Preterite vs Imperfect: A Past Tense Decision Course
This tutorial teaches the real difference between the two main Spanish past tenses:
the preterite for bounded events and the imperfect for background, ongoing states,
habits, descriptions, and in-progress situations. It gives special attention to
ser and estar, because their preterite and imperfect
forms express very different ideas.
The preterite and imperfect do not divide the past into "short" and "long." They divide
it by how the speaker frames the action.
Preterite: the speaker packages the action as a completed event with an edge.
Imperfect: the speaker opens the scene and describes what was going on,
what used to happen, what someone was like, or what the conditions were.
Ongoing action uses imperfect; the phone ringing is the interrupting event.
We went to the beach every summer.habit
Íbamos a la playa todos los veranos.
Repeated habitual past action: imperfect.
We went to the beach last Sunday.specific event
Fuimos a la playa el domingo pasado.
Specific completed trip: preterite. Fuimos here is from ir.
4. Signals and traps: time words help, but do not decide alone
Time expressions can guide you, but the real decision is still viewpoint. Some words strongly
suggest one tense; others can work with either tense depending on meaning.
Often preterite
ayer, anoche, el lunes, en 2019, una vez, de repente, entonces, por fin, durante tres horas, tres veces
Anoche terminé el proyecto.
Last night I finished the project.
Often imperfect
siempre, normalmente, todos los días, de niño, antes, mientras, a menudo, cada verano
De niño jugaba en esa plaza.
As a child I used to play in that square.
Trap:durante does not automatically mean imperfect. If the speaker frames
the action as completed within a measured block, use preterite: Estudié durante tres horas.
If the speaker describes what was going on during another event, use imperfect: Estudiaba cuando llamaste.
English
Spanish
Why
I studied for three hours.
Estudié durante tres horas.
Completed measured event.
I was studying for three hours when...
Estudiaba desde hacía tres horas cuando...
Ongoing background.
He always arrived late.
Siempre llegaba tarde.
Habit.
Yesterday he arrived late.
Ayer llegó tarde.
Specific event.
Signal drills
Choose: Antes mi hermano siempre ___ tarde.
Answer: llegaba. Antes + siempre describes a habit.
Choose: Ayer mi hermano ___ tarde.
Answer: llegó. Ayer frames one completed event.
For years, I wanted to speak without translating.ongoing state
Durante años quería hablar sin traducir.
Longstanding desire/state, not a completed attempt: imperfect.
For two hours, I tried to fix the error.bounded effort
Durante dos horas intenté arreglar el error.
A bounded completed effort: preterite.
5. Ser in the past: era vs fue
Ser is where many learners overuse the preterite. Use era for
identity, character, description, origin, profession, and background qualities. Use
fue when you frame the identity/quality as a completed event, evaluation of
a completed event, or the role someone played in a specific occasion.
Imperfect ser: era
Preterite ser: fue
Mi abuela era médica. My grandmother was a doctor.
La reunión fue útil. The meeting was useful.
La casa era enorme. The house was huge.
La fiesta fue un desastre. The party was a disaster.
Cuando era niño, vivía en Lima. When I was a child, I lived in Lima.
Mi hermano fue el primero en llegar. My brother was the first to arrive.
El profesor era exigente. The teacher was demanding.
El examen fue difícil. The exam was difficult.
Shortcut: if you are describing what someone/something was like, use era.
If you are evaluating a completed event, performance, meeting, trip, class, movie, conversation,
or day, use fue.
Ser drills
Choose: Mi profesora de secundaria ___ muy paciente.
Answer: era. This describes her characteristic.
Choose: La clase de ayer ___ muy útil.
Answer: fue. A completed class/event is being evaluated.
The movie was long, but the ending was perfect.event evaluation
La película fue larga, pero el final fue perfecto.
You are evaluating a completed movie and ending as events/results: preterite ser.
The old movie theater was small and dark.description
El cine antiguo era pequeño y oscuro.
Background description of what the place was like: imperfect ser.
When she was the director, the company was more organized.role/background
Cuando ella era la directora, la empresa estaba más organizada.
Role/background uses era; organizational state uses estar in the imperfect.
6. Estar in the past: estaba vs estuvo
Estar describes states, locations, and conditions. Use estaba
for background states or locations in progress. Use estuvo when the state/location
is framed as a completed stay, episode, reaction, or period.
Imperfect estar: estaba
Preterite estar: estuvo
La puerta estaba abierta. The door was open.
La puerta estuvo abierta toda la noche. The door was open all night.
Yo estaba nervioso. I was nervous.
Yo estuve nervioso durante la entrevista. I was nervous during the interview.
El hotel estaba cerca del museo. The hotel was near the museum.
Estuvimos en el hotel tres noches. We stayed/were at the hotel for three nights.
María estaba enferma cuando llamé. María was sick when I called.
María estuvo enferma una semana. María was sick for a week.
Estaba opens the scene. Estuvo closes the state into a completed episode.
Both can translate as "was," but Spanish tells you whether the state is background or bounded.
Estar drills
Choose: Cuando entré, la ventana ___ abierta.
Answer: estaba. The open window is background when you entered.
Choose: La ventana ___ abierta toda la noche.
Answer: estuvo. The state is framed as a completed bounded period.
I was at home when you called.location background
Estaba en casa cuando llamaste.
Location as background for another event: imperfect estar.
I was in Madrid for three days.bounded stay
Estuve en Madrid tres días.
Completed stay with a clear duration: preterite estar.
The room was clean when we arrived.state background
La habitación estaba limpia cuando llegamos.
State/background: imperfect. Arrival: preterite.
The room was clean for about five minutes.bounded state
La habitación estuvo limpia unos cinco minutos.
The state is boxed into a completed period: preterite estar.
7. Ser vs estar in both past tenses
You often make two decisions at once: ser vs estar and preterite vs imperfect.
First decide meaning: identity/character/event evaluation uses ser; state/location/condition uses estar.
Then decide viewpoint: background uses imperfect; bounded episode uses preterite.
Form
Meaning
Example
Why
era
was as identity/description/background
El jefe era amable.
Characteristic.
fue
was as completed event/evaluation/role in event
La entrevista fue amable.
Evaluation of completed event.
estaba
was as background state/location
El jefe estaba amable ese día.
Temporary state that day.
estuvo
was as bounded state/location episode
El jefe estuvo amable durante la reunión.
State during a bounded event.
Four versions of "was nice"
Mi vecino era amable.
My neighbor was kind. Characteristic.
La visita fue amable.
The visit was pleasant/kindly. Completed event evaluation.
Mi vecino estaba amable cuando lo vi.
My neighbor was acting/feeling nice when I saw him. Temporary state/background.
Mi vecino estuvo amable durante la cena.
My neighbor was nice during dinner. Bounded episode.
Ser/estar contrast drills
Choose: La ciudad ___ tranquila en esa época. (general description)
Answer: era. General description/character of the city in that era.
Choose: La ciudad ___ tranquila cuando llegamos. (state at arrival)
Answer: estaba. Temporary/background state when we arrived.
Choose: El viaje ___ tranquilo. (completed trip evaluation)
Meeting someone is the start of knowing them: preterite conocer.
I knew my best friend very well.conocer imperfect
Conocía muy bien a mi mejor amigo/amiga.
Ongoing familiarity: imperfect conocer.
I could not open the file.failed attempt
No pude abrir el archivo.
Preterite no poder often means tried and failed.
I could not open files on that old computer.general inability
No podía abrir archivos en esa computadora vieja.
Ongoing/general inability: imperfect poder.
She refused to answer.no querer preterite
No quiso contestar.
Preterite no querer often means refused.
She did not want to answer because she was tired.state
No quería contestar porque estaba cansada.
Ongoing desire/state plus condition: imperfect.
9. Narration: make the tenses work together
Real Spanish narration mixes the two tenses. The imperfect paints the scene; the preterite
moves the story forward. You do not choose one tense for a whole paragraph.
Mini story with tense layering
El tren iba casi vacío. Los pasajeros dormían,
y afuera llovía. Yo estaba leyendo cuando
una mujer entró en el vagón, miró a todos
y dejó una carta sobre mi asiento.
The train was almost empty. The passengers were sleeping, and outside it was raining.
I was reading when a woman entered the car, looked at everyone, and left a letter on my seat.
Verb
Tense
Job in the story
iba, dormían, llovía, estaba leyendo
Imperfect
Scene, background, ongoing actions.
entró, miró, dejó
Preterite
New events that move the plot.
Narration drills
It was raining and everyone was waiting when the bus finally arrived.scene + event
Llovía y todos esperaban cuando por fin llegó el autobús.
Rain/waiting are background; bus arrival is the event.
The house was quiet, the lights were off, and suddenly the phone rang.scene + event
La casa estaba tranquila, las luces estaban apagadas y de repente sonó el teléfono.
States use imperfect estar; ringing is a sudden preterite event.
When I was a student, I lived near the university and walked to class every day.habitual past
Cuando era estudiante, vivía cerca de la universidad e iba caminando a clase todos los días.
Identity/period, location, and habit all use imperfect.
10. Mixed quiz: translate before revealing
Say the Spanish before opening the answer. Explain your choice: completed event, background,
habit, description, state, bounded episode, or meaning-shift verb.
The exam was hard, but I finished it.ser event + event
El examen fue difícil, pero lo terminé.
Completed exam evaluation and completed finishing: preterite.
The teacher was strict and the classroom was cold.description + state
El profesor era estricto y el aula estaba fría.
Characteristic uses ser imperfect; condition uses estar imperfect.
I was nervous when the interview started.state + event
Estaba nervioso/nerviosa cuando empezó la entrevista.
State/background: estaba. Start of interview: preterite.
I was nervous during the whole interview.bounded state
Estuve nervioso/nerviosa durante toda la entrevista.
State framed as a completed episode: preterite estar.
We knew the city well, but we got lost last night.state + event
Conocíamos bien la ciudad, pero anoche nos perdimos.
Ongoing familiarity: imperfect. Getting lost last night: preterite.
They found out the answer and left immediately.sequence
Supieron la respuesta y se fueron inmediatamente.
Finding out and leaving are sequenced events: preterite.
My grandparents used to be farmers.identity/background
Mis abuelos eran agricultores/granjeros.
Past profession/identity as background: imperfect ser.
The wedding was in June and it was beautiful.event location + evaluation
La boda fue en junio y fue hermosa.
A completed event's date and evaluation: preterite ser.
The church was downtown and was full of flowers.location + state
La iglesia estaba en el centro y estaba llena de flores.
Location and condition as background: imperfect estar.
I tried to call you, but I could not.attempt/failure
Intenté llamarte, pero no pude.
Both are bounded events; no pude means failed to manage it.
I wanted to call you, but I did not have your number.states
Quería llamarte, pero no tenía tu número.
Desire and possession are ongoing states: imperfect.
At first the child was quiet, but then he started to cry.state + change
Al principio el niño estaba tranquilo, pero luego empezó a llorar.
Initial state uses imperfect estar; beginning of crying uses preterite.
11. Reference sheet
Use
Preterite
Imperfect
Basic idea
Completed event with edges
Background, habit, description, ongoing state
Story role
Moves plot forward
Sets scene
Common time sense
ayer, una vez, de repente, por fin, three times
siempre, antes, de niño, mientras, every week
Ser
fue = event evaluation/role/date
era = identity/character/description/background
Estar
estuvo = bounded state/location episode
estaba = state/location as background
Saber
supe = found out
sabía = knew
Conocer
conocí = met
conocía = knew/was familiar with
Poder
pude = managed to; no pude = failed to
podía = could/was able generally
Querer
quise = tried/decided; no quise = refused
quería = wanted
Final test: ask what the verb is doing in the sentence. Is it an event you could
put on a timeline as a completed point/block? Use preterite. Is it describing the scene,
a condition, a habit, an age, a mental state, or what was going on? Use imperfect.