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NotesSpanish BTopic 3.3Future
Back to Spanish B Topics
3.3.13 min read

Future

IB Spanish B • Unit 3

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Contents

  • What it is
  • The forms
  • When to use it
  • In action
  • Common errors
The simple future: The simple future (el futuro simple) is how Spanish says «will». You use it to talk about future plans («el año que viene viajaré»), to make predictions («mañana lloverá») and even to express probability about now («¿Quién será?» = Who could that be?). The best part: the endings are identical for all three verb families (-ar, -er, -ir), so there is only one set to learn.
el futuro simple
the simple future tense («will + verb»)
el infinitivo
the infinitive — the whole, unchanged verb (hablar, comer, vivir); the future is built on it
la terminación
the ending — for the future it is added to the WHOLE infinitive
la raíz irregular
the irregular stem — a few verbs change the infinitive before adding the endings (tener → tendr-)
la predicción
a prediction — saying what will happen
la conjetura
conjecture / probability — guessing about the present («serán las tres»)
When you reach for it: If the prompt mentions «mañana», «el año que viene», «en el futuro», «algún día» — or asks you to make plans or predictions — it's the future. In speaking and writing tasks it's the natural tense for «¿Qué harás después del colegio?»
Whole infinitive + one set of endings: To form the future of a regular verb: keep the whole infinitive (don't drop anything!) and add the ending -é / -ás / -á / -emos / -éis / -án. The very same endings work for -ar, -er and -ir verbs, so hablaré, comeré, viviré all follow the identical pattern. Note the accents — they fall on every ending except nosotros.
Persona-ar (hablar)-er (comer)-ir (vivir)
yohablarécomeréviviré
túhablaráscomerásvivirás
él / ella / ustedhablarácomerávivirá
nosotros / nosotrashablaremoscomeremosviviremos
vosotros / vosotrashablaréiscomeréisviviréis
ellos / ellas / ustedeshablaráncomeránvivirán
InfinitivoRaíz irregularEjemplo (yo)
tenertendr-tendré
hacerhar-haré
decirdir-diré
poderpodr-podré
salirsaldr-saldré
venirvendr-vendré
quererquerr-querré
sabersabr-sabré
ponerpondr-pondré
Same endings, only the stem can change: Regular verbs add the endings to the full infinitive. A short list of verbs use an irregular stem (tener → tendr-, hacer → har-), but they take exactly the same endings: tendré, tendrás, tendrá… Learn the nine stems above and you've covered almost every irregular future.

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Three everyday jobs: The future tense does a few different jobs. Here are the three you meet most in the exam — each with a Spanish example. There's also a very common everyday alternative for the near future, shown at the end.

Usos del futuro

  • Future plans — «El verano que viene viajaré a México con mi familia.» (Next summer I will travel to Mexico with my family.)
  • Predictions — «Mañana hará buen tiempo en toda la costa.» (Tomorrow the weather will be good along the whole coast.)
  • Probability / conjecture about now — «¿Quién será a estas horas? Serán los vecinos.» (Who could that be at this hour? It's probably the neighbours.)
The near-future alternative: «ir a + infinitivo»: For plans that are close or already decided, Spanish very often uses «ir a + infinitivo» instead: «Voy a estudiar esta noche» (I'm going to study tonight). It means roughly the same as «estudiaré esta noche», and it's the form you'll hear most in casual speech. The simple future sounds a little more formal or distant.
My plans, sentence by sentence: Here's a short paragraph about future plans, built one sentence at a time. Every verb is in the simple future — watch for the irregular stems terminaré… tendré… haré. Read it once for the meaning, then tap Ver traducción for the English or 🔊 to hear it.

El futuro en acción

Mis planes, frase a frase

  1. El año que viene terminaré el bachillerato y empezaré la universidad.
  2. Estudiaré ingeniería porque me gustan las matemáticas y la tecnología.
  3. Tendré que mudarme a otra ciudad, así que viviré en una residencia.
  4. Mis amigos y yo nos veremos en las vacaciones y viajaremos juntos.
  5. Algún día haré un máster en el extranjero y trabajaré como ingeniera.
Steal this for your plans: Notice the pattern: a time marker («el año que viene», «algún día») + a verb in the future. Swap in your own plans and you have a ready-made answer for «¿Qué harás en el futuro?» Remember the irregular stems — haré, not haceré.

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The slips to watch for: Two mistakes account for most lost marks in the future: dropping the accent (the ending must keep its tilde) and regularising an irregular stem (writing «teneré» instead of «tendré»). Compare the right version with the typical mistake and the fix becomes obvious.

Correcto

  • Mañana hablaré con el profesor.
  • El sábado tendremos una fiesta.
  • Ellos harán los deberes esta tarde.

Error común

  • Mañana hablare con el profesor.
  • El sábado teneremos una fiesta.
  • Ellos haceran los deberes esta tarde.
Check the accent and the stem: Before you move on, ask two things: does the ending keep its accent (hablaré, not hablare), and is the verb one of the irregular-stem ones (tener → tendré, hacer → haré)? Those two checks catch nearly every future-tense slip.

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Conjuga el verbo «vivir» en futuro simple en las seis personas (yo, tú, él/ella/usted, nosotros, vosotros, ellos/ellas/ustedes). [2 marks]

Related Spanish B Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

3.1.1Present regular
3.1.2Present irregular
3.1.3Ser vs Estar
3.1.4Gustar-type verbs
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