In Spanish, “your mom” is usually “tu mamá” in familiar talk and “su mamá” when you’re being respectful or using formal address.
You’ll hear a few ways to say “your mom” in Spanish, and they don’t all land the same. One small word changes the tone: tu feels close and direct, while su can sound polite, distant, or unclear unless the context is tight.
This article gives you the phrases native speakers lean on, when each one fits, and the grammar checks that keep you from sounding sharp, childish, or oddly formal.
Your Mom In Spanish With The Right Tone
English uses “your mom” for lots of jobs: a neutral label (“your mom is here”), a warm check-in (“how’s your mom?”), or possession (“your mom’s car”). Spanish does the same jobs, but the wording shifts with closeness, respect, and who you’re talking to.
Two nouns matter. Madre is neutral and common in writing, school notes, and official contexts. Mamá is everyday and affectionate, so it shows up constantly in real conversation. The choice doesn’t change meaning as much as it changes feel.
Tu Vs. Su Changes The Relationship
Tu matches familiar “you”: friends, classmates, family, couples, and casual talk. Su often lines up with respectful or formal address tied to usted. It can also mean “his,” “her,” or “their,” which is why clarity becomes a bigger deal when you use it.
If you’re speaking to someone you don’t know well, su mamá is the safer pick. If you’re speaking to a friend, tu mamá will sound natural.
Mamá Vs. Madre Sets The Vibe
Mamá is widely used in everyday speech. The Real Academia Española marks it as a common, colloquial way to refer to one’s mother. RAE definition of “mamá” reflects that everyday use.
Madre stays normal in speech, just less cozy. It’s also the default in formal writing and neutral descriptions. RAE definition of “madre” shows the core meaning and common senses.
Everyday Phrases That Cover Most Situations
Start with these three and you can handle most moments without overthinking:
- Tu mamá — familiar and direct: “your mom.”
- Su mamá — respectful or formal: “your mother.”
- La mamá de + nombre — specific and clear: “(Name)’s mom.”
Spanish also drops repeated nouns once the person is obvious. You might begin with “¿Cómo está tu mamá?” and later just ask “¿Cómo está?” because everyone already knows who you mean.
When You Should Add A Name
Use a name when su could point to more than one person. In a room with several people, “su mamá” can trigger a quick follow-up like “¿la de quién?”
These fixes sound natural and keep things clear:
- La mamá de Carlos — Carlos’s mom.
- Su mamá, la de Carlos — his mom, Carlos’s.
- La mamá de la niña — the girl’s mom (when the child is already known in the talk).
Who Is Your Mom In Spanish?
If you mean the direct identity question “Who is your mom?”, Spanish uses quién plus the verb ser. You’re not translating the phrase “your mom” here; you’re asking who the person is.
These options are clean and natural:
- ¿Quién es tu mamá? — familiar, common with friends.
- ¿Quién es su mamá? — respectful, used with usted.
- ¿Quién es tu madre? — familiar but more neutral.
- ¿Quién es su madre? — formal and neutral.
In many places you’ll also hear “¿Tu mamá quién es?” That word order is conversational and widely understood.
Accent Detail That Changes Meaning
Spanish has two look-alike words: tú (the pronoun “you”) and tu (the possessive “your”). They differ by a diacritic accent. The RAE explains that the pronoun carries the accent to separate it from the possessive. RAE note on “tú” vs “tu” spells out the rule.
So “¿Quién eres tú?” uses the accented pronoun. “Tu mamá” uses the unaccented possessive.
Ways People Refer To Someone’s Mom In Real Life
Once you’ve got the building blocks, the rest is mix-and-match. Spanish often chooses what sounds respectful without sounding stiff, so you’ll hear titles and family terms a lot in everyday interaction.
Use Señora In Polite Contexts
If you’re speaking to an adult about their mother and you want a respectful tone, you can pair mamá with a title or a clarifier. It shows courtesy without pushing you into overly formal phrasing.
- ¿Cómo está su mamá?
- ¿Cómo está su mamá, la señora García?
- Su mamá ya llegó.
Use “Mamá” As A Direct Address Carefully
Kids say “Mamá” when speaking to their own mother, and adults may also use it in family talk. When you’re talking about someone else’s mom, you usually keep it as “tu mamá” or “su mamá,” not just “Mamá” on its own, unless you’re in a setting where everyone calls her that (like close family friends).
Regional Note: Vos Still Uses Tu For “Your”
In parts of Latin America you’ll hear vos instead of tú. That can change the verb forms (“vos sos,” “vos tenés”), but the possessive for “your” is still commonly tu in daily speech.
So you may hear “¿Quién es tu mamá?” right alongside vos verbs in the same conversation. If you’re learning for one specific country, it’s worth listening for what locals use around you, then matching it.
Table Of Phrases And When Each One Fits
This table gives you ready-to-use options with the tone each one carries, so you can pick quickly without guessing.
| Spanish Phrase | English Sense | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Tu mamá | your mom | Friends, family, casual talk |
| Tu madre | your mother | Neutral tone, writing, school settings |
| Su mamá | your mother (formal) / his / her / their | Respectful address; add a name if unclear |
| Su madre | your mother (formal) / his / her / their | Formal or written tone; neutral phrasing |
| La mamá de Ana | Ana’s mom | Clarity when several people are involved |
| La madre de Ana | Ana’s mother | Formal clarity in notes, emails, documents |
| ¿Quién es tu mamá? | Who is your mom? | Identity question, familiar address |
| ¿Quién es su mamá? | Who is your mother? | Identity question, respectful address |
| ¿Cómo está tu mamá? | How is your mom? | Warm check-in with someone close |
Grammar Checks That Keep You From Sounding Off
Most mistakes with “your mom” aren’t about vocabulary. They come from possessives, formality, and number.
Match The Possessive To Who Owns It
Spanish possessives match the person who owns the thing, not the gender of the thing. So it’s tu mamá and tu padre, not a gendered form like “ta” or “to.”
Also, the possessive changes when the thing owned is plural: tus for “your” (plural items) and sus for “his/her/their/your” (formal, plural items). The Instituto Cervantes curriculum lists the core set (mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus) and shows the number pattern clearly. Cervantes inventory of possessives is a solid reference.
Know What “Su” Might Mean
Su can mean “your” (formal), “his,” “her,” or “their.” Native speakers keep it clear in two simple ways: they rely on context, or they add a clarifier like a name or “de él / de ella / de ellos.”
If you’re writing and the reader might guess wrong, “la mamá de Laura” can be cleaner than “su mamá.” It’s direct and hard to misread.
Plural “You” Can Shift The Possessive
In most of Latin America, ustedes is the usual “you all,” even with friends, so su can mean “your” (plural). In Spain, you’ll also hear vosotros for casual plural “you,” and that can bring in forms like vuestra madre in very casual group talk.
If you want one choice that’s widely understood, ustedes and su will travel well.
Pick-Right Rules By Situation
Use this table when you need a fast, confident choice in the moment.
| Situation | What To Say | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Talking to a friend | Tu mamá | Fits familiar address |
| Talking to a teacher, boss, older adult | Su mamá | Matches respectful address |
| Writing a school note | La madre de + nombre | Clear and neutral in writing |
| Several people could be “su” | Su mamá, la de + nombre | Removes doubt |
| Asking identity, casual | ¿Quién es tu mamá? | Direct identity question |
| Asking identity, respectful | ¿Quién es su mamá? | Direct identity question with courtesy |
Mini Scripts You Can Reuse
Memorizing full lines beats memorizing single words. These scripts cover the moments learners run into most.
Meeting Someone’s Family
- Mucho gusto. ¿Usted es la mamá de Sofía?
- Encantado. ¿Tú eres la mamá de Sofía? (use only if you already speak on tú terms)
- Tu mamá me habló de ti.
Checking In When Someone Mentions A Hard Week
- ¿Cómo está tu mamá hoy?
- ¿Cómo está su mamá?
- Si necesitas algo, avísame.
Talking About Belongings
- Ese es el carro de tu mamá.
- Esa bolsa es de su mamá.
- La casa de tu mamá queda cerca.
Common Mistakes And Clean Fixes
These are the slips that make learners sound odd, plus the fix that gets you back on track.
Mixing Up Tú And Tu In Writing
If you mean “you,” use tú. If you mean “your,” use tu. A quick test: if you can replace it with “mi” (my), it’s the possessive and it has no accent.
Using “Su Mamá” With Close Friends
With close friends, su mamá can sound stiff. Swap to tu mamá unless your relationship is clearly formal or you’re speaking in a setting that expects respectful address.
Forgetting That “Su” Can Be Ambiguous
If you say “su mamá” and the listener pauses, don’t repeat it louder. Just clarify smoothly: “su mamá, la de Carlos” or “la mamá de Carlos.” It sounds normal and keeps the talk moving.
Two-Second Self-Check Before You Speak
Run through these in your head. It takes almost no time and it saves you from awkward corrections.
- Am I speaking in familiar address (tú) or respectful address (usted)?
- Could su point to more than one person in this context?
- Do I want an everyday tone (mamá) or a neutral tone (madre)?
Answer those, pick the phrase, and you’ll sound natural.
References & Sources
- Real Academia Española (RAE).“madre” (Diccionario de la lengua española).Defines “madre” and its primary senses used in neutral and formal contexts.
- Real Academia Española (RAE).“mamá” (Diccionario de la lengua española).Notes “mamá” as a common, colloquial term for “mother” in everyday speech.
- Real Academia Española (RAE).“tú” (Diccionario panhispánico de dudas).Explains the diacritic accent that distinguishes “tú” (pronoun) from “tu” (possessive).
- Instituto Cervantes (Centro Virtual Cervantes).“Gramática. Inventario A1-A2” (posesivos).Lists core Spanish possessive forms (mi/tu/su) and how they vary with number.