Gender in Spanish Nouns: The Complete Guide to Masculine & Feminine [2026]
Key Takeaway: Every noun in Spanish is either masculine (el) or feminine (la). While the rules cover about 95% of cases, the exceptions are where most learners stumble. This guide gives you the rules, the exceptions, flowcharts for quick decisions, and the memory tricks to get gender right every time.
If you have ever said “el problema” and wondered why a word ending in -a is masculine, or been confused by “la mano” ending in -o but being feminine, you are not alone. Grammatical gender is one of the first challenges English speakers face when learning Spanish, and it never completely goes away.
But here is the good news: Spanish gender follows clear patterns. Once you learn the rules and a handful of exceptions, you will get it right the vast majority of the time. This guide covers everything you need, from basic patterns to the tricky words that trip up even intermediate learners. We have also included two visual flowcharts you can bookmark and reference anytime you are unsure about a noun’s gender.
What Is Grammatical Gender in Spanish?
Grammatical gender is a classification system that assigns every noun to a category: masculine (masculino) or feminine (femenino). This is not about biological sex. A table (la mesa) is feminine and a book (el libro) is masculine for purely linguistic reasons inherited from Latin.
Gender matters because it determines which articles, adjectives, and pronouns you use. Getting gender wrong does not usually prevent understanding, but it marks you as a non-native speaker instantly. If you are also working on your Spanish greetings or conversation practice, getting gender right from the start will make everything else flow more naturally.
Here is how gender works in practice:
Correct
- El libro rojo (The red book)
- La mesa roja (The red table)
- El problema difícil (The difficult problem)
Incorrect
- La libro roja
- El mesa rojo
- La problema difícila
Notice how the article (el/la), the adjective ending (-o/-a), and sometimes even the noun ending all need to agree. This chain of agreement is what makes gender such a fundamental part of Spanish grammar, similar to how verb conjugation changes based on the subject.
Flowchart: How to Determine a Spanish Noun’s Gender
Use this decision flowchart whenever you encounter a new Spanish noun and need to figure out whether it takes el or la. Start at the top and follow the arrows.
el profesor / la profesora
el gato / la gata
-o → el libro, el gato
-or → el color, el amor
-aje → el viaje, el garaje
-ma (Greek) → el problema, el tema
-mente → el continente
-a → la casa, la mesa
-ción / -sión → la nación
-dad / -tad → la ciudad
-tud → la juventud
-umbre / -eza → la costumbre
These are unpredictable. You must memorize them with their article.
Examples: el coche (car) vs. la noche (night)
el pan (bread) vs. la sal (salt)
Tip: Always learn the noun WITH its article!
Masculine Noun Rules (El)
Most masculine nouns follow predictable ending patterns. If you learn these rules, you will correctly identify the gender of roughly 95% of nouns you encounter.
| Ending | Examples | Reliability |
|---|---|---|
| -o | el libro, el gato, el vino, el cielo | ~99% |
| -or | el color, el amor, el valor, el calor | ~95% |
| -aje | el viaje, el paisaje, el garaje, el equipaje | ~99% |
| -mente | el continente, el presidente, el accidente | ~85% |
| -ma (Greek origin) | el problema, el sistema, el tema, el idioma | ~95% |
Also masculine: days of the week (el lunes), months (el enero frío), rivers (el Amazonas), oceans (el Pacífico), and most mountains (el Everest). Numbers are also masculine when used as nouns (el cinco, el cien), which connects to our guide to Spanish numbers.
Pro Tip: Colors used as nouns are always masculine: el rojo (the red), el azul (the blue). This is because they refer to el color, which is masculine. When you describe people in Spanish, though, color adjectives must agree with the noun they modify.
Feminine Noun Rules (La)
| Ending | Examples | Reliability |
|---|---|---|
| -a | la casa, la mesa, la ventana, la persona | ~95% |
| -ción / -sión | la nación, la decisión, la información | ~99% |
| -dad / -tad | la ciudad, la libertad, la universidad | ~99% |
| -tud | la juventud, la actitud, la multitud | ~99% |
| -umbre | la costumbre, la cumbre, la muchedumbre | ~99% |
| -eza | la belleza, la naturaleza, la tristeza | ~99% |
Also feminine: letters of the alphabet (la a, la be), islands (las Canarias), and most companies (la empresa). Interestingly, feminine endings like -ción and -sión correspond to English words ending in “-tion” and “-sion,” which makes them easy to spot if you already know the English equivalent.
The “El” Before Feminine Nouns Trick
You may hear native speakers say “el agua” or “el águila” and think these are masculine. They are not. Feminine nouns that start with a stressed a- or ha- sound use el instead of la in the singular form to avoid an awkward vowel clash. In the plural, they revert to las:
- el agua (the water) but las aguas (the waters) – still feminine
- el águila (the eagle) but las águilas (the eagles) – still feminine
- el alma (the soul) but las almas (the souls) – still feminine
- el hacha (the axe) but las hachas (the axes) – still feminine
Common Mistake: Saying “la agua” sounds wrong to native speakers because of the repeated “a” sound. But adjectives still agree in feminine: el agua fría (the cold water), NOT el agua frío. The noun is feminine regardless of the article used.
Tricky Exceptions & Memory Tricks
Here is where it gets interesting. These are the nouns that do not follow the standard patterns, and they trip up learners constantly.
Remember: LONERS (Masculine Nouns Ending in -a)
- L – el clima, el enigma
- Greek-origin words ending in -ma
- O – el idioma, el diploma
- More Greek-origin -ma words
- N – el sistema, el drama
- Systematically masculine
- E – el planeta, el mapa
- Essential exceptions to memorize
- R – el tema, el poema
- Literary and academic terms
- S – el sofá, el día
- Special high-frequency words
Feminine Exceptions (Ending in -o)
- La mano (the hand) – The most famous exception in Spanish
- La radio (the radio) – Short for la radiodifusión
- La foto (the photo) – Short for la fotografía
- La moto (the motorcycle) – Short for la motocicleta
Common Mistake: Shortened words keep the gender of the original word. La foto is feminine because la fotografía is feminine, even though it ends in -o. The same applies to la moto (from la motocicleta).
Words That Change Meaning by Gender
Some Spanish words are spelled the same but have completely different meanings depending on their gender. These are important to learn because using the wrong article changes what you are saying entirely. If you have studied Spanish verb conjugation, you know how small differences create big changes in meaning. Gender works the same way.
| Masculine (El) | Feminine (La) |
|---|---|
| El capital = money/capital | La capital = capital city |
| El orden = order/sequence | La orden = command/order (restaurant) |
| El cura = priest | La cura = cure/healing |
| El guía = male guide | La guía = guidebook / female guide |
| El papa = the Pope | La papa = potato (Latin America) |
| El cometa = comet | La cometa = kite |
| El frente = front (battle/weather) | La frente = forehead |
| El policía = male police officer | La policía = the police force / female officer |
These dual-gender words are sometimes called homónimos de género. While there are not hundreds of them, the ones that exist tend to be common, everyday words. Mixing them up can lead to genuinely confusing moments, like telling someone about a comet when you mean a kite.
Compound Nouns & Gender
Compound nouns (sustantivos compuestos) combine two or more words into a single noun. Understanding their gender rules saves you from guessing every time you encounter one.
Verb + Noun Compounds (Almost Always Masculine)
When a verb and a noun combine, the result is masculine regardless of the second word’s gender. These are some of the most common compound nouns in daily Spanish:
- el paraguas (umbrella) – from parar (to stop) + aguas (waters)
- el cumpleaños (birthday) – from cumplir (to complete) + años (years)
- el lavavajillas (dishwasher) – from lavar (to wash) + vajillas (dishes)
- el rascacielos (skyscraper) – from rascar (to scratch) + cielos (skies)
- el sacacorchos (corkscrew) – from sacar (to pull) + corchos (corks)
- el parabrisas (windshield) – from parar (to stop) + brisas (breezes)
Noun + Noun Compounds
When two nouns combine, the first noun usually determines gender:
- la bocacalle (street entrance) – la boca determines gender
- el mediodía (noon) – el medio determines gender
- la telaraña (spider web) – la tela determines gender
Adjective + Noun Compounds
The noun part determines the gender:
- la medianoche (midnight) – from media + la noche
- el altavoz (loudspeaker) – from alta + la voz, but treated as masculine
Pro Tip: For verb+noun compounds, just remember: they are masculine. Period. This rule has almost no exceptions. You will hear el abrelatas (can opener), el cortacésped (lawn mower), and el tocadiscos (record player), all masculine. Many of these words come up in daily routine vocabulary, so getting their gender right from the start pays off.
Adjective Agreement: Why Gender Matters
In Spanish, adjectives must agree with the gender (and number) of the noun they describe. This is the main practical reason why getting gender right is so important. If you enjoy Spanish idioms and expressions, you will notice that adjective agreement appears everywhere, even in fixed phrases.
Four Types of Adjective Agreement
- -o/-a adjectives change ending: el gato blanco / la gata blanca
- -e adjectives stay the same: el hombre inteligente / la mujer inteligente
- Consonant-ending adjectives stay the same: el examen fácil / la prueba fácil
- Nationality adjectives add -a for feminine: español/española, francés/francesa
Special Cases in Agreement
Some situations require extra attention:
- Mixed groups: When a masculine and feminine noun share an adjective, use the masculine form: El libro y la revista son interesantes
- Adjectives before nouns: Some adjectives shorten before masculine singular nouns: buen (from bueno), gran (from grande), primer (from primero)
- Color adjectives from nouns: Colors derived from objects do not change: el coche naranja / la casa naranja (orange does not become “naranja” or “naranjo”)
“Gender agreement is the thread that holds a Spanish sentence together. Once a learner internalizes it, everything else in grammar clicks into place.”
Flowchart: How to Apply Gender Agreement in a Sentence
Once you know a noun’s gender, you need to make everything else in the sentence agree. Use this step-by-step flowchart to build grammatically correct phrases every time.
Masculine
Definite: el / Indefinite: un
Plural: los / unos
Feminine
Definite: la / Indefinite: una
Plural: las / unas
-o/-a type
Change ending:
alto → alta
bonito → bonita
-e type
No change:
grande stays grande
inteligente stays
Consonant type
No change:
fácil stays fácil
azul stays azul
Masculine
este libro, ese coche, aquel edificio
mi/tu/su – no change needed
Feminine
esta casa, esa mesa, aquella ventana
mi/tu/su – no change needed
Putting the Agreement Flowchart into Practice
Let us walk through an example. Say you want to express “the beautiful white house”:
- Identify gender: casa ends in -a, so it is feminine
- Choose article: feminine definite = la
- Adjust adjectives: hermoso becomes hermosa, blanco becomes blanca
- Result: La casa hermosa y blanca or La hermosa casa blanca
Gender Patterns by Semantic Category
Beyond word endings, certain categories of words tend to follow consistent gender patterns. Learning these groups can help you guess correctly even when you encounter a noun for the first time.
Days: el lunes, el martes, el miércoles
Numbers: el cinco, el mil, el millón
Rivers: el Amazonas, el Nilo, el Sena
Oceans: el Atlántico, el Pacífico
Mountains: el Everest, los Andes
Languages: el español, el inglés, el francés
Colors (as nouns): el rojo, el azul
Trees: el pino, el roble, el olmo
Letters: la a, la be, la ce
Islands: las Canarias, las Baleares
Companies: la empresa, la compañía
Sciences: la biología, la química, la física
Fruits: la manzana, la naranja, la pera
Roads: la calle, la avenida, la autopista
Hours: la una, las dos, las tres
Body parts ending -a: la cabeza, la pierna
Notice the pattern with trees and fruits. In many cases, the tree is masculine while its fruit is feminine: el manzano (apple tree) vs. la manzana (apple), el naranjo (orange tree) vs. la naranja (orange). This is a handy distinction unique to Spanish that applies across many fruit-bearing trees.
Regional Differences in Gender Usage
While the vast majority of nouns share the same gender across all Spanish-speaking countries, a small number of words vary by region. These regional differences rarely cause confusion, but they are worth knowing if you plan to travel or communicate with speakers from different countries. Our guide to Spanish slang by region covers similar regional variations in vocabulary.
| Word | Spain | Latin America |
|---|---|---|
| sartén (frying pan) | la sartén | el sartén (Mexico) / la sartén (most others) |
| internet | el/la internet (both used) | el internet (more common) |
| mar (sea) | el mar (everyday) / la mar (literary, nautical) | el mar (standard) |
| azúcar (sugar) | el azúcar (standard) | el/la azúcar (varies) |
| calor (heat) | el calor (standard) | la calor (colloquial in some regions) |
The Real Academia Española (RAE) provides official guidance on these words, but regional usage often wins in everyday conversation. When in doubt, follow the standard form and nobody will correct you. Most speakers are quite tolerant of regional gender variations since they know the differences exist.
7 Tips to Master Spanish Gender Fast
- Always learn nouns WITH their article. Never learn “casa” alone. Learn “la casa.” This builds the correct association from day one and becomes automatic over time.
- Color-code your notes. Write masculine nouns in blue and feminine nouns in red. Visual association reinforces the pattern. If you use flashcards, add a color stripe to each card.
- Group exceptions together. Learn all the -ma exceptions (el problema, el tema, el sistema) as a batch. Same for shortened feminines (la foto, la moto, la radio). Grouping makes patterns stick.
- Read in Spanish daily. Seeing articles with nouns in context is the fastest way to internalize gender patterns. Start with our best Spanish books for learners or try watching Spanish movies on Netflix with subtitles.
- Listen to Spanish music. Songs repeat phrases and reinforce article-noun pairings naturally. Our Spanish love songs guide is a great starting point since love songs tend to use emotional, descriptive language full of adjective agreement.
- Practice with flash drills. Take a list of 20 nouns, cover the articles, and quiz yourself. Aim for 90% accuracy before adding new words. Speed matters, so push yourself to answer in under two seconds per noun.
- Do not panic about mistakes. Native Spanish-speaking children take years to master gender. You will make errors, and people will still understand you. Consistency comes with exposure, and every mistake is a step forward.
Practice Exercises: Test Your Gender Knowledge
Now that you know the rules, let us put them to the test. Try to determine the correct article for each noun before checking the answers.
Exercise 1: Choose El or La
- ___ problema (problem)
- ___ nación (nation)
- ___ garaje (garage)
- ___ mano (hand)
- ___ juventud (youth)
- ___ clima (climate)
- ___ foto (photo)
- ___ paisaje (landscape)
- ___ costumbre (custom)
- ___ agua (water)
Click to Reveal Answers
- El problema – Greek-origin -ma exception (masculine)
- La nación – Ends in -ción (always feminine)
- El garaje – Ends in -aje (always masculine)
- La mano – Famous exception (feminine despite -o)
- La juventud – Ends in -tud (always feminine)
- El clima – Greek-origin -ma exception (masculine)
- La foto – Short for la fotografía (keeps feminine gender)
- El paisaje – Ends in -aje (always masculine)
- La costumbre – Ends in -umbre (always feminine)
- El agua – Feminine noun using el to avoid vowel clash (still feminine: el agua fría)
Exercise 2: Spot the Gender Error
Each sentence below contains a gender agreement mistake. Can you find and fix it?
- La problema es muy difícila.
- El mano derecha está frío.
- Me gusta el foto que tomaste.
- La sistema no funciona bien.
- El agua está frío hoy.
Click to Reveal Corrected Sentences
- El problema es muy difícil. (problema is masculine, difícil does not change)
- La mano derecha está fría. (mano is feminine despite -o ending)
- Me gusta la foto que tomaste. (foto is feminine, short for fotografía)
- El sistema no funciona bien. (sistema is masculine, a Greek -ma word)
- El agua está fría hoy. (agua is feminine, uses el to avoid vowel clash, but adjective stays feminine)
Frequently Asked Questions
How does gender work in Spanish?
Every Spanish noun is either masculine (el) or feminine (la). Gender affects articles, adjectives, and pronouns. Most nouns ending in -o are masculine and most ending in -a are feminine, but there are important exceptions like el problema and la mano. Gender is grammatical, not biological, for most nouns.
Why does Spanish have gendered nouns?
Spanish inherited grammatical gender from Latin, which had three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter). Over centuries, the neuter merged mostly into masculine, leaving two. This system helps with sentence clarity and word agreement, making complex sentences easier to parse.
Is there a trick to remember Spanish noun gender?
Yes. Use the LONERS mnemonic for masculine nouns ending in -a (el clima, el idioma, el sistema, el planeta, el tema, el sofá, el día). For feminine nouns ending in -o, remember the “shortened” rule: la foto (fotografía), la moto (motocicleta), la radio (radiodifusión). And always learn nouns with their article.
Does noun gender matter in Spanish?
Yes, noun gender is essential because it affects articles (el/la), adjectives (alto/alta), demonstratives (este/esta), and possessives. It can also change meaning entirely: el capital (money) vs. la capital (city), el cura (priest) vs. la cura (cure).
Are there gender-neutral options in Spanish?
Spanish is exploring inclusive language options. Some speakers use “elle” as a gender-neutral pronoun and -e endings (amigue instead of amigo/amiga). The Real Academia Española has not officially endorsed these forms, but they are increasingly used in informal and activist contexts, particularly in Argentina and among younger speakers across Latin America.
What about nouns that refer to people?
For nouns referring to people, gender usually matches the person: el profesor / la profesora, el doctor / la doctora. Some nouns use the same form for both: el/la artista, el/la estudiante, el/la periodista. The article changes but the noun stays the same.
How do compound nouns work with gender in Spanish?
Compound nouns formed with verb+noun are almost always masculine regardless of the second word’s gender: el paraguas (umbrella), el cumpleaños (birthday), el lavavajillas (dishwasher). When two nouns are combined, the first noun typically determines gender: la bocacalle (street entrance), el mediodía (noon).
Do all Spanish-speaking countries use the same gender for every noun?
Most nouns have the same gender everywhere, but a few differ by region. In Spain, la sartén is standard, while Mexico uses el sartén. The word internet varies between el and la depending on the country. These regional variations are minor and both forms are understood everywhere. When in doubt, follow the RAE’s recommendation.
Your Next Steps
- Bookmark the two flowcharts above – reference them whenever you encounter a new noun
- Memorize the LONERS exceptions – they cover 90% of the tricky cases
- Start learning all new nouns with their article – “la mesa” not just “mesa”
- Complete the practice exercises – aim for 100% before moving on
- Practice with our complete guide to Spanish pronouns to see gender agreement in action
- Learn how adjectives work with our guide to describing people in Spanish
Gender in Spanish is a pattern, not a puzzle. Learn the rules, memorize the exceptions, and trust that it gets easier with every sentence you read and speak. The two flowcharts above are your roadmap, and the practice exercises are your first steps on the journey.
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Written by Carlos Rivera
Carlos is a native Spanish speaker from Buenos Aires with a passion for making language learning accessible. He has helped over 5,000 students achieve fluency through his innovative teaching methods and deep understanding of Spanish grammar.
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