Spanish Numbers 1-100 with Audio

Learn every number in Spanish. We will teach you the patterns step by step so you can say any number confidently.

Numbers100
Patterns4
AudioYes
CostFree
Speed0.9x

Step 1: Numbers 1-10 (memorize these)

These ten numbers are the building blocks for everything else. There is no pattern here. You need to memorize each one. Click to hear the pronunciation and repeat out loud.

1uno
2dos
3tres
4cuatro
5cinco
6seis
7siete
8ocho
9nueve
10diez
Practice tip

Count your fingers in Spanish. Touch each finger and say the number out loud: uno, dos, tres... Do this five times until it feels automatic. Then try counting backward: diez, nueve, ocho...

Step 2: Numbers 11-15 (unique words, memorize these too)

Bad news: 11 through 15 are also unique words with no clear pattern. You just have to learn them. Good news: this is the last group you need to memorize. Everything after 15 follows rules.

11once
12doce
13trece
14catorce
15quince

Step 3: Numbers 16-19 (first pattern!)

Here is where it gets easy. The pattern is: dieci + unit number, written as one word. So 16 = dieci + seis = dieciseis. Simple!

16dieciséis
17diecisiete
18dieciocho
19diecinueve
The formula

dieci + seis = dieciséis (16), dieci + siete = diecisiete (17), dieci + ocho = dieciocho (18), dieci + nueve = diecinueve (19). You already know the unit numbers from Step 1. Just add dieci in front!

Step 4: Numbers 20-29 (same pattern with veinti)

Twenty is veinte. For 21-29, the pattern is veinti + unit, written as one word. Almost identical to the 16-19 pattern.

20veinte
21veintiuno
22veintidós
23veintitrés
24veinticuatro
25veinticinco
26veintiséis
27veintisiete
28veintiocho
29veintinueve

Step 5: The tens (30, 40, 50... 100)

Learn these seven words and you can build any number up to 100. Notice the pattern: most end in -enta.

30treinta
40cuarenta
50cincuenta
60sesenta
70setenta
80ochenta
90noventa
100cien

Step 6: Building any number 31-99

The magic formula: tens + y + units (as separate words). That is it. You now know every number from 1 to 100.

31treinta y uno
42cuarenta y dos
53cincuenta y tres
64sesenta y cuatro
75setenta y cinco
86ochenta y seis
97noventa y siete
99noventa y nueve
How it works

Pick any number, say 73. Split it: 70 + 3. Seventy is setenta, three is tres, connect with y: setenta y tres. Try 48: cuarenta y ocho. Try 91: noventa y uno. Every number from 31-99 works exactly the same way. No exceptions.

Summary: 4 rules to remember

1. Numbers 1-15: memorize individually (uno through quince)

2. Numbers 16-19: dieci + unit as one word (dieciséis, diecisiete...)

3. Numbers 21-29: veinti + unit as one word (veintiuno, veintidós...)

4. Numbers 31-99: tens + y + unit as three words (treinta y uno, cuarenta y cinco...)

Quiz: Test Your Spanish Numbers

1. What is 'cinco' in English?

2. How do you say 'seven' in Spanish?

3. What number is 'veinte'?

4. How do you say '15' in Spanish?

5. What is 'cuarenta' in English?

6. How do you say '100' in Spanish?

7. What number is 'once'?

8. How do you say '50' in Spanish?

9. What is 'dieciséis'?

10. How do you say '0' in Spanish?

Ready to use these numbers in sentences?

Free tools for translation, text-to-speech and language learning. No registration, no limits.

Learn Spanish HubTranslatorText to Speech

How Spanish numbers work

Spanish numbers follow a logical system once you understand the patterns. Numbers 1-15 must be memorized individually. Starting at 16, numbers are built by combining known parts. The compound system from 31 onward is completely regular with zero exceptions making Spanish numbers easier than English.

The word for 100 is cien when alone or before a noun but ciento in compounds (ciento uno, ciento veinte). Learning to count to 100 is achievable in a single study session because the patterns are so consistent and predictable.

The four patterns you need

Pattern one: 1-15 are unique words. Pattern two: 16-19 use dieci + unit as one word. Pattern three: 21-29 use veinti + unit as one word. Pattern four: 31-99 use tens + y + unit as three words. These four rules cover every number from 1 to 100.

Once you know the units and the tens you can construct any number on the fly. Most learners master this quickly because the patterns are so consistent. After memorizing 1-15 and the seven tens every other number can be built without additional memorization.

When you need Spanish numbers

Numbers appear constantly: prices, addresses, phone numbers, telling time, dates, ages, hotel rooms, bus numbers and sports scores. Confident number pronunciation makes all these interactions smoother and more natural in any Spanish-speaking country.

At restaurants you need numbers for the bill. At markets you negotiate prices. At hotels you confirm rooms and checkout times. At train stations you read platform numbers and departure times. Numbers are the foundation of practical communication.

Pronunciation tips

Most Spanish numbers stress the last syllable which creates a rhythmic pattern aiding memorization. The -enta numbers (treinta, cuarenta, cincuenta) all share the same stress and rhythm making them easy to group together in your memory.

Practice counting forward and backward. Try random numbers to test yourself. Say phone numbers digit by digit. Practice prices by imagining you are at a Spanish market. The audio on this page gives authentic pronunciation at your chosen speed.

From 100 and beyond

Two hundred is doscientos, three hundred trescientos, up to novecientos. One thousand is mil. Two thousand is dos mil. One million is un millon. The system stays consistent and predictable at every level of magnitude.

Knowing 1-100 gives you building blocks for any number. Spanish large numbers follow the same logical patterns requiring only a few additional words. The system remains consistent and learner-friendly at every level.