a llover. / Terminó la clase.

Imperfect Keeps The Past “Open”

Imperfect (usually pretérito imperfecto) does not mark an ending. It sets a scene, describes ongoing action, or reports habits and repeated patterns. Think “used to” and “was/were doing.”

  • Background description: La casa era pequeña.
  • Ongoing action: Leía cuando sonó el teléfono.
  • Habits: De niño jugaba en el parque.

Preterite Vs Imperfect In Spanish With Clear Signals

When you’re stuck, run this simple mental check. You don’t need grammar jargon. You need two questions you can answer fast.

Question One: Is The Action Presented As Done?

If you’re presenting it as finished inside the story, pick preterite. If you’re leaving it open or using it as scene-setting, pick imperfect.

Question Two: Are You Moving The Story Or Painting The Scene?

Preterite moves the plot forward. Imperfect paints the backdrop. In many sentences, both tenses appear together because a story needs both motion and setting.

  • Mientras yo cocinaba, él llegó. (background + event)
  • Vivíamos en Madrid y un día conocimos a Julia. (state + event)

Signal Words That Nudge You Toward Preterite

Signal words help, but treat them as hints, not laws. These tend to pair with completed events:

  • ayer, anoche, anteayer
  • el lunes pasado, en 2019, una vez
  • de repente, entonces, por fin

Signal Words That Nudge You Toward Imperfect

These often introduce habits, ongoing scenes, or repeated time blocks:

  • siempre, a menudo, todos los días
  • antes, en esa época, cuando era niño
  • mientras (when it means “while” and sets background)

How The Two Tenses Work Together In One Sentence

A lot of confusion comes from trying to label a sentence as “preterite” or “imperfect.” Real Spanish stacks them. One clause sets the scene, the other delivers the event.

Background Plus Interrupting Event

This is the classic pattern: imperfect for the action in progress, preterite for the interrupting event.

  • Estudiaba en la biblioteca cuando se fue la luz.
  • Mirábamos la tele y de repente sonó la alarma.

State Plus Change

Use imperfect for a past state, preterite for the moment it changed.

  • La puerta estaba cerrada, pero alguien la abrió.
  • No tenía tiempo y luego conseguí un hueco.

Habit Plus One Exception

Imperfect marks a repeated routine. Preterite marks the day the routine broke.

  • Siempre tomaba café, pero ayer pedí té.
  • Los domingos íbamos al mercado y un domingo nos quedamos en casa.

Conjugation Patterns You Should Know Cold

You can pick the right tense and still get stuck on endings. The good news: most forms are regular, and the irregular sets are small.

Imperfect Endings Are Mostly Predictable

For -ar verbs: -aba, -abas, -aba, -ábamos, -abais, -aban. For -er/-ir verbs: -ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían.

Only three verbs are irregular in the imperfect: ser (era), ir (iba), and ver (veía).

Preterite Has More Irregulars, So Group Them

Preterite irregulars look scary when you list them one by one. Group them by pattern and they stick.

  • Stem-changers: tener (tuve), estar (estuve), poner (puse), venir (vine).
  • -ir verbs with i/y: leer (leyó), oír (oyó), caer (cayó).
  • Spelling shifts for sound: buscar (busqué), llegar (llegué), empezar (empecé).

Decision Table For The Tense Choice

Use this table when you’re editing writing or checking homework. Pick the row that matches your meaning, then match the tense.

What You Mean Pick This Tense Mini Example
Single finished event at a point in the past Preterite Ayer llamé a mi madre.
Series of completed actions Preterite Entré, compré pan y salí.
Beginning or ending of an action Preterite Empezó a nevar.
Background scene or description Imperfect La calle estaba vacía.
Ongoing action when another event happens Imperfect Cocinaba cuando llegaste.
Habit or repeated pattern in the past Imperfect De pequeño jugaba aquí.
Age, time, and ongoing states in the past Imperfect Tenía quince años.
Change of state or a switch that advances the story Preterite De pronto me di cuenta.

Meaning Changes With Certain Verbs

Some verbs shift meaning depending on the tense. You’re not just changing grammar. You’re changing what you claim happened.

Two reminders help: imperfect often reads like “was” or “used to,” while preterite often reads like “did” or “got.” The verb stays the same, your viewpoint changes.

If you want official terminology for these tenses, the Real Academia Española’s glossary entries for pretérito imperfecto de indicativo and pretérito perfecto simple lay out the contrast in a clear, compact way.

Three Pairs That Show The Shift Fast

  • conocer: Conocía a Marta (I knew her) vs Conocí a Marta (I met her).
  • saber: Sabía la respuesta (I knew it) vs Supe la respuesta (I found out).
  • poder: Podía salir (I was able / had permission) vs Pude salir (I managed to get out).

Common Ones Learners Trip Over

  • querer: Quería (I wanted) vs Quise (I tried / I decided).
  • tener: Tenía (I had) vs Tuve (I got / I had for a time).
  • estar: Estaba (I was) vs Estuve (I was there for a while).

How To Fix The Most Common Mistakes

Mistakes often come from translating one English word at a time. English past simple covers both ideas. Spanish splits them.

Using Preterite For Age And Ongoing States

Age, time, feelings, and ongoing states usually sit in imperfect because they act like a backdrop.

  • Better: Tenía veinte años. (not Tuve veinte años unless you mean “I had a twenty-year-old phase” with a clear frame)
  • Better: Estaba cansado. when it’s a state in a scene

Overusing Imperfect For One-Time Events

If the sentence is about “what happened,” preterite often fits. Watch for finished actions tied to a point in time.

  • El sábado fui al cine.
  • Anoche cenamos tarde.

Letting “Siempre” Force Imperfect

Siempre often pairs with imperfect, but it can show up with preterite when you’re talking about a series you treat as complete.

  • Routine: Siempre iba en bus.
  • Complete chapter: Siempre fui amable con él en esa etapa.

Missing The Scene Setting Step

If your story feels flat, you may be stacking preterite verbs and skipping the background. Add one imperfect clause to set time, weather, mood, or what people were doing.

The Centro Virtual Cervantes has teaching notes that frame this contrast as “background vs events,” which matches how real narration works in Spanish. You can see that idea in their PDF on imperfecto e indefinido en la clase de ELE.

Practice Patterns That Build Automatic Choice

Reading rules helps. Your brain still needs reps. These patterns train you to choose tense without pausing mid-sentence.

Pattern One: While X Was Happening, Y Happened

Write five lines using this frame, changing only the verbs:

  • Mientras + imperfecto, pretérito.

Try: Mientras caminaba, vi un perro. Then swap verbs: Mientras hablábamos, llegó el jefe.

Pattern Two: Used To, Then One Day

This trains habit vs exception:

  • Antes + imperfecto. Un día + pretérito.

Try: Antes estudiaba por la noche. Un día cambié mi horario.

Pattern Three: Description, Then Action

Set the scene with two imperfect clauses, then add one preterite action.

Try: Hacía frío, la calle estaba vacía y de repente alguien gritó.

Mini Drill Table For Daily Practice

Use this as a 10-minute warm-up. Speak the sentence out loud, then change one detail and say it again.

Drill Prompt Target Tense One Clean Model
Background + interrupting event Imperfect + preterite Leía cuando tocaron la puerta.
Habit in the past Imperfect De niño jugaba aquí.
One finished event with a time marker Preterite En 2020 me mudé a Sevilla.
State, then change Imperfect + preterite No tenía hambre y luego pedí algo.
Meaning change verb pair Depends on meaning Conocía a Ana / Conocí a Ana.

Last Check Before You Hit Send

When you’re writing a message, a diary entry, or a story, do this simple review:

  • Circle the verbs that move the timeline. Those often want preterite.
  • Underline verbs that describe a scene, habit, age, time, or mood. Those often want imperfect.
  • If you see only one tense across a whole paragraph, add one clause of the other tense and see if the meaning sharpens.

If you want a standard definition of “pretérito” in Spanish grammar terms, the RAE dictionary entry for pretérito is a handy reference for the labels you’ll see in textbooks.

References & Sources