100 Essential Spanish Adjectives

Describe the World Around You

Adjectives are fundamental in Spanish. They describe qualities, states, and characteristics. To master them, you must understand placement, agreement, and meaning changes.

📌 Key Notes (Puntos clave)

1. Position (Posición)

Most adjectives follow the noun. However, some can precede the noun, often changing the emphasis or meaning.

un coche rojo → a red car

una gran idea → a great idea

una idea grande → a big idea

2. Agreement (Concordancia)

Adjectives agree with the noun in gender and number. Some adjectives ending in -e or consonants are invariable.

casa bonita → pretty house (fem. singular)

casas bonitas → pretty houses (fem. plural)

fácil / difícil → easy / difficult (invariable)

3. SER vs ESTAR Changes

Using an adjective with ser (permanent) vs estar (temporary) can completely change its meaning.

Ella es rica. → She is rich.

La comida está rica. → The food is delicious.

Soy listo / Estoy listo. → I am clever / I am ready.

4. Derived Adjectives

Many are formed from verbs using suffixes (participles).
cansar → cansado (tired)
aburrir → aburrido (bored)

5. Multiple Meanings

mayor: older / main / greater
viejo: old (age) / long‑standing (friendship)
antiguo: old / ancient / former

The Ultimate Adjective List

La Lista (100 Adjetivos)

fácileasy
difícildifficult
abiertoopen
cerradoclosed
cercanear
lejosfar
baratocheap
caroexpensive
nuevonew
viejoold
jovenyoung
grandebig
pequeñosmall
buenogood
malobad
rápidofast
lentoslow
limpioclean
suciodirty
fuertestrong
débilweak
calientehot
fríocold
llenofull
vacíoempty
interesanteinteresting
aburridoboring
segurosafe
peligrosodangerous
altotall / high
bajolow / short
largolong
cortoshort
bonitopretty / nice
feougly
felizhappy
tristesad
ricorich / delicious
pobrepoor
inteligenteintelligent
tontosilly / stupid
amablekind / friendly
groserorude
sencillosimple
complejocomplex
modernomodern
antiguoancient / old
importanteimportant
posiblepossible
imposibleimpossible
comúncommon
rarorare / strange
claroclear
oscurodark
vivoalive / lively
muertodead
sanohealthy
enfermosick
mayorolder / main
menoryounger / minor
dulcesweet
amargobitter
suavesoft / gentle
durohard / tough
pesadoheavy
ligerolight
famosofamous
desconocidounknown
públicopublic
privadoprivate
útiluseful
inútiluseless
completocomplete
incompletoincomplete
perfectoperfect
imperfectoimperfect
ocupadobusy
librefree / available
tranquilocalm / quiet
ruidosonoisy
sincerosincere
falsofalse
verdaderotrue / real
profundodeep
estrechonarrow
anchowide
brillantebright / shiny
eleganteelegant
informalinformal
puntualpunctual / on time
tempranoearly
listoclever (ser) / ready (estar)
preocupadoworried
cansadotired
amigablefriendly
serioserious
curiosocurious
vergonzosoembarrassed / shy
orgullosoproud
humildehumble

💡 Quick Summary & Examples

  • Rule 1

    Adjectives follow nouns, but some precede for emphasis.

    un coche rojo (a red car) vs. una gran idea (a great idea)

  • Rule 2

    They agree in gender and number.

    el niño alto (the tall boy)las niñas altas (the tall girls)

  • Rule 3

    Some adjectives are invariable (they don't change for gender).

    un libro interesante (an interesting book)una clase interesante (an interesting class)

  • Rule 4

    SER vs ESTAR can completely change the meaning.

    Él es aburrido. (He is boring.) vs. Él está aburrido. (He is bored.)

  • Rule 5

    Participles often function as adjectives.

    cerrar (to close)la puerta cerrada (the closed door)

  • Rule 6

    Key adjectives (mayor, viejo, antiguo) have multiple meanings depending on context and placement.

    un amigo viejo (an old friend in age) vs. un viejo amigo (a long-time friend)

Learning these 100 adjectives gives a strong foundation for everyday Spanish.