Spanish Subject Pronouns

Subject pronouns tell us who is doing the action. In Spanish, they are often omitted because the verb ending tells you who is speaking.

Hablo español. (I speak Spanish.) — "yo" is understood from "-o"

¿Hablas inglés? (Do you speak English?) — "tú" is understood from "-as"

Master the pronouns and the grammar becomes much clearer.

The Six Subject Pronouns

Spanish has six main subject pronouns:

yo I (first person singular)
you (informal, singular)
él / ella / usted he / she / you (formal, singular)
nosotros / nosotras we (first person plural)
vosotros / vosotras you all (informal, Spain only)
ellos / ellas / ustedes they / you all (plural)

Note: nosotras, ellas, vosotras are feminine forms (all female groups). Use nosotros, ellos, vosotros for mixed groups.

Yo vs. Tú vs. Usted

= informal "you" (friends, family, peers)

Tú hablas rápido. (You speak fast. — to a friend)

Usted (Ud.) = formal "you" (teachers, strangers, older people)

Usted habla rápido. (You speak fast. — to a teacher)

Key difference: Tú and usted have DIFFERENT verb endings!

Tú hablas (informal) vs. Usted habla (formal)

Masculine vs. Feminine (and Mixed Groups)

When a group includes both males and females, or the gender is unknown, use the masculine form:

Un grupo de hombres: Ellos hablan. (All male group: They speak.)

Un grupo de mujeres: Ellas hablan. (All female group: They speak.)

Un grupo mixto: Ellos hablan. (Mixed group: They speak. — use masculine)

Same rule for nosotros/nosotras and vosotros/vosotras.

When to Use Subject Pronouns

Usually OMITTED: The verb ending tells you who is speaking

Trabajo en un banco. (I work in a bank.) — no need for "yo"

USE the pronoun to:

  • Emphasize who is speaking: Yo trabajo aquí; ella trabaja en otra oficina. (I work here; she works elsewhere.)
  • Clarify when two people might be confused: Él habla español, pero ella habla inglés. (He speaks Spanish, but she speaks English.)
  • Contrast: Nosotros preferimos café; ustedes prefieren té. (We prefer coffee; you prefer tea.)

Spain vs. Latin America: Vosotros

In Spain, people use vosotros/vosotras for informal "you all":

¿Vosotros habláis español? (Do you all speak Spanish? — informal, Spain)

In Latin America, people use ustedes for all "you all" (formal and informal):

¿Ustedes hablan español? (Do you all speak Spanish? — Latin America)

For A1, focus on the pronouns most common in your region. Both are correct!

Common Mistakes

Traps for English speakers

These are the errors English speakers make most often.

Yo veo le
Yo lo veo
Object pronouns go before the conjugated verb.
Es para yo
Es para
After a preposition use mí, not yo.
Doy a ella el libro
Le doy el libro
Use the indirect-object pronoun le.

Key Takeaways

  • Spanish has six main pronouns that correspond to verb endings.
  • Subject pronouns are usually omitted unless you want to emphasize or clarify.
  • (informal) vs. usted (formal) — different verb endings!
  • Use masculine form for mixed-gender groups.
  • Vosotros (Spain) vs. ustedes (Latin America) for "you all".

Practice →