Spanish weekday names are mostly masculine and usually come with “el” for a single day and “los” for a weekly routine.
Learning the days of the week sounds simple, but little details can trip you up: when to use el or los, why Spanish doesn’t capitalize weekdays, and how to say each one so people catch it the first time.
This article gives you clean translations, pronunciation help that matches real speech, and practice you can do out loud. No fluff. Just the parts that make the words stick.
Weekday Names In Spanish And What They Mean
Here are the standard weekday names you’ll see in books, schools, and everyday writing. Spanish starts the week on different days depending on the country and the calendar you’re looking at, so treat the list as names, not a calendar rule.
Monday Through Sunday
- Monday → lunes (LOO-nes)
- Tuesday → martes (MAR-tes)
- Wednesday → miércoles (MYAIR-ko-les)
- Thursday → jueves (HWEH-ves)
- Friday → viernes (VYER-nes)
- Saturday → sábado (SAH-ba-do)
- Sunday → domingo (do-MEEN-go)
Capital Letters: English Versus Spanish
In English, weekday names get capital letters. In Spanish, they usually don’t. You’ll normally write lunes, not Lunes, unless it starts a sentence or is part of a title style choice.
How To Use Articles With Days Of The Week
In Spanish, weekdays often act like nouns. That’s why you’ll see articles before them. The article you choose changes the meaning in a way English doesn’t show as clearly.
One Specific Day: Use “el”
Use el when you mean a single, specific day. Think “this coming” or “that one” in English, even if you don’t say those words.
- El lunes tengo un examen. — I have an exam on Monday.
- El viernes es mi entrevista. — My interview is on Friday.
A Weekly Habit: Use “los”
Use los for something you do on that day every week. It’s the Spanish way of saying “on Mondays” or “every Tuesday.”
- Los lunes estudio en la biblioteca. — I study in the library on Mondays.
- Los sábados trabajo. — I work on Saturdays.
Another Common Pattern: “cada”
Cada means “every.” It’s handy when you want a clean, direct sentence.
- Cada miércoles tengo clase de español. — Every Wednesday I have Spanish class.
- Cada domingo llamo a mi abuela. — Every Sunday I call my grandma.
Pronunciation That Gets You Understood
Spanish pronunciation is steady once you learn a few habits. Read these tips, then say the full weekday list out loud twice. Your mouth will learn the pattern.
Stress And Rhythm
Spanish words usually stress the second-to-last syllable unless an accent mark says otherwise. That’s why lunes and martes feel even, while miércoles has a clear written accent that marks the stress.
Tricky Sounds In The List
- J in jueves: In most accents, j is a strong breathy sound, like a firm “h.”
- V in viernes: Many Spanish speakers pronounce v close to a soft “b.” Don’t bite your lip hard.
- R in martes and viernes: It’s a light tap, not the long English “r.”
- Accent in miércoles: Keep the stress where the accent mark sits, or it will sound off.
English Weekdays To Spanish With Real Examples
The best way to lock these in is to pair each day with a sentence you’d actually say. Pick two that fit your life and reuse them each week.
- Lunes: El lunes empiezo un curso nuevo. — On Monday I start a new course.
- Martes: Los martes tengo práctica de fútbol. — On Tuesdays I have soccer practice.
- Miércoles: El miércoles entrego mi tarea. — On Wednesday I turn in my homework.
- Jueves: Cada jueves leo veinte páginas. — Every Thursday I read twenty pages.
- Viernes: El viernes salgo con amigos. — On Friday I go out with friends.
- Sábado: Los sábados hago compras. — On Saturdays I shop.
- Domingo: El domingo descanso en casa. — On Sunday I rest at home.
Common Mistakes And Quick Fixes
Most errors come from copying English patterns. Fix these and your Spanish will sound cleaner right away.
Mixing Up Gender Or Plurals
Weekdays are usually masculine: el lunes, el martes, el miércoles. In the plural for routines, you’ll see los lunes, not las lunes.
Capitalizing Weekdays
Writing Lunes everywhere looks odd in Spanish. Use lowercase unless it starts the sentence or matches a title rule.
Adding “en” When You Don’t Need It
English uses “on” with days, so learners often add en. In Spanish, you usually don’t. Say El viernes tengo examen, not En el viernes.
Dropping The Accent Marks
Accents matter in writing. Miércoles and sábado carry accents. If your keyboard makes accents annoying, set up a Spanish keyboard layout. It saves time and keeps your writing clean.
Questions And Answers You’ll Hear A Lot
Once you know the names, the next step is using them in quick questions. These show up in class, at work, and in day-to-day plans.
- ¿Qué día es hoy? — What day is today?
- Hoy es lunes. — Today is Monday.
- ¿Qué día es mañana? — What day is tomorrow?
- Mañana es jueves. — Tomorrow is Thursday.
- ¿Qué día te queda bien? — What day works for you?
- Me queda bien el martes. — Tuesday works for me.
Notice how Spanish often skips “on.” You’ll hear el martes, not a word-for-word match to English.
Abbreviations You’ll See In Schedules
On timetables and school notes, weekdays get shortened. The exact style varies, but these are common and easy to read.
- lun. lunes
- mar. martes
- mié. miércoles
- jue. jueves
- vie. viernes
- sáb. sábado
- dom. domingo
Quick Reference Table For Meaning And Use
Use this table when you’re writing homework, messages, or a schedule. It keeps the pattern in one place so you don’t second-guess yourself.
| English Day | Spanish | Common Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | lunes | el lunes / los lunes |
| Tuesday | martes | el martes / los martes |
| Wednesday | miércoles | el miércoles / los miércoles |
| Thursday | jueves | el jueves / los jueves |
| Friday | viernes | el viernes / los viernes |
| Saturday | sábado | el sábado / los sábados |
| Sunday | domingo | el domingo / los domingos |
| Weekend | el fin de semana | este fin de semana |
Weekdays With Dates In Writing
When you write a full date, Spanish often uses a comma after the weekday in casual notes. In formal styles, you may also see the weekday without a comma. Both look normal in many places.
- Lunes, 5 de mayo — Monday, May 5
- el lunes 5 — on Monday the 5th
- viernes 12 — Friday the 12th
Mini Dialogs You Can Reuse
Short dialogs make the words feel real. Say the lines out loud and swap the day. Keep the rhythm the same.
Setting A Meeting
A:¿Puedes el jueves?
B:El jueves no puedo. ¿Y el viernes?
A:Perfecto, el viernes a las cinco.
Talking About Routines
A:¿Cuándo estudias?
B:Los lunes y los miércoles estudio en casa.
A:Yo estudio los domingos.
School Deadlines
A:¿Cuándo es la entrega?
B:El martes.
A:Uf, entonces trabajo el lunes por la noche.
Memory Tricks That Don’t Feel Like Homework
Pure repetition works, but a tiny hook can speed things up. Use one of these, then drill with real sentences.
Link Days To Familiar Words
- Martes looks like “Mars.” It can remind you of Tuesday.
- Jueves starts with j, the breathy sound, so your mouth prepares early.
- Viernes can cue “viernes, viernes” like a weekend chant.
Anchor The Accent Days
Two days carry accents: miércoles and sábado. Write each one five times, then read them without looking. Your hand learns the shape.
Practice Plan: 10 Minutes A Day
This plan is short, but it hits speaking, listening, and writing. Do it for a week and you’ll stop translating in your head. That pattern sticks after a week.
- Minute 1: Say all seven days from memory.
- Minutes 2–3: Say two habit sentences with los.
- Minutes 4–5: Say two one-time plans with el.
- Minutes 6–7: Write the two accent days with accents.
- Minutes 8–10: Do one mini dialog and swap in new days.
Second Table: Common Phrases With Weekdays
These phrases show up in texts, classes, and everyday chat. Learn a few and you’ll sound more natural without extra effort.
| Spanish Phrase | Meaning | When To Say It |
|---|---|---|
| entre semana | on weekdays | Talking about Monday–Friday as a block |
| el fin de semana | the weekend | Plans for Saturday and Sunday |
| este lunes | this Monday | A near Monday, usually the next one |
| el lunes que viene | next Monday | When you want to be extra clear |
| todos los viernes | every Friday | Repeating plans and habits |
| de lunes a viernes | Monday to Friday | Work or school schedules |
| los domingos por la mañana | on Sunday mornings | A routine with a time detail |
| viernes por la noche | Friday night | Weekend plans |
When People Start The Week On Monday Or Sunday
You may see calendars that start on Monday and others that start on Sunday. Spanish names stay the same either way. If you’re planning travel, school, or work, check the calendar format so you don’t book the wrong day.
Spelling Checks For Tests And Writing
If you’re writing for class, spelling matters as much as speech. Use these quick checks:
- miércoles has an accent and an extra syllable.
- sábado has an accent.
- jueves keeps the ue sound at the start.
- viernes ends with -nes, like lunes.
One-Page Recap You Can Say Out Loud
Say this recap once a day. It’s short, but it covers the grammar pattern that matters.
El lunes is one Monday. Los lunes is Mondays as a habit. Weekdays are lowercase in Spanish. Accents stay on miércoles and sábado. If you can say the list smoothly, you’re ready to use it in real sentences.
Days Of The Week In English To Spanish: Final Check
Write the seven Spanish days from memory, add accents where they belong, then create one sentence for a single plan and one sentence for a weekly habit. If both feel easy, you’ve got it.