Ser vs Estar
When to use ser and when to use estar — both mean 'to be', but they are not interchangeable
Both ser and estar translate to "to be" in English, but they are never interchangeable. The shortcut: ser describes what something is (permanent identity); estar describes how something is (temporary state or location).
Ser
Ser expresses identity — things that define what or who something fundamentally is.
| Use | Clue | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Identity / description | name, nationality, profession | Ella es médica |
| Origin | where from | Soy de Jamaica |
| Material / composition | made of | La mesa es de madera |
| Time / dates | what time / day is it | Son las tres |
| Possession | whose | El libro es de Ana |
| Relationships | family, connection | Él es mi hermano |
| Inherent characteristics | colour, shape, size | El cielo es azul |
| Events (location) | where an event takes place | La fiesta es en mi casa |
Ser — Identity & Description
Ser — Origin
Ser — Material / Composition
Ser — Time & Dates
Ser — Possession & Relationships
Ser — Inherent Characteristics
Ser — Events (Location)
Click any row to reveal its translation.
Estar
Estar expresses state — how something is right now, where it physically is, or what it is in the process of doing.
| Use | Clue | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Location (people & things) | where something physically is | El banco está en la esquina |
| Health / mood | how someone feels right now | Estoy cansado |
| Temporary condition | current state | La puerta está abierta |
| Progressive tense | estar + gerundio | Estamos comiendo |
| Result of an action | past participle as result | La tarea está hecha |
Estar — Location
Estar — Health & Mood
Estar — Temporary Condition
Estar — Progressive Tense
Estar — Result of an Action
Click any row to reveal its translation.
Adjectives That Change Meaning
Some adjectives pair with either verb — but the meaning shifts completely:
| Adjective | With Ser | With Estar |
|---|---|---|
| aburrido | He is boring (personality) | He is bored (current feeling) |
| malo | He is bad / evil (character) | He is sick (current state) |
| bueno | He is good / kind (character) | It is tasty / he looks good |
| listo | He is clever (naturally) | He is ready (prepared) |
| rico | He is rich (wealthy) | It is delicious |
| seguro | It is safe (inherently) | I am sure / certain |
| vivo | He is sharp / shrewd | He is alive |
| muerto | — | He is dead (state) |
Changing Adjectives — Ser vs Estar
Changing Adjectives — Malo
Changing Adjectives — Listo
Changing Adjectives — Rico
Changing Adjectives — Seguro
Changing Adjectives — Vivo
Click any row to reveal its translation.
Common Confusions
| Phrase | Translation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| La fiesta es en mi casa | The party is at my house | Ser = location of an event |
| El gato está en mi casa | The cat is in my house | Estar = physical location of a person/thing |
| Mi madre es nerviosa | My mother is a nervous person | Ser = permanent personality trait |
| Mi madre está nerviosa | My mother is nervous (right now) | Estar = current emotional state |
| El café es frío | Coffee is (served) cold | Ser = defining characteristic |
| El café está frío | The coffee is cold (right now) | Estar = temporary condition |
| Él es aburrido | He is boring (as a person) | Ser = character |
| Él está aburrido | He is bored (at this moment) | Estar = current feeling |
Ask yourself one question: am I describing what it IS, or how it IS right now?
- What it is (identity, origin, material, permanent trait) → Ser
- How it is right now (location, mood, health, temporary state) → Estar
Special cases to memorise: events use ser (La fiesta es aquí), even though locations normally use estar. And estar + past participle describes the result of an action (La puerta está cerrada = the door is [in the state of being] closed).
Practice
Test yourself. Fill in the blank with ser or estar, then flip to check.