Inklingo

Spanish Verb ConjugatorMaster Every Tense

Explore full conjugations for 1,832 Spanish verbs. Search by verb, translation, or filter by ending to find exactly what you need.

Welcome to the Inklingo Spanish verb conjugator. Below is a comprehensive list of Spanish verbs, from the most common regular verbs to complex irregular ones. Use the search and filter tools to quickly find a specific verb. Click on any card to view its complete conjugation tables across all major tenses and moods, including indicative, subjunctive, and imperative.

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Showing 36 of 1,832 matching verbs

abandonar

abandon

A2-ar
Gerundabandonando
Past Participleabandonado

regular

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abandonarse

neglect oneself

B2-ar
Gerundabandonándose
Past Participleabandonado

regular

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abarcar

cover

B1-ar
Gerundabarcando
Past Participleabarcado

spelling change

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abastecer

supply

B1-er
Gerundabasteciendo
Past Participleabastecido

irregular

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ablandar

soften

B1-ar
Gerundablandando
Past Participleablandado

regular

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abofetear

slap

B1-ar
Gerundabofeteando
Past Participleabofeteado

regular

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abordar

tackle

B1-ar
Gerundabordando
Past Participleabordado

regular

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abortar

abort

B1-ar
Gerundabortando
Past Participleabortado

regular

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abrazar

hug

A1-ar
Gerundabrazando
Past Participleabrazado

spelling-change

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abrir

open

A1-ir
Gerundabriendo
Past Participleabierto

regular

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abrochar

fasten

A2-ar
Gerundabrochando
Past Participleabrochado

regular

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abrumar

overwhelm

B1-ar
Gerundabrumando
Past Participleabrumado

regular

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absolver

acquit

B2-er
Gerundabsolviendo
Past Participleabsuelto

irregular (stem-changing o > ue and irregular past participle)

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absorber

soak up

A2-er
Gerundabsorbiendo
Past Participleabsorbido

regular

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abstenerse

refrain

B1-er
Gerundabsteniéndose
Past Participleabstenido

irregular

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abundar

be plentiful

B1-ar
Gerundabundando
Past Participleabundado

regular

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aburrir

bore

A2-ir
Gerundaburriendo
Past Participleaburrido

regular

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abusar

take advantage of

B1-ar
Gerundabusando
Past Participleabusado

regular

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acabar

finish

A1-ar
Gerundacabando
Past Participleacabado

regular

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acampar

camp

A2-ar
Gerundacampando
Past Participleacampado

regular

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acaparar

hoard

B1-ar
Gerundacaparando
Past Participleacaparado

regular

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acariciar

pet

A2-ar
Gerundacariciando
Past Participleacariciado

regular

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acarrear

cause

B1-ar
Gerundacarreando
Past Participleacarreado

regular

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acatar

obey

B2-ar
Gerundacatando
Past Participleacatado

regular

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acceder

access

A2-er
Gerundaccediendo
Past Participleaccedido

regular

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accionar

activate

B1-ar
Gerundaccionando
Past Participleaccionado

regular

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acechar

stalk

B1-ar
Gerundacechando
Past Participleacechado

regular

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acelerar

speed up

A2-ar
Gerundacelerando
Past Participleacelerado

regular

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acentuar

accent

A2-ar
Gerundacentuando
Past Participleacentuado

u-varying

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aceptar

accept

A1-ar
Gerundaceptando
Past Participleaceptado

regular

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acercar

they bring closer

A2-ar
Gerundacercando
Past Participleacercado

regular with a spelling change

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acercarse

approach

A2-ar
Gerundacercándose
Past Participleacercado

regular (reflexive, with spelling change in preterite 'yo' form)

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acertar

get right

B1-ar
Gerundacertando
Past Participleacertado

boot verb (e to ie change)

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aclarar

clarify

B1-ar
Gerundaclarando
Past Participleaclarado

regular

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acoger

welcome

B1-er
Gerundacogiendo
Past Participleacogido

spelling change

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acomodar

arrange

A2-ar
Gerundacomodando
Past Participleacomodado

regular

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Why Mastering Conjugations Is Essential

Verb conjugation is the backbone of Spanish communication. Every sentence you speak or write requires at least one conjugated verb, and getting it right determines whether you sound fluent or confused.

The good news: Spanish has clear patterns. Regular -ar, -er, and -ir verbs follow predictable rules, and the 20 most common irregular verbs cover the vast majority of everyday conversation. Master those, and you''re already ahead of most learners.

💡

Did You Know?

Spanish has 14 major verb tenses across 3 moods (indicative, subjunctive, imperative), but just 3 tenses — present, preterite, and imperfect — account for over 80% of verbs used in everyday speech. Focus there first.

Express Time Precisely

Past, present, future, hypothetical — conjugations let you place actions exactly when they happened or might happen.

🗣️

Avoid Embarrassing Mistakes

Wrong conjugations can change who did what. ''Hablé'' (I spoke) vs ''habló'' (he spoke) — one accent mark, completely different meaning.

📝

Pass Proficiency Exams

DELE, AP Spanish, and university placement tests all heavily test conjugation accuracy. It''s the most testable skill in Spanish.

🧠

Think in Spanish

When conjugation becomes automatic, you stop translating in your head and start thinking directly in Spanish. That''s true fluency.

Frequently Asked Questions About Spanish Conjugations

How many verb tenses does Spanish have?

Spanish has 14 major tenses across three moods: indicative (present, preterite, imperfect, future, conditional, and their compound forms), subjunctive (present, imperfect, and compound forms), and imperative. For everyday conversation, focus on the present, preterite, and imperfect first.

What are the most important irregular verbs to learn?

Start with: ser (to be), estar (to be), tener (to have), hacer (to do/make), ir (to go), poder (to be able), querer (to want), decir (to say), saber (to know), and venir (to come). These 10 verbs are used in nearly every Spanish conversation.

Do I need to memorize every conjugation?

No. Focus on patterns, not memorization. Regular verbs follow three simple patterns (-ar, -er, -ir). Learn the pattern once and you can conjugate thousands of verbs. For irregular verbs, focus on the most common ones and practice them in context rather than through rote memorization.

What is the difference between indicative and subjunctive?

The indicative mood states facts and certainties (''I know he speaks Spanish''). The subjunctive expresses doubt, wishes, emotions, and hypotheticals (''I hope he speaks Spanish''). Most beginners can delay learning the subjunctive until B1 level — it appears far less frequently in everyday speech.

What is the fastest way to practice conjugations?

Active recall is key: use our interactive exercises to conjugate verbs from memory rather than just reading tables. Start with present tense, master it, then add one new tense at a time. Practicing 10 minutes daily is more effective than cramming for an hour once a week.