Spanish Number Converter & Guide

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Key Takeaways

•Convert any number 0-999,999,999 from digits to Spanish words instantly using our free tool above!
•Learn the patterns for numbers 0-30 (unique forms), 31-99 (tens y units), and 100-199 (cien/ciento)
•Master thousands (mil - never plural) and millions (millón/millones - does become plural)
•Understand the difference between cardinal numbers (one, two, three) and ordinal numbers (first, second, third)
•Avoid common mistakes like "cien libros" vs "ciento libros" and "dos miles" vs "dos mil"

Understanding Spanish Numbers: A Complete Guide

Spanish numbers follow logical patterns, but there are important rules to remember. Unlike English, where numbers like "twenty-one" combine simply, Spanish uses specific structures for different ranges. Once you learn the patterns below, you can spell any number up to 999,999,999 correctly using the converter tool above.

Spanish Number Rules: 0 to 30 (Unique Forms)

The first 31 numbers in Spanish have unique names that must be memorized. Once you master these, the rest of the numbers build upon this foundation.

NumberSpanishNumberSpanish
0cero16dieciséis
1uno17diecisiete
2dos18dieciocho
3tres19diecinueve
4cuatro20veinte
5cinco21veintiuno
6seis22veintidĂłs
7siete23veintitrés
8ocho24veinticuatro
9nueve25veinticinco
10diez26veintiséis
11once27veintisiete
12doce28veintiocho
13trece29veintinueve
14catorce30treinta
15quince

Spanish Numbers 31-99: The "Tens y Units" Pattern

From 31 to 99, Spanish numbers follow a simple pattern: the tens word + "y" (and) + the unit word. For example, 31 is "treinta y uno" (thirty and one). Here are the tens you need to know:

TensSpanish
40cuarenta
50cincuenta
60sesenta
70setenta
80ochenta
90noventa

Examples:
31 → treinta y uno
45 → cuarenta y cinco
57 → cincuenta y siete
68 → sesenta y ocho
72 → setenta y dos
89 → ochenta y nueve
94 → noventa y cuatro

Sapnish Numbers 100-199: Cien vs Ciento

The number 100 has two forms in Spanish. "Cien" is used for exactly 100, while "ciento" is used for 101-199.

100 → cien
101 → ciento uno
115 → ciento quince
120 → ciento veinte
150 → ciento cincuenta
199 → ciento noventa y nueve

Spanish Numbers 200-900: Hundreds

HundredsSpanish
200doscientos
300trescientos
400cuatrocientos
500quinientos
600seiscientos
700setecientos
800ochocientos
900novecientos

Note: 500, 700, and 900 have irregular forms (quinientos, setecientos, novecientos) instead of following the regular pattern. For numbers like 245, you combine: doscientos cuarenta y cinco.

Thousands: Using "Mil"

The word for thousand is "mil". Unlike English, "mil" does NOT become plural. You say "dos mil" (two thousand), not "dos miles". This rule applies for all thousands.

1,000 → mil
2,000 → dos mil
5,000 → cinco mil
10,000 → diez mil
100,000 → cien mil
999,000 → novecientos noventa y nueve mil

Millions: MillĂłn vs Millones

Unlike "mil", the word for million DOES change for plural. Use "un millĂłn" for exactly 1,000,000 and "millones" for 2,000,000 and above.

1,000,000 → un millón
2,000,000 → dos millones
5,500,000 → cinco millones quinientos mil
10,000,000 → diez millones
999,999,999 → novecientos noventa y nueve millones novecientos noventa y nueve mil novecientos noventa y nueve

Ordinal Numbers: First, Second, Third in Spanish

Ordinal numbers indicate position or order (1st, 2nd, 3rd). Unlike cardinal numbers, ordinals must match the gender of the noun they modify.

OrdinalSpanish (Masculine)Spanish (Feminine)
1stprimeroprimera
2ndsegundosegunda
3rdtercerotercera
4thcuartocuarta
5thquintoquinta
6thsextosexta
7thséptimoséptima
8thoctavooctava
9thnovenonovena
10thdécimodécima

For numbers 11th through 19th, combine "décimo" with the unit: décimoprimero (11th), décimosegundo (12th), etc. For 20th and above, use "vigésimo" (20th), "trigésimo" (30th), "centésimo" (100th), "milésimo" (1000th), and "millonésimo" (1,000,000th).

Note: When "primero" and "tercero" appear directly before a masculine singular noun, they drop the final -o: "primer libro" (first book), "tercer capĂ­tulo" (third chapter).

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Using "cien" before another number: Say "ciento uno" not "cien uno" (except for exactly 100)
Making "mil" plural: Say "dos mil" not "dos miles" - mil never becomes plural
Forgetting the accent marks: dieciséis, veintidós, veintitrés, veintiséis all need accents
Writing numbers 31-99 without "y": "treinta y uno" is correct, not "treinta uno"
Confusing "quinientos" (500) with "quinientos" - it's irregular, not "cincocientos"
Using "y" between hundreds and tens: "doscientos treinta" not "doscientos y treinta" - the "y" is only between tens and units
Matching ordinal gender incorrectly: "la primera vez" (feminine) vs "el primer dĂ­a" (masculine with apocopation)
Writing "un millĂłn" for 2,000,000: Use "dos millones" with the plural form

Quick Reference Chart

CategorySpanish Examples
0-30cero, uno, dos, tres... treinta (unique forms)
31-99treinta y uno, cuarenta y dos, etc. (tens + y + units)
100cien (exact hundred)
101-199ciento uno, ciento quince, etc.
200-900doscientos, trescientos, quinientos, etc.
1,000mil (never becomes plural)
1,000,000un millĂłn / millones (does become plural)
Ordinal 1st-10thprimero, segundo, tercero, cuarto, quinto, sexto, séptimo, octavo, noveno, décimo

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