A1 Spanish Numbers Quiz: Test Your Beginner Spanish Numbers
◄ Back to Spanish Numbers Quiz Hub | Practice More Spanish Numbers Quizzes ►
Master Spanish numbers from 1 to 30! This A1 Spanish numbers quiz tests your understanding of basic Spanish numbers, including the unique forms for 1-15 and the combined patterns for 16-19 and 21-29. Practice recognizing number words, converting numbers to Spanish, and building your confidence with instant feedback and detailed explanations. Perfect for beginners who want to read prices, tell time, talk about age, and use numbers confidently in everyday Spanish conversations!
A1 Spanish Numbers Tip: Numbers 0-15 are unique and must be memorized. Numbers 16-19 combine “dieci” + the digit (16 = dieciséis). Numbers 21-29 combine “veinti” + the digit (25 = veinticinco).
Key Numbers 1-15: 1=uno, 2=dos, 3=tres, 4=cuatro, 5=cinco, 6=seis, 7=siete, 8=ocho, 9=nueve, 10=diez, 11=once, 12=doce, 13=trece, 14=catorce, 15=quince.
Key Numbers 16-30: 16=dieciséis, 17=diecisiete, 18=dieciocho, 19=diecinueve, 20=veinte, 21=veintiuno, 22=veintidós, 23=veintitrés, 24=veinticuatro, 25=veinticinco, 26=veintiséis, 27=veintisiete, 28=veintiocho, 29=veintinueve, 30=treinta.
Need more help? Use our Spanish Number Converter Tool to practice any number!
What Numbers Does This A1 Spanish Quiz Cover?
This quiz focuses on Spanish numbers 1-30, including:
- Numbers 1-15: Unique words that must be memorized (uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, diez, once, doce, trece, catorce, quince)
- Numbers 16-19: Combined pattern using “dieci” + the last digit (dieciséis, diecisiete, dieciocho, diecinueve)
- Numbers 20-29: Combined pattern using “veinti” + the last digit (veinte, veintiuno, veintidós, veintitrés, veinticuatro, veinticinco, veintiséis, veintisiete, veintiocho, veintinueve)
- Number 30: treinta
Why Learn Spanish Numbers at A1 Level?
Numbers are essential for everyday Spanish communication. At the A1 beginner level, mastering numbers 1-30 allows you to:
- Tell your age: “Tengo veinticinco años” (I am 25 years old)
- Ask for prices: “¿Cuánto cuesta?” (How much does it cost?)
- Give your phone number: “Mi número es seis, cinco, dos…”
- Tell time: “Son las tres de la tarde” (It’s 3 in the afternoon)
- Order food: “Quiero dos tacos, por favor” (I want two tacos, please)
Spanish Numbers Pattern Summary
| Range | Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 0-15 | Unique forms (memorize) | 5 = cinco, 12 = doce |
| 16-19 | dieci + last digit | 16 = dieciséis |
| 20-29 | veinti + last digit | 25 = veinticinco |
| 30-99 | tens + y + units | 31 = treinta y uno |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Don’t add “y” in 16-19 or 21-29 – They combine into one word (dieciséis, not diez y seis)
- Don’t forget accents – dieciséis, veintidós, veintitrés, veintiséis all have accents
- Remember 100 is special – “cien” not “ciento” for exactly 100 (but that’s A2 level!)
- Uno becomes “un” before masculine nouns – “un libro” (one book), but that’s grammar!
Related Spanish Resources
- Spanish Number Converter Tool – Convert any number to Spanish instantly
- A2 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Practice numbers 1-100
- B1 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Master hundreds and ordinals
- Complete Spanish Numbers Guide – All rules and patterns explained



