Spanish grammar exercises.
Short exercises on the topics most people get stuck on: ser vs estar, the subjunctive, the past tenses. Pick one and read why after every answer.
What this is.
Most language apps teach a bit of everything: vocabulary, pronunciation, conversation. Useful, but none of them help when you pause mid-sentence wondering which past tense goes here? That's what these exercises are for.
Each topic has 20 to 30 multiple-choice questions on one rule. By the time you finish, you can pick the right form without thinking — and you know why it's right.
What an exercise looks like.
A short Spanish sentence with a blank, four options. Pick one, then read why it's right.
Nothing fancy. A sentence, four options, an explanation. That's the whole loop.
Three steps. Nothing else between you and the rule.
Pick a topic.
Browse the catalog and open one. No account needed.
Answer, then read.
Pick one of four options. You see right away whether you got it and why.
Move on.
Each exercise is tagged with a small concept (like “telling time” or “meaning shift”) so you can see what you’ve covered.
Pick one.
See full catalog →Verb Pairs
Same English word, two Spanish verbs. The choice changes the meaning.
Tenses & Moods
Past, present, future, subjunctive — when to use which.
- 01Spanish Subjunctive PracticeB1 – B230 ex.→
- 02Present TenseComing soonA130 ex.
- 03Preterite TenseComing soonA230 ex.
- 04Imperfect TenseComing soonA225 ex.
- 05Future TenseComing soonA2 – B125 ex.
- 06Conditional TenseComing soonB125 ex.
- 07Commands (Imperative)Coming soonA2 – B125 ex.
- 08Present PerfectComing soonB120 ex.
- 09Present ProgressiveComing soonA220 ex.
- 10Imperfect SubjunctiveComing soonB225 ex.
Verb Mechanics
Conjugation patterns and verb constructions.
- 01Spanish Conjugation PracticeA1 – A230 ex.→
- 02Spanish Reflexive Verbs PracticeA1 – A230 ex.→
- 03Stem-Changing VerbsComing soonA225 ex.
- 04Irregular VerbsComing soonA225 ex.
- 05Gustar & Similar VerbsComing soonA220 ex.
- 06Passive VoiceComing soonB220 ex.
Nouns, Articles & Pronouns
Gender, agreement, articles, and the pronouns that hold sentences together.
- 01Noun Gender & PluralsComing soonA120 ex.
- 02ArticlesComing soonA120 ex.
- 03Adjective AgreementComing soonA1 – A220 ex.
- 04Possessive AdjectivesComing soonA120 ex.
- 05Object PronounsComing soonB125 ex.
- 06DemonstrativesComing soonA220 ex.
- 07Relative PronounsComing soonB120 ex.
Other Grammar
Prepositions, question words, accent rules, and small grammar that adds up.
- 01Question WordsComing soonA115 ex.
- 02NegationComing soonA220 ex.
- 03PrepositionsComing soonB125 ex.
- 04Comparatives & SuperlativesComing soonA220 ex.
- 05NumbersComing soonA120 ex.
- 06Accent RulesComing soonB120 ex.
- 07Sentence StructureComing soonA1 – A220 ex.
You learn a grammar rule fastest by getting it wrong and reading why.
No streaks, no points, no leaderboards. Just questions and explanations.
Common questions.
Is this a course?+−
No. It's a set of grammar exercises with explanations. Use it alongside whatever course or app you're already on.
Do I need to know any Spanish before starting?+−
Each topic shows its level (A1 to B2). If you're a beginner, start with regular conjugation or gender. If you already know some Spanish, jump into ser vs estar or the subjunctive.
Why no signup?+−
So you can land on a page and start practicing in one click. Bookmark the topics you want to come back to.
Is this Castilian or Latin American Spanish?+−
Neutral Latin American. When something differs in Spain (vosotros, certain words), we mention it in the explanation.
How is this different from Duolingo or Babbel?+−
Those teach Spanish broadly: vocabulary, pronunciation, conversation. This site only does grammar exercises, with a full explanation after every answer.
Can I suggest a topic?+−
Yes. The email is in the footer. Corrections and suggestions both welcome.