Ser vs Estar

Matthew Williams
||9 min read
GrammarVerbsCSEC Spanish

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.

UseClueExample
Identity / descriptionname, nationality, professionElla es médica
Originwhere fromSoy de Jamaica
Material / compositionmade ofLa mesa es de madera
Time / dateswhat time / day is itSon las tres
PossessionwhoseEl libro es de Ana
Relationshipsfamily, connectionÉl es mi hermano
Inherent characteristicscolour, shape, sizeEl cielo es azul
Events (location)where an event takes placeLa 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.

UseClueExample
Location (people & things)where something physically isEl banco está en la esquina
Health / moodhow someone feels right nowEstoy cansado
Temporary conditioncurrent stateLa puerta está abierta
Progressive tenseestar + gerundioEstamos comiendo
Result of an actionpast participle as resultLa 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:

AdjectiveWith SerWith Estar
aburridoHe is boring (personality)He is bored (current feeling)
maloHe is bad / evil (character)He is sick (current state)
buenoHe is good / kind (character)It is tasty / he looks good
listoHe is clever (naturally)He is ready (prepared)
ricoHe is rich (wealthy)It is delicious
seguroIt is safe (inherently)I am sure / certain
vivoHe is sharp / shrewdHe is alive
muertoHe 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

PhraseTranslationWhy
La fiesta es en mi casaThe party is at my houseSer = location of an event
El gato está en mi casaThe cat is in my houseEstar = physical location of a person/thing
Mi madre es nerviosaMy mother is a nervous personSer = permanent personality trait
Mi madre está nerviosaMy mother is nervous (right now)Estar = current emotional state
El café es fríoCoffee is (served) coldSer = defining characteristic
El café está fríoThe coffee is cold (right now)Estar = temporary condition
Él es aburridoHe is boring (as a person)Ser = character
Él está aburridoHe is bored (at this moment)Estar = current feeling
Exam Tip

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.

Ser vs Estar | Study Vault