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Language Tips#spanish#phrases#beginner

10 Spanish Phrases You'll Use Every Day

LT
LumenShore Team
·22 March 2026·6 min read

Language textbooks love teaching you how to say "The cat is under the table" or "My uncle is a firefighter." Useful? Maybe someday. What you actually need on day one are the phrases that let you navigate real conversations — ordering food, asking for help, making small talk, and being polite.

Here are ten Spanish phrases that cover roughly 80% of daily conversational needs. Master these, and you'll feel functional in any Spanish-speaking environment.

1. "¿Cómo estás?" — How are you?

The most common greeting after hola. The informal tú form (¿Cómo estás?) is appropriate for peers, friends, and most casual interactions. For formal situations — a boss, an elder, or a stranger — use ¿Cómo está usted?

Pro tip: The expected response isn't an honest health report. Say "Bien, gracias, ¿y tú?" (Good, thanks, and you?) — the universal social lubricant of the Spanish-speaking world.

Variations

  • ¿Qué tal? — What's up? (Very casual)
  • ¿Cómo te va? — How's it going?
  • ¿Cómo andas? — How are you doing? (Argentina/Uruguay)

2. "Me gustaría..." — I would like...

This single phrase handles restaurants, shops, hotels, and every transaction where you need something. It's more polite than quiero (I want), which can sound blunt.

Examples:

  • Me gustaría un café, por favor. — I'd like a coffee, please.
  • Me gustaría la cuenta. — I'd like the bill.
  • Me gustaría una mesa para dos. — I'd like a table for two.
✨Pro Tip

In casual situations, "Quisiera..." (I would like) works identically and sounds slightly more native. Both are subjunctive forms of politeness that Spanish speakers appreciate from learners.

3. "¿Cuánto cuesta?" — How much does it cost?

Essential for markets, shops, taxis, and any situation where prices aren't displayed. For plural items: ¿Cuánto cuestan?

Useful follow-ups:

  • Es muy caro. — It's very expensive.
  • ¿Tiene algo más barato? — Do you have something cheaper?
  • ¿Acepta tarjeta? — Do you accept card?

4. "No entiendo" — I don't understand

The single most important safety phrase for any language learner. Saying this clearly and confidently signals that you're trying but need help — and Spanish speakers will almost always slow down, simplify, or find another way to communicate.

Power combo:

  1. No entiendo. — I don't understand.
  2. ¿Puede hablar más despacio? — Can you speak more slowly?
  3. ¿Puede repetir, por favor? — Can you repeat, please?

These three phrases together create a conversation rescue kit that prevents you from nodding along pretending to understand (we've all done it).

5. "¿Dónde está...?" — Where is...?

Navigation in any city requires this phrase:

  • ¿Dónde está el baño? — Where is the bathroom?
  • ¿Dónde está la estación de metro? — Where is the metro station?
  • ¿Dónde está la farmacia más cercana? — Where is the nearest pharmacy?

Understanding the answer is the hard part. Listen for these direction words:

  • a la derecha — to the right
  • a la izquierda — to the left
  • todo recto / derecho — straight ahead
  • al lado de — next to
  • en la esquina — on the corner
🗺️

Contextual Vocabulary

LumenLingo groups vocabulary by real-world context — dining, travel, shopping, social — so you learn words that naturally go together. When you need "Where is the bathroom?", you'll also know "left," "right," and "straight ahead."

6. "Lo siento" — I'm sorry

Two types of sorry in Spanish:

  • Lo siento — I'm sorry (empathy, regret). Use when something unfortunate happened: Lo siento por tu pérdida (I'm sorry for your loss).
  • Perdón / Disculpe — Excuse me / Pardon (requesting attention or apologising for a minor inconvenience). Use when bumping into someone, getting a waiter's attention, or interrupting.

English speakers often say "lo siento" when they should say "perdón". If you stepped on someone's foot, it's perdón. If their dog died, it's lo siento.

7. "¿Qué me recomienda?" — What do you recommend?

A restaurant power phrase. Instead of struggling through a menu in a foreign language, ask the waiter what's good. This also signals cultural respect — you're trusting their expertise rather than imposing your preferences.

Variations:

  • ¿Cuál es el plato del día? — What's the dish of the day?
  • ¿Qué es lo más popular? — What's the most popular?
  • Soy alérgico/a a... — I'm allergic to... (Critical if applicable!)

8. "Me encanta" — I love it

Express genuine enthusiasm. Me gusta means "I like it," but me encanta (literally "it enchants me") communicates delight. Use it generously — Spanish speakers appreciate enthusiasm.

  • Me encanta esta ciudad. — I love this city.
  • Me encanta la comida. — I love the food.
  • ¡Me encanta! — I love it! (General enthusiasm about anything)
💡Did You Know?

The verb encantar works grammatically like gustar — the thing you love is the subject. Literally, "me encanta la comida" means "the food enchants me." This is why it's me encanta (singular: the food) not me encantan unless referring to multiple distinct things.

9. "Estoy aprendiendo español" — I'm learning Spanish

This phrase is social magic. Saying it early in a conversation accomplishes three things:

  1. Sets expectations. The other person knows to speak simply and patiently.
  2. Earns goodwill. Spanish speakers overwhelmingly appreciate the effort of learning their language and will help you.
  3. Opens doors. People love helping learners — you'll get free vocabulary lessons, pronunciation corrections, and cultural insights from strangers.

Follow-up phrases:

  • Hablo un poco de español. — I speak a little Spanish.
  • Mi español no es muy bueno, pero estoy practicando. — My Spanish isn't very good, but I'm practicing.

10. "¡Salud!" — Cheers! / Bless you!

A delightful multipurpose word:

  • Toast at a bar: Raise your glass and say ¡Salud! Literally means "health."
  • Someone sneezes: Say ¡Salud! Same word, same spirit.
  • General well-wishing: ¡Salud! works in any context where you'd wish someone well.

It's one of those words that makes you feel immediately integrated into social moments — and it's impossible to mispronounce.

The 80/20 Principle in Action

These ten phrases won't make you fluent. But they'll make you functional — and functional is where confidence lives. Confidence is what keeps you practicing. And consistent practice is what eventually makes you fluent.

The 80/20 principle (Pareto's law) applies powerfully to language learning: roughly 20% of the vocabulary handles 80% of daily situations. These ten phrases are the starting line of that 20%.

Master them, then expand. Use them in real conversations, make mistakes, get corrected, and keep going. Each successful interaction — ordering coffee, asking for directions, sharing a toast — builds the emotional evidence that you can do this.


Start with these ten, then keep going. Download LumenLingo and build your Spanish vocabulary systematically — from essential phrases to confident conversation, one flashcard at a time.

Continue Reading

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