Ser vs. Estar: Finally Make Sense of Spanish's Two 'To Be's
8 June 2026 · Maria Eugenia
Both mean "to be", but they're not interchangeable. A simple way to think about ser and estar that goes beyond "permanent vs temporary".
Nothing frustrates Spanish learners like having two verbs for "to be". The usual rule — ser is permanent, estar is temporary — is a helpful start but breaks down fast. Here''s a clearer way to think about it.
Ser = identity
Use ser for what something fundamentally is: who, what, where-from, made-of, time and dates.
- Soy profesora. (I am a teacher.)
- Es de Madrid. (He''s from Madrid.)
- Son las tres. (It''s three o''clock.)
Estar = state and location
Use estar for conditions, feelings, and physical location — how or where something is right now.
- Estoy cansado. (I''m tired.)
- La casa está en la playa. (The house is at the beach.)
- ¿Cómo estás? (How are you?)
The pairs that change meaning
This is the fun part — the same adjective shifts meaning depending on the verb:
- Es aburrido = he is boring. / Está aburrido = he is bored.
- Es rico = he is rich. / Está rico = it tastes delicious.
A shortcut
Ask yourself: am I describing what something is (ser) or how/where it is (estar)? When in doubt, locations and feelings almost always take estar.
Practise with real sentences about your own life — that''s when the distinction finally clicks.