Inklingo
A person in comfortable clothes climbing a large, leafy green tree using their hands and feet.

trepar Future Conjugation

treparto climb

A2regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

Use 'treparé' and 'trepará' for actions that will happen in the future.

trepar Future Forms

yotreparé
treparás
él/ella/ustedtrepará
nosotrostreparemos
vosotrostreparéis
ellos/ellas/ustedestreparán

When to Use the Future

The future tense is for actions that are certain to happen or are predicted to happen. 'Mañana treparé la pared' means 'Tomorrow I will climb the wall'. It can also express probability.

Notes on trepar in the Future

Trepar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the infinitive 'trepar-'.

Example Sentences

  • Yo treparé al árbol más alto la próxima semana.

    I will climb the tallest tree next week.

    yo

  • ¿Tú treparás por la cuerda?

    Will you climb up the rope?

  • Ella trepará la montaña con su equipo.

    She will climb the mountain with her team.

    él/ella/usted

  • Ellos treparán el muro para entrar.

    They will climb the wall to get in.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present tense instead of the future.

    Correct: For 'I will climb tomorrow', use 'treparé', not 'trepo'.

    Why: The present tense usually refers to current or habitual actions, not future ones unless context implies it (e.g., 'Mañana salgo').

  • Mistake: Confusing future and conditional.

    Correct: 'Treparé' is 'I will climb'; 'treparía' is 'I would climb'.

    Why: The future indicates certainty, while the conditional expresses hypothetical outcomes.

Master Spanish verbs in context

Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'trepar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.

Related Tenses