Chapter 4 introduces the second essential "to be" verb in Spanish: ESTAR. While Chapter 3 taught you SER — the verb for permanent identity, origin, and character — ESTAR covers the other side of "being": where you are right now, how you feel, and what condition something is in. The distinction between SER and ESTAR is one of the most important concepts in Spanish, and mastering ESTAR is the key to completing that picture. By the end of this chapter, you will express locations, emotions, states, and current conditions with precision and confidence.
ESTAR is irregular in the present tense — pay close attention to accent marks, which change pronunciation and distinguish verb forms from other words
The verb ESTAR is irregular in the present tense. This means it does not follow the standard rules for verbs ending in -ar. You must pay close attention to the accent marks on several of its forms. These accents are vital because they change the pronunciation and distinguish the verb from other words.
ESTAR shares the same English translation as SER — "to be" — but is used in entirely different situations: current location, temporary states, feelings, and conditions. Learning ESTAR's conjugation now gives you the tools to express where things are and how people feel.
| Subject Pronoun(s) | ESTAR Form | Person & Number | Accent? | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yo | estoy | 1st singular | No accent | Yo estoy en la oficina hoy. |
| Usted / Él / Ella | está | 3rd singular | ⚠️ Accent on á | Él está cansado después del trabajo. |
| Nosotros / Nosotras | estamos | 1st plural | No accent | Nosotros estamos en la clase de español. |
| Ustedes / Ellos / Ellas | están | 3rd plural | ⚠️ Accent on á | Ellos están en el hospital ahora. |
Use this form to talk about your current state or your location. Estoy ends in -oy — a unique ending shared with only one other verb in Spanish (soy). Unlike the accent-bearing forms, estoy requires no written accent. It can express where you physically are right now (Estoy en la oficina) or how you currently feel (Estoy bien, estoy feliz, estoy listo). The key word is current — ESTAR always anchors you to the present moment.
The singular form está requires an accent on the -á. Without the accent, "esta" means "this" (a demonstrative adjective) — so the mark is absolutely necessary for clarity and correctness. Está is used for Usted, él, ella, and any singular noun subject: El documento está sobre el escritorio (The document is on the desk). Just as with SER, all three singular subjects share one form. The accent is your signal that this is the verb "to be," not the word "this."
Use estamos when describing the location or state of a group you are part of. Note that this form does not have an accent mark — unlike está and están. The -mos ending is consistent across all Spanish verbs for "we," so once you know this pattern you will recognize first-person plural in every tense you learn. Estamos is used for both location (Estamos en la clase) and emotional or physical states (Estamos contentos, estamos preocupados).
The plural form están also requires an accent on the -á. This is the universal plural form used in the Americas for any group. Just as está serves Usted, él, and ella, están serves Ustedes, ellos, ellas, and any plural noun subject: Los libros están en la mochila (The books are in the backpack). The accent mark on están is required in writing — its absence would be a grammatical error even though the pronunciation is the same.
Using ESTAR with Usted is the standard way to ask how someone is doing or to acknowledge their current situation politely. The question ¿Cómo está usted? is the formal, respectful way to greet someone and ask about their wellbeing — essential for professional and social interaction in the Americas. Note that ESTAR is always used here, never SER — because "how someone is doing right now" is a current state, not a permanent characteristic.
Study each subject-verb pair as a complete unit. Pay special attention to which forms carry accent marks — this is one of the most tested points for Spanish learners at this level.
| Subject Pronoun | Verb Form | English | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yo | estoy | I am | Unique -oy ending. No accent needed. |
| Usted | está | You are (Formal) | Must have accent on á. Without it: "esta" = "this." |
| Él / Ella | está | He / She is | Same form as Usted. Accent on á required. |
| Nosotros | estamos | We are | No accent mark. -mos ending = always "we." |
| Ustedes | están | You all are | Accent on á required. Universal plural in the Americas. |
| Ellos / Ellas | están | They are | Same form as Ustedes. Accent on á required. |
Listen to each sentence in Spanish, then repeat it aloud during the countdown pause.
Each sentence below uses a conjugated form of ESTAR in a natural, everyday context. As you listen, identify which form of ESTAR is used — estoy, está, estamos, or están — and confirm whether the sentence expresses a location, a feeling, or a current state. Notice the clear stress on the accented á in está and están.
Step 1 — Listen: The Spanish sentence plays automatically. Focus on the ESTAR form — say it quietly to yourself as you hear it, then prepare to repeat the full sentence.
Step 2 — Repeat: During the 4-second countdown, say the sentence aloud — pay special attention to the stressed á vowel in está and están.
Step 3 — Adjust: Use the Speed and Volume sliders to find your ideal practice pace.
Chant the four forms: Before each session, recite all four forms in sequence — estoy, está, estamos, están — three times. Pair them mentally with their accent status: "estoy — no accent, está — accent, estamos — no accent, están — accent."
Listen for the stressed á: In sentences 6–10 (está) and 16–20 (están), listen carefully to the stress on the final syllable. This is the sound that distinguishes the verb from the demonstrative adjective esta.
Repeat daily: ESTAR appears in every conversation about location, feelings, and states. Internalizing these four forms now makes every future chapter faster and easier.
Choose the correct answer to complete each question. 20 questions drawn randomly from a pool of 25.