Estan vs Son: Mastering Spanish “To Be” in 60 Seconds

Estan is the third-person plural form of estar, used for temporary states or locations. Son is the third-person plural of ser, used for permanent traits or identities. Only one is correct in each context.

Travelers panic when describing locations: “Las playas *son* abiertas” sounds off because beaches aren’t always open. Meanwhile, natives joke on WhatsApp voice notes: “¿Dónde *están* mis llaves?”—mixing the two can flip the meaning from location to essence.

Key Differences

Estar (están) = condition, emotion, place: “Los niños están cansados.” Ser (son) = nature, profession, material: “Los niños son estudiantes.” One handles the “how,” the other the “what.”

Which One Should You Choose?

Ask: “Can it change tomorrow?” If yes, use están. If it defines the subject, pick son. Quick test: swap to singular—está vs es—to confirm.

Examples and Daily Life

Café orders: “Los cafés *están* calientes” (temperature) vs “Los cafés *son* colombianos” (origin). Airports: “Los vuelos *están* retrasados” (temporary delay) vs “Los vuelos *son* internacionales” (classification).

Can I ever switch them for style?

No—grammar rules are strict. Swapping them changes meaning and can confuse listeners.

How do I teach kids the difference?

Use the “Doctor Ser, Place Estar” mnemonic: Description, Occupation, Characteristic, Time, Origin, Relationship for ser; Position, Location, Action, Condition, Emotion, State for estar.

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