Spanish Imperative: Commands, Requests and Instructions

Learn how the Spanish imperative works for commands, instructions, advice and invitations — from habla and come to no hables, venga and hazlo.

Learn the Spanish imperative for commands, requests and instructions
The Spanish imperative is used to give commands, instructions, advice and direct requests.

Why the Spanish imperative matters

The imperative appears in real communication all the time: classroom instructions, travel situations, recipes, signs, workplace requests and everyday advice. To use it correctly, learners need more than one form. Spanish distinguishes affirmative and negative commands, informal and formal address, singular and plural forms, irregular commands and pronoun placement.

How to use this page

Use this page as the central entry point for Spanish command forms. Start with the basic function, then compare affirmative and negative forms, and finally move into irregular commands and pronouns.

Understand the function.
The imperative is used to tell someone to do something: Escucha, Lee, Ven aquí.
Separate affirmative and negative commands.
Spanish often changes the verb form when a command becomes negative: habla, but no hables.
Add address and pronouns.
Choose between , usted, vosotros and ustedes, then place pronouns correctly: dime, hazlo, no me digas.

The core system: affirmative, negative and formal commands

Affirmative commands

Affirmative commands tell someone to do something. Informal forms are common in everyday speech.

Habla más despacio. · Come algo. · Vive el momento.

Negative commands

Negative commands tell someone not to do something. They usually use present subjunctive forms.

No hables tan rápido. · No comas eso. · No vayas solo.

Formal commands

With usted and ustedes, Spanish uses formal command forms.

Hable despacio. · Venga aquí. · No se preocupen.

Spanish imperative forms at a glance

The imperative changes according to who receives the command. The most important distinction for learners is between informal commands, formal usted commands and plural commands.

Person Affirmative command Negative command Example
habla, come, vive no hables, no comas, no vivas Habla conmigo. · No hables ahora.
usted hable, coma, viva no hable, no coma, no viva Hable más despacio. · No se preocupe.
vosotros hablad, comed, vivid no habléis, no comáis, no viváis Escuchad. · No habléis todos a la vez.
ustedes hablen, coman, vivan no hablen, no coman, no vivan Pasen, por favor. · No se olviden.
Learning note: Do not learn the imperative as one single form. Learn affirmative, negative, informal, formal and pronoun position together.

Informal tú commands

Informal commands are used with people you address directly and informally. Regular affirmative forms often look like third-person singular present-tense forms: habla, come, vive.

Escucha la frase.
Lee el texto.
Escribe la respuesta.

Negative commands are different: no escuches, no leas, no escribas. This is why learners should always compare the affirmative and negative forms together.

Irregular imperative forms

Some of the most frequent Spanish commands are irregular. The most important affirmative forms are ven, di, haz, ten, ve, pon, sal and .

Ven aquí. · Di la verdad. · Hazlo ahora. · Ten cuidado. · Ve a casa. · Pon la mesa. · Sal de aquí. · Sé paciente.

These forms have their own detailed lesson here: Spanish Imperative Irregular Forms.

Pronouns with the Spanish imperative

Pronoun placement is one of the most important parts of the Spanish imperative. With affirmative commands, object and reflexive pronouns are attached to the verb. With negative commands, they go before the verb.

Di la verdad.Dime la verdad.
Haz el ejercicio.Hazlo.
No digas eso.No me digas eso.
No hagas el ejercicio.No lo hagas.

When pronouns are attached, a written accent may be needed to preserve the original stress: dímelo, házmelo, explícamelo.

When to use the Spanish imperative

Instructions

Classroom and learning tasks

Use imperatives for exercises, classroom instructions and learning steps.

Lee el texto. · Escucha el audio. · Repite la frase.

Advice

Recommendations and guidance

Use commands to give advice, especially with softening expressions.

Practica cada día. · Ten paciencia. · No te preocupes.

Everyday speech

Requests and invitations

The imperative can sound direct, but it is common in requests and invitations when used naturally.

Pasa. · Siéntate. · Ven conmigo.

Related grammar topics

Verb system

Irregular Verbs

Connect command forms with broader irregular verb patterns in Spanish.

Reflexive commands

Reflexive Verbs

Understand forms such as siéntate, levántate and no te preocupes.

Negative and formal commands

Present Subjunctive

Understand the forms behind no hables, venga, diga and hagan.

Typical mistakes with the Spanish imperative

  • Using the affirmative form after no: say no hables, not no habla.
  • Forgetting irregular tú commands: say ven, di, haz, ten, ve, pon, sal and .
  • Putting pronouns in the wrong place: say hazlo, but no lo hagas.
  • Using informal commands in formal situations: with usted, use forms such as hable, venga and diga.
  • Forgetting accents with attached pronouns: forms such as dímelo and házmelo need written accents.

Where to go next

After the general imperative, continue with irregular command forms, pronoun position and the present subjunctive forms used in negative and formal commands.

Want personal guidance?

If Spanish commands feel difficult, individual guidance can help you practise affirmative commands, negative commands, formal address and pronoun placement in real communication.

FAQ: Spanish imperative

What is the Spanish imperative?

The Spanish imperative is the verb form used for commands, instructions, requests, invitations and advice.

How do you form regular tú commands in Spanish?

Regular affirmative commands often use forms like habla, come and vive.

How do negative tú commands work?

Negative commands usually use present subjunctive forms: no hables, no comas, no vivas.

What are common irregular imperative forms?

Common irregular affirmative commands are ven, di, haz, ten, ve, pon, sal and .

Where do pronouns go with Spanish commands?

With affirmative commands, pronouns are attached to the verb: dime, hazlo. With negative commands, they go before the verb: no me digas, no lo hagas.

Are usted commands different from tú commands?

Yes. Formal usted commands use forms such as hable, coma, venga, diga and haga.

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