In Spanish, the usual word for clothing hangers is perchas, pronounced PEHR-chahs.
You open a closet, you grab a few hangers, you keep moving. It’s a small word that shows up in dorm rooms, laundromats, clothing stores, and when you’re packing for a move. If you say it wrong, people still get you, but the right word makes you sound natural right away.
This article gives you the everyday Spanish for “hangers,” the forms you’ll see on labels and signs, plus the phrasing you’ll use when you’re asking for more hangers or telling someone to hang something up.
How To Say ‘Hangers’ In Spanish In Real Life
The most common translation for “hangers” (the kind used for clothes) is perchas. The singular is percha. In many Spanish-speaking places, if you say ¿Tienes perchas? people will understand you right away.
Singular And Plural Forms
La percha means “the hanger.” Las perchas means “the hangers.” Spanish nouns carry grammatical gender, and percha is feminine, so it uses la and las.
- One hanger:una percha
- Two hangers:dos perchas
- Those hangers:esas perchas
Pronunciation That Gets You Understood
Percha sounds like “PEHR-chah.” Keep the r light, a quick tap. The ch is the same “ch” you hear in “chocolate.” In the plural, add an “s”: “PEHR-chahs.”
What Kind Of Hanger Do You Mean
English uses “hanger” for a few different things. Spanish splits those meanings across different words. If you mean the plastic or wooden piece for shirts and jackets, percha fits. If you mean a hook, a clasp, or a hanging hardware piece, another word may fit better.
Percha For Clothing Hangers
Percha is the clean choice for a closet hanger. You’ll hear it at home, in rentals, and in clothing shops. You’ll also see longer phrases when people want to be extra clear.
- percha de ropa (clothes hanger)
- percha para ropa (hanger for clothes)
- percha de madera (wooden hanger)
- percha de plástico (plastic hanger)
Gancho When It’s More Like A Hook
Gancho means “hook.” In some places, people will use gancho for clothing hangers too, especially in casual speech or in a store. If someone hands you a hanger and calls it a gancho, don’t panic. They’re still talking about the same object.
Use gancho with confidence when you truly mean a hook: a wall hook, a hook for a bag, or a metal hook used for hanging items.
Perchero Is Not A Hanger
Perchero is a coat rack or a standing rack where you hang coats, hats, or bags. It’s related to percha, but it’s not the small hanger you put inside a closet. If you’re pointing at a floor rack in an entryway, perchero is the word you want.
Common Phrases You’ll Actually Say
Knowing the noun is step one. Step two is the phrases you use when you need hangers, when you’re giving directions, or when you’re sorting laundry. These lines are short and natural, so you can borrow them as-is.
Asking For Hangers
- ¿Tienes perchas? (Do you have hangers?)
- ¿Me das unas perchas? (Can you give me a few hangers?)
- Necesito más perchas. (I need more hangers.)
- No hay perchas en el armario. (There aren’t any hangers in the closet.)
Talking About Hanging Clothes Up
Spanish often uses the verb colgar for “to hang.” If you want to tell someone to hang up a shirt, you’ll use colgar plus the clothing item.
- Cuelga la camisa en una percha. (Hang the shirt on a hanger.)
- Voy a colgar la chaqueta. (I’m going to hang up the jacket.)
- Cuélgalo en el perchero. (Hang it on the coat rack.)
Closet And Laundry Words That Pair Well
These are the words that show up next to percha in daily speech. If you learn them as a set, you’ll form sentences faster.
- armario (closet, wardrobe)
- ropero (wardrobe; common in parts of Latin America)
- barra (closet rod)
- gancho (hook)
- ropa (clothes)
How Spanish Speakers Label Hangers In Stores
If you shop in Spanish, you may see hangers labeled a few different ways. Some labels stick to the base word; others add a clarifier. Knowing the patterns saves you time when you’re scanning shelves.
Look for perchas in big print. Then check smaller text for material or purpose: madera, plástico, antideslizantes (non-slip), or para pantalones (for pants).
Also pay attention to shape words. If a pack has clips, it may say con pinzas. A velvet style may mention terciopelo.
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Spanish Terms Related To Clothing Hangers
This table gathers the most common hanger words and close relatives you’ll see in speech and on packaging. Use it as a quick decoder while you learn the patterns.
| Spanish Term | Plain Meaning | When You’ll Hear It |
|---|---|---|
| percha | hanger (singular) | General use at home and in shops |
| perchas | hangers (plural) | When asking for or counting hangers |
| percha de ropa | clothes hanger | When someone wants to be extra clear |
| percha para pantalones | pants hanger | Shopping, storage, closet sorting |
| percha con pinzas | hanger with clips | Skirts, shorts, kids’ clothes |
| gancho | hook; sometimes “hanger” | Hooks, hardware, casual store talk |
| ganchos | hooks; sometimes “hangers” | When a shop uses gancho as its default |
| perchero | coat rack, standing rack | Entryways, bedrooms, offices |
| barra del armario | closet rod | When talking about where hangers sit |
Regional Notes Without Overthinking It
You’ll hear percha across Spain and Latin America. You may also hear gancho used for a clothing hanger in many places. The safest path is simple: use percha as your default, and treat gancho as a common alternate that often leans toward “hook.”
If a friend says pásame un gancho while pointing at the closet, pass the hanger. If a hardware aisle sign says ganchos, expect hooks and wall pieces. Context does most of the work.
Spain Vs. Latin America Vocabulary
In Spain, percha is widely used for hangers. In many Latin American regions, you’ll still hear percha, yet shops and homes may mix in gancho. Your goal is smooth communication, not perfect labeling.
Mistakes That Make You Sound Odd
Most learners don’t get in trouble because of grammar. They get in trouble because of literal translation habits. Here are the common slip-ups, with fixes that keep your Spanish clean.
Using Perchero When You Mean A Single Hanger
Perchero is a rack. If you ask for un perchero in a store, you might get directed to big floor stands or wall-mounted racks. If you want the small item for a shirt, ask for una percha or unas perchas.
Forgetting The Feminine Articles
Because percha is feminine, the natural pair is la and las. You can still be understood with el percha, but it will sound off to many speakers.
Overusing A Dictionary Entry
Some dictionaries list rare senses or regional labels without telling you what’s common in daily talk. If you see five options, pick the one you hear most around closets and laundry: percha. Keep the rest as “good to know.”
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Pronunciation Cheats That Stick
If you want a simple mental hook for pronunciation, use short syllable guides. Say each word out loud a few times, then drop it into a sentence. Your mouth learns the pattern.
| Word | Say It Like | Memory Cue |
|---|---|---|
| percha | PEHR-chah | “Perch” + “cha” |
| perchas | PEHR-chahs | Add the final “s” sound |
| gancho | GAHN-choh | Hard “g” as in “go” |
| ganchos | GAHN-chohs | Plural “s” again |
| perchero | pehr-CHEH-roh | Stress the middle syllable |
| armario | ahr-MAH-ryoh | Think “arm” at the start |
| colgar | kohl-GAHR | Ends with a rolled or tapped “r” |
Mini Dialogs You Can Reuse
Reading single words helps, but short dialogs train you to speak in full lines. Try these aloud. Swap in your clothing items and numbers.
At Home
A:¿Dónde están las perchas?
B:Están en el armario, arriba.
A:Me faltan perchas.
B:Te doy tres.
At A Store
A:Hola, ¿tienen perchas de madera?
B:Sí, están en ese pasillo.
A:¿Estas perchas tienen pinzas?
B:Sí, sirven para faldas.
Practice Plan That Takes Ten Minutes
You don’t need a long study session to lock this in. A short loop works well, especially if you repeat it for a few days.
Step 1: Say The Core Pair
Say una percha ten times. Then say unas perchas ten times. Keep your pace steady.
Step 2: Add A Verb
Say Colgué la camisa en una percha. Then switch the item: la chaqueta, el vestido, los pantalones. If you don’t know the clothing word yet, point at a real item and use what you know.
Step 3: Add A Real Request
Say Necesito más perchas. Then make it polite: ¿Me das unas perchas?. This is the line you’ll actually use when you’re staying with family or renting a room.
Quick Checks Before You Speak
Use these checks when you’re unsure which word to pick. They’re simple, and they prevent the most common mix-ups.
- If it holds a shirt in a closet, say percha.
- If it’s a metal piece on a wall, say gancho.
- If it’s a standing rack by the door, say perchero.
- If you mean the action, use colgar.
Small Extras That Make Your Spanish Sound Natural
Once you have the core word, small add-ons make your speech clearer without making it long.
Counting And Quantities
Spanish often drops the “some” you might say in English. You can still add it with unas when you want. Both work.
- Dame perchas. (Give me hangers.)
- Dame unas perchas. (Give me some hangers.)
- Dame cinco perchas. (Give me five hangers.)
Describing The Type
Material and features come after the noun, so you can stack details in a natural order.
- perchas de madera
- perchas de plástico
- perchas finas (thin hangers)
- perchas anchas (wide-shoulder hangers)
Recap You Can Save In Your Notes
Percha is the standard word for a clothing hanger. The plural is perchas. Use gancho when you mean a hook, and expect it as a casual alternate in some places. Use perchero for a coat rack. With colgar, you can say exactly what you’re doing with your clothes.
If you can say ¿Tienes perchas? and Necesito más perchas, you’re ready for day-to-day use.