How to Say "I Like" in Spanish: Gustar Without the Confusion
June 9, 2026 • SpanishNow • 6 minute read
Table of Contents
- Gustar doesn’t mean “to like” — it means “to be pleasing”
- The person goes in front: me, te, le, nos, os, les
- The only two forms you need: gusta vs. gustan
- Don’t forget the article — “el café,” not “café”
- Adding emphasis with “a mí, a ti, a Juan…”
- Saying “I like you” — the romantic trap
- 5 verbs that work exactly like gustar
- 8 mistakes to stop making today
On your first day of Spanish you probably tried to say “I like chocolate” and reached for something like yo gusto el chocolate. It feels right — “I” is doing the liking, so “I” should be the subject. Except that sentence actually means roughly “I am pleasing chocolate,” and no native speaker would ever say it. Don’t worry: this is the most common beginner mistake in the language, and it comes from one tiny mismatch between English and Spanish. Fix that one idea and the whole thing snaps into place.
Gustar doesn’t mean “to like” — it means “to be pleasing”
Here’s the reframe that fixes everything. The verb gustar does not work like English “to like.” In English, you are the subject: “I like chocolate.” In Spanish, the thing is the subject and the person gets demoted. So me gusta el chocolate literally says “chocolate is pleasing to me.”
| Spanish | Literal meaning | English |
|---|---|---|
| Me gusta el chocolate | Chocolate is pleasing to me | I like chocolate |
| Me gustan los plátanos | Bananas are pleasing to me | I like bananas |
| ¿Te gusta el café? | Is coffee pleasing to you? | Do you like coffee? |
| Nos gusta viajar | Traveling is pleasing to us | We like to travel |
The thing you like is the boss of the sentence. The person doing the liking shrinks down to a little pronoun that sits in front of the verb. And the verb agrees with the thing — never with the person. Hold onto that and the rest is just details.
The person goes in front: me, te, le, nos, os, les
Those little “who is pleased” markers are indirect object pronouns. There are only six, and they never change for gustar — only the verb flexes.
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Me gusta el té | I like tea |
| Te gusta el té | You like tea (informal) |
| Le gusta el té | He / she / you (formal) likes tea |
| Nos gusta el té | We like tea |
| Les gusta el té | They / you all like tea |
Notice the pronoun never picks up an -n. Only the verb does. If those same pronouns show up in other corners of Spanish and you want the full picture, our guide to object pronouns lo, la, le, se is your next stop — and don’t confuse these with the reflexive me, te, se you’ll meet in reflexive verbs.
The only two forms you need: gusta vs. gustan
This is the part nobody tells beginners early enough. Forget the full conjugation table. For liking things, you choose between exactly two forms, and the choice depends only on what is liked.
| Spanish | English | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Me gusta la música | I like music | one singular thing → gusta |
| Me gusta nadar | I like swimming | an action → gusta |
| Me gusta cantar y bailar | I like to sing and dance | actions stay singular → gusta |
| Me gustan los perros | I like dogs | plural things → gustan |
Three rules lock it in. One singular thing → gusta. Plural things → gustan — that -n comes from the thing, not the person. Verbs (infinitives like nadar or viajar) always take gusta, even two or three in a row, because an action counts as one idea. And the pronoun is irrelevant to the choice: nos gustan los perros is gustan because there are plural dogs, even though nos means “we.”

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Don’t forget the article — “el café,” not “café”
When you talk about liking something in general, Spanish wants a definite article (el, la, los, las) where English uses none. So it’s me gusta el café (“I like coffee”), never me gusta café. Plural likes need both pieces: me gustan las fresas (“I like strawberries”).
The one exception is proper nouns. You don’t put an article before a place or a person’s name: me gusta Barcelona, me gusta María.
Adding emphasis with “a mí, a ti, a Juan…”
You can stick an optional a + name/pronoun phrase at the front — but it doubles up with the pronoun, it doesn’t replace it.
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| A Juan le gusta el fútbol | Juan likes soccer (clarifies who) |
| A mí me gusta el café, pero a ti te gusta el té | I like coffee, but you like tea (contrast) |
| A nosotros nos gusta viajar | We like to travel (emphasis) |
It does two jobs: it clarifies the vague le / les (him? her? you?), and it adds emphasis or contrast. The pronoun stays no matter what — a Juan le gusta is right; dropping le is an error.
Saying “I like you” — the romantic trap
Here’s where gustar bites people. When the liked “thing” is a person, gustar means romantic attraction, not friendly liking. So me gustas (“you are pleasing to me”) is a confession — “I’m into you” — not “you seem nice.”
To say you like someone as a friend or colleague, Spanish swaps verbs. Use me caes bien (“you come across well to me / we click”). So me gusta mi profesor sounds like a crush, while me cae bien mi profesor simply means he’s a good guy. If you want the warmer family of “I love you” expressions, that’s a different toolkit entirely — closer to the tener-style feeling expressions you’ll meet later.
5 verbs that work exactly like gustar
Here’s your payoff. Once gustar clicks, you instantly own a whole family of high-frequency verbs that copy the structure: pronoun + third person agreeing with the thing.
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Me encanta tu estilo | I love your style (encantar) |
| Me encantan los tacos | I love tacos (plural → encantan) |
| Me interesa el vino | I'm interested in wine (interesar) |
| Me molesta su actitud | His attitude bothers me (molestar) |
| Me duele la cabeza | My head hurts (doler) |
| Me falta dinero | I'm short on money (faltar) |
A few notes. encantar already means “love it,” so you never add mucho — me encanta mucho is redundant. doler is how body parts hurt: the body part is the subject, so me duele la cabeza (“the head is hurting to me”) and me duelen los pies for plural parts. And faltar flips an English subject too — “I’m missing money” becomes “money is missing to me,” me falta dinero. The pattern is identical every time, which means interesar and molestar come almost free.
8 mistakes to stop making today
- Yo gusto el chocolate. ❌ → Me gusta el chocolate. ✅ The #1 error — “I” is not the subject.
- Me gusta los perros. ❌ → Me gustan los perros. ✅ Plural thing takes
-n. - Me gustan cantar y bailar. ❌ → Me gusta cantar y bailar. ✅ Infinitives stay singular.
- Me gusta café. ❌ → Me gusta el café. ✅ General likes need the article.
- A Juan gusta el fútbol. ❌ → A Juan le gusta el fútbol. ✅ Keep the pronoun.
- Nos gustamos los perros. ❌ → Nos gustan los perros. ✅ The verb agrees with the dogs.
- Me gusta mi profesor (meaning he’s a good teacher) ❌ → Me cae bien mi profesor. ✅
- Me encanta mucho. ❌ → Me encanta. ✅ Encantar is already the intensifier.
You just unlocked one of the highest-leverage patterns in Spanish — one reframe, two forms, and six verbs that all behave the same. Next time you order food or talk about your weekend, try one out loud: pick a singular thing, then a plural one, and feel that -n switch on. That muscle memory is what turns me gusta from a rule into a reflex.
Test your gustar
5 quick questions to see what stuck.
-
Which sentence means “I like dogs”?
Perros is plural, so the verb takes -n: me gustan. The pronoun (me) never changes.
-
Complete: “Me ___ el café.” (I like coffee — one singular thing.)
One singular thing → gusta. Plural things would trigger gustan.
-
“Me gusta cantar y bailar” is correct even though there are two activities.
Infinitives count as one idea, so they always stay singular: gusta.
-
Match each pronoun to who is pleased.
Tap a Spanish word, then its English meaning to pair them.
Spanish
English
-
You want to tell a teacher you like them (as a person, not a crush). What do you say?
Me gusta + a person sounds romantic. For friendly liking, use me cae bien.
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