Spanish Professions & Jobs

Learn 40+ job titles in Spanish with audio pronunciation. Click any word to hear it spoken.

Words42
AudioYes
GenderM/F
CostFree
Speed0.85x

Healthcare & Science

el médico / la médica

doctor

el enfermero / la enfermera

nurse

el dentista / la dentista

dentist

el cirujano / la cirujana

surgeon

el farmacéutico / la farmacéutica

pharmacist

el veterinario / la veterinaria

vet

el científico / la científica

scientist

Gender in professions

Most Spanish professions change -o to -a for feminine: médico → médica. Some stay the same: el/la periodista, el/la dentista. A few have irregular forms: actor → actriz, rey → reina.

Education & Office

el profesor / la profesora

teacher

el maestro / la maestra

elementary teacher

el director / la directora

principal / director

el abogado / la abogada

lawyer

el contador / la contadora

accountant

el secretario / la secretaria

secretary

el ingeniero / la ingeniera

engineer

el arquitecto / la arquitecta

architect

Talking about jobs

Use ser (not estar) for professions: Soy médico (I am a doctor). Note: Spanish often drops the article: Soy profesor, not Soy un profesor. Add un/una only for emphasis or with adjectives: Es un buen abogado.

Trades & Services

el bombero / la bombera

firefighter

el policía / la policía

police officer

el mecánico / la mecánica

mechanic

el electricista

electrician

el plomero / la plomera

plumber

el carpintero / la carpintera

carpenter

el cocinero / la cocinera

cook / chef

el camarero / la camarera

waiter / waitress

el peluquero / la peluquera

hairdresser

el conductor / la conductora

driver

Asking about work

¿A qué te dedicas? (What do you do?) and ¿En qué trabajas? (What do you work in?) are the most common ways to ask about someone's profession. The answer: Soy... or Trabajo como... (I work as...).

Arts, Media & Tech

el periodista / la periodista

journalist

el escritor / la escritora

writer

el músico / la música

musician

el actor / la actriz

actor / actress

el fotógrafo / la fotógrafa

photographer

el diseñador / la diseñadora

designer

el programador / la programadora

programmer

Business & Commerce

el empresario / la empresaria

entrepreneur

el gerente / la gerente

manager

el vendedor / la vendedora

salesperson

el piloto / la piloto

pilot

el agricultor / la agricultora

farmer

el cartero / la cartera

mail carrier

el juez / la jueza

judge

el traductor / la traductora

translator

Quiz: Spanish Professions

1. What does 'médico' mean?

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

3. What does 'bombero' mean?

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

5. What does 'enfermera' mean?

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

7. What does 'periodista' mean?

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

9. What does 'juez' mean?

10. The feminine of 'actor' is:

Why learn job vocabulary in Spanish

Knowing profession names in Spanish is essential for everyday conversation. Whether you are introducing yourself, talking about your family, or navigating a Spanish-speaking workplace, job titles come up constantly. They also teach you important patterns in gender agreement.

Gender rules for professions

Most professions ending in -o change to -a for feminine. Professions ending in -ista or -e stay the same for both genders: el/la dentista, el/la gerente. A few have special feminine forms: actor → actriz. Modern Spanish increasingly uses feminine forms for all professions.

Explore more Spanish resources

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

▶ Learn Spanish Hub ✎ Translator ♪ Text to Speech