Tener in Spanish: Why You're Hungry, Cold & 30 Years
June 9, 2026 • SpanishNow • 5 minute read
Table of Contents
Picture this: you proudly introduce yourself in Spanish and announce soy 30 años — and your teacher smiles. You’ve just said “I am 30 years.” It’s one of the most common slip-ups English speakers make, and it comes from a single, fixable habit: translating “I am” word for word. The fix is one of the most useful patterns in the whole language.
The one idea: Spanish has what English is
Here’s the structural difference that unlocks dozens of phrases at once: Spanish treats many feelings and states as things you possess, not things you are. Where English says I am hungry, Spanish says I have hunger. Where English says I am afraid, Spanish says I have fear.
The verb that does this work is tener (“to have”). And the thing you “have” is always a noun — hambre (hunger), miedo (fear), razón (rightness) — never an adjective. Once that clicks, you stop memorizing a dozen unrelated phrases and start generating them from a rule. This is the flip side of the to be problem you may know from the ser vs. estar guide: some “I am” sentences don’t use to be at all.
First, conjugate tener
You can’t build these phrases without the verb. Tener is irregular: it stem-changes from e→ie, and the yo form is a special tengo.
| Pronoun | Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| yo | tengo | Tengo hambre. (I’m hungry.) |
| tú | tienes | ¿Tienes frío? (Are you cold?) |
| él / ella / usted | tiene | Ella tiene sueño. (She’s sleepy.) |
| nosotros/as | tenemos | Tenemos prisa. (We’re in a hurry.) |
| vosotros/as | tenéis | ¿Tenéis sed? (Are you thirsty?) |
| ellos / ellas / ustedes | tienen | Tienen miedo. (They’re scared.) |
The cheat sheet: physical states
These are the everyday sensations — hunger, thirst, temperature, sleepiness. Notice that every English translation uses “to be,” but every Spanish version uses tener.
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Tengo hambre | I'm hungry (I have hunger) |
| Tengo sed | I'm thirsty (I have thirst) |
| Tengo frío | I'm cold (I have cold) |
| Tengo calor | I'm hot (I have heat) |
| Tengo sueño | I'm sleepy (I have sleep) |
So when you forget your sweater, you say tengo frío, and when the room is stuffy you say tengo calor. The words sed (thirst), calor (heat), and sueño (sleep) are all nouns you’re carrying around.
The cheat sheet: feelings & circumstance
The same logic extends to emotions, judgment, and luck. This is where learners get the biggest payoff, because these are exactly the sentences you reach for in real conversation.
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Tengo miedo | I'm afraid (I have fear) |
| Tienes razón | You're right (you have rightness) |
| Tengo ganas de comer | I feel like eating (I have urges to eat) |
| Tenemos prisa | We're in a hurry (we have haste) |
| Tienes suerte | You're lucky (you have luck) |
| Ten cuidado | Be careful (have care) |
A few of these are gold in daily life. Razón (rightness) gives you tienes razón — “you’re right,” the friendliest way to concede a point. Prisa (haste) and suerte (luck) cover being rushed and being fortunate, and cuidado (care) turns into the warning ten cuidado — “be careful.” You can also “have” success (tener éxito) or “have” shame (tener vergüenza).
Your age: tengo … años
This is the flagship mistake, so it gets its own section. To give your age, you “have” years: tengo treinta años = “I’m thirty years old.” To ask, you say ¿Cuántos años tienes? — literally “How many years do you have?”
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Tengo treinta años | I'm thirty years old |
| ¿Cuántos años tienes? | How old are you? (informal) |
| ¿Cuántos años tiene? | How old are you? (formal) |
The word años (years) is not optional in a statement: tengo treinta on its own is incomplete. Keep años in. And if you’re brushing up on the numbers that go in front of it, the Spanish numbers guide has you covered — handy the next time you introduce yourself in Spanish and someone asks your age.

Enjoying this?
Patterns like tener + noun stick faster with daily reps. Grab our free PDF of the 100 most useful Spanish words — sent straight to your inbox.
Tener que + infinitive: obligation
One tener phrase breaks the noun pattern, and it’s too useful to skip. Tener que + an infinitive means “to have to / must do something.”
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Tengo que estudiar | I have to study |
| Tienes que terminar | You have to finish |
| No tenemos que ir | We don't have to go |
The key rule: the second verb stays in the infinitive (estudiar, terminar), never conjugated. So it’s tengo que estudiar — not tengo que estudio. Compare it side by side with tener ganas de: both keep the infinitive, but one is duty (tengo que estudiar = “I have to study”) and the other is desire (tengo ganas de estudiar = “I feel like studying”).
The “very” trap: mucha, not muy
Because what you “have” is a noun, you make it stronger with mucho/mucha (“a lot of”), which agrees in gender — never with muy (“very,” which only modifies adjectives). So it’s tengo mucha hambre, not tengo muy hambre.
| ✅ Correct | ❌ Wrong | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Tengo mucha hambre | Tengo muy hambre | hambre is feminine → mucha |
| Tengo mucho frío | Tengo muy frío | frío is masculine → mucho |
| Tengo mucho sueño | Tengo muy sueño | sueño is masculine → mucho |
| Tienes mucha razón | Tienes muy razón | razón is feminine → mucha |
Tengo frío vs. soy frío vs. estoy frío
Here’s a genuine “aha.” The word frío can be a noun (cold) or an adjective (cold), and your choice of verb changes the meaning completely:
- Tengo frío — I feel cold (a person’s sensation — pass the blanket). This is what you want.
- Es frío — He’s a cold person (unfriendly, distant).
- Está frío — It’s cold (an object’s temperature: la sopa está fría, the soup is cold).
The same split runs through heat: a person “has heat” (tengo calor), but an object “is hot” (el café está caliente). Mix them up and you accidentally call yourself emotionally distant — or worse, room-temperature.
You don’t need to memorize twenty separate phrases. Hold on to one idea — Spanish has what English is — and the whole family falls into place. Next time you’re hungry, cold, or counting your years, reach for tener and watch yourself sound a little more like a native. ¡Tienes esto! (You’ve got this!)
Test your tener
5 quick questions to see what stuck.
-
How do you say “I'm 30 years old” in Spanish?
Age uses tener + número + años: Tengo 30 años — literally “I have 30 years.” The word años is required.
-
“Tengo mucha hambre” is correct, not “Tengo muy hambre.”
Hambre is a noun, so you intensify it with mucho/mucha, never muy. Hambre is feminine, so it takes mucha.
-
Complete: “¿Cuántos ___ tienes?” (How old are you?)
To ask someone's age: ¿Cuántos años tienes? — “How many years do you have?”
-
Match each tener phrase to what it means.
Tap a Spanish word, then its English meaning to pair them.
Spanish
English
-
Which sentence means “I have to study”?
Tener que + infinitive = obligation. The second verb stays in the infinitive: tengo que estudiar.
Related Articles

Keep going with Spanish.
Get our starter pack of the 100 most common words — and the occasional new lesson when one's worth reading.