Spanish Haber and Hay: There Is, There Are and Perfect Tenses
Learn how haber and hay work in Spanish — from hay un problema and hay muchas preguntas to he hablado, hemos visto and other perfect-tense structures.
Why haber and hay matter
Haber is essential for compound tenses, while hay is essential for saying that something exists. Together they appear in everyday Spanish, grammar explanations, storytelling, travel situations and classroom language. The main challenge is that English uses several different expressions — “there is”, “there are”, “have”, “has” and “have done” — while Spanish separates these functions more clearly.
How to use this page
Use this page as the central entry point for haber and hay. First separate auxiliary haber from impersonal hay, then connect each use with the relevant grammar topic.
Use hay for “there is” and “there are”: hay una clase, hay muchas palabras.
Use haber + past participle for perfect tenses: he estudiado, hemos aprendido.
Use tener for possession, hay for existence and estar for the location of something specific.
The core system: auxiliary, existence and location
Auxiliary haber
Use haber with the past participle to form perfect tenses.
he hablado · has comido · hemos visto
Impersonal hay
Use hay to say that something exists, is present or is available.
hay una pregunta · hay tres respuestas
Hay vs estar
Use hay to introduce something; use estar to locate something specific.
Hay un hotel. · El hotel está aquí.
Haber and hay at a glance
Haber and hay belong to the same verb family, but they do different jobs. The table gives a practical overview before you study each use in detail.
| Form or use | Main function | Example | Meaning | Important note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| hay | existence / availability | Hay una mesa. | There is a table. | Same form for singular and plural. |
| hay | plural existence | Hay tres mesas. | There are three tables. | Do not change hay for plural nouns. |
| haber as auxiliary | compound tenses | He hablado. | I have spoken. | The participle normally stays unchanged. |
| impersonal haber | existence in other tenses | Había muchas personas. | There were many people. | Usually singular form in standard impersonal use. |
| tener | possession | Tengo un libro. | I have a book. | Use tener, not haber, for possession. |
Haber as an auxiliary verb
As an auxiliary verb, haber combines with the past participle to form compound tenses. In this use, haber is conjugated, while the past participle normally stays unchanged.
| Subject | Haber | Past participle | Example | English meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| yo | he | hablado | He hablado. | I have spoken. |
| tú | has | comido | Has comido. | You have eaten. |
| él/ella/usted | ha | visto | Ha visto la película. | He / she / you have seen the movie. |
| nosotros | hemos | aprendido | Hemos aprendido mucho. | We have learned a lot. |
| vosotros | habéis | llegado | Habéis llegado tarde. | You all have arrived late. |
| ellos/ellas/ustedes | han | escrito | Han escrito el texto. | They / you all have written the text. |
Learn the participle form in detail here: Past Participle in Spanish.
Hay for “there is” and “there are”
Hay is the present impersonal form used to express existence or availability. It does not change for singular or plural nouns.
Hay una silla. — There is a chair.
Hay tres sillas. — There are three chairs.
Hay café. — There is coffee.
No hay problema. — There is no problem.
Learn this use in detail here: Hay in Spanish.
Impersonal haber in other tenses
Hay is the present form. In other tenses, Spanish uses other impersonal forms of haber. These forms express “there was”, “there were”, “there will be” or “there have been”.
| Meaning | Spanish form | Example | English meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| there is / there are | hay | Hay una reunión. | There is a meeting. |
| there was / there were | había | Había muchas personas. | There were many people. |
| there was / there occurred | hubo | Hubo un problema. | There was a problem / a problem occurred. |
| there will be | habrá | Habrá cambios. | There will be changes. |
| there have been | ha habido | Ha habido retrasos. | There have been delays. |
Hay vs estar
Use hay to introduce something or say that something exists. Use estar to locate a specific, known or definite thing.
Hay un restaurante en esta calle. — There is a restaurant on this street.
El restaurante está en esta calle. — The restaurant is on this street.
Hay una farmacia cerca. — There is a pharmacy nearby.
La farmacia está cerca. — The pharmacy is nearby.
This contrast belongs together with the broader topic of ser and estar: Ser and Estar.
Haber vs tener
English uses “have” in different ways. Spanish separates these uses. Use tener for possession, but use haber as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses.
Tengo un coche. — I have a car.
He comprado un coche. — I have bought a car.
Tienen tiempo. — They have time.
Han terminado. — They have finished.
This difference is essential: tener expresses possession, while auxiliary haber helps build a tense.
When to use haber and hay
Use hay
Use hay to say that something exists, is present or is available.
Hay una clase. · Hay muchas preguntas.
Use haber + participle
Use haber with the past participle to form perfect tenses.
He estudiado. · Hemos aprendido.
Use impersonal haber
Use forms such as había, hubo, habrá and ha habido.
Había gente. · Habrá cambios.
Related grammar topics
Hay in Spanish
Learn hay in detail for “there is”, “there are”, questions, negatives and hay vs estar.
Auxiliary Verbs
Understand how helper verbs work in Spanish verb structures.
Past Participle
Learn hablado, comido, hecho, visto and other participles used with haber.
Present Perfect
Use he, has, ha, hemos and han with the past participle.
Compound Tenses
Connect haber with present perfect, pluperfect, future perfect and conditional perfect forms.
Ser and Estar
Understand why Spanish says hay un hotel, but el hotel está aquí.
Typical mistakes with haber and hay
- Using haber for possession: say tengo un libro, not he un libro.
- Changing hay for plural nouns: say hay tres libros, not han tres libros.
- Using hay for a known specific location: say el hotel está aquí, not hay el hotel aquí.
- Changing the participle after haber: say he escrito la carta, not he escrita la carta.
- Confusing hay and está: hay una farmacia introduces a pharmacy; la farmacia está cerca locates it.
Where to go next
After this overview, continue with hay, the past participle and compound tenses. These pages explain the two main sides of haber more deeply.
Want personal guidance?
If haber, hay, tener and estar feel confusing, individual guidance can help you separate existence, possession, location and perfect-tense structures clearly.
FAQ: Haber and hay in Spanish
What is the difference between haber and hay?
Haber is the verb. It can work as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses. Hay is the present impersonal form used to mean “there is” or “there are”.
What does hay mean in Spanish?
Hay means “there is” or “there are”. It is used to say that something exists, is present or is available.
How is haber used as an auxiliary verb?
Haber is used with the past participle to form perfect tenses: he hablado, has comido, hemos visto.
Is hay used for both singular and plural nouns?
Yes. Hay is used for both singular and plural nouns: hay un libro, hay tres libros.
Is haber the same as tener?
No. Use tener for possession: tengo un libro. Use auxiliary haber for perfect tenses: he leído el libro.
What is the difference between hay and estar?
Use hay to say that something exists or to introduce it. Use estar to locate something specific: hay un hotel, but el hotel está aquí.
