Learning Spanish Numbers 1-500 helps you move from basic counting into real beginner Spanish. These numbers appear constantly when you talk about prices, dates, time, age, classroom work, quantities, and everyday listening tasks.

This page keeps the same lesson style as the rest of the series while expanding into a much more practical number range. It is designed to help you recognize, pronounce, and translate numbers that appear in prices, addresses, page ranges, and larger quantities.

If you are searching for Spanish Numbers 1-500 pronunciation or the common misspelling pronunciation, this page is built for that too. The chart supports audio or audible practice through the clickable number tool, and the lesson text highlights the forms learners most often need to hear, repeat, and translate.

  • Spanish Numbers 1-500 chart review helps you recognize the forms quickly.
  • Pronunciation support helps you hear and repeat the numbers more confidently.
  • Translate practice helps connect Arabic numerals with the written Spanish form.
  • Audio / audible chart use makes repetition easier and more memorable.

Spanish Numbers 1-500 Chart

Start with the chart below to see the full set of spanish numbers 1-500. On Teach Numbers, this chart supports clickable listening practice, so it is a good place to work on recognition, translate review, and pronunciation.

Click any number to hear it spoken aloud.

Use the chart first for quick recognition, then come back to it for audio or audible repetition after you have read the lesson sections below.


Key Spanish Numbers from 1 to 500

This reference table highlights the forms and turning points that matter most on a spanish numbers 1-500 page. It gives you a cleaner way to review the structure without losing sight of the larger chart.

NumberSpanish
100cien
101ciento uno
200doscientos
250doscientos cincuenta
300trescientos
375trescientos setenta y cinco
400cuatrocientos
450cuatrocientos cincuenta
500quinientos

Understanding Spanish Numbers 1-500

The biggest teaching focus on a Spanish Numbers 1-500 page is the hundreds. Once you know cien / ciento, the next major forms are doscientos, trescientos, cuatrocientos, and quinientos.

Not every hundred is equally transparent. In particular, quinientos is worth memorizing directly because learners cannot rely on a simple spelling guess. This is one reason a structured chart and pattern lesson are more useful than a plain list.

Key forms and patterns to notice:

  • 100 is cien, but 101–199 begin with ciento.
  • 200, 300, and 400 follow more recognizable patterns.
  • 500 is quinientos, which should be memorized directly.
  • The lower tens and units still keep the same internal structure within larger numbers.

That pattern awareness is what makes a page like Spanish Numbers 1-500 more useful than a simple list. Once you stop treating each number as isolated, the larger system becomes much easier to remember.

Spanish Numbers Pronunciation Tips

If your main goal is Spanish Numbers 1-500 pronunciation, focus first on the forms that learners most often hesitate over. Repeat them slowly, then return to the chart and say them again at a more natural speed.

  • Practice the hundreds as a set: doscientos, trescientos, cuatrocientos, quinientos.
  • Repeat full mixed numbers like doscientos treinta y ocho and cuatrocientos noventa y uno.
  • Use audio practice to compare the endings in the hundreds.
  • Keep reviewing cien and ciento, because they still appear often.

Examples of Spanish Numbers 1-500 in Sentences

Reading the numbers in short everyday sentences helps move them out of isolation and into real use. These examples keep the vocabulary simple so you can focus on the number words themselves.

  • La biblioteca tiene trescientos libros. — The library has three hundred books.
  • Viven cuatrocientas personas aquí. — Four hundred people live here.
  • El costo total es quinientos euros. — The total cost is five hundred euros.
  • La página doscientos cuarenta y ocho está marcada. — Page two hundred forty-eight is marked.
  • Necesitamos ciento cincuenta sillas más. — We need one hundred fifty more chairs.

Practicing number words in real sentences makes pronunciation, recognition, and recall much stronger than memorizing a list by itself.


Try the Spanish Number Translate Tool

Use the translate tool to type a numeral and see the Spanish number word. This is one of the fastest ways to connect Spanish Numbers 1-500 with written forms, chart review, and pronunciation practice.

Spanish Number Translate

Type a number to see it written as a Spanish number word.

Example: 1234

How to Practice Spanish Numbers 1-500

Here are a few simple ways to review the lesson efficiently.

  • count by hundreds, then fill in numbers between them
  • practice all the named hundreds from 100 to 500 as one family
  • translate mixed numbers such as 214, 386, and 499
  • use the chart to locate random numbers quickly
  • say larger prices and page numbers out loud with the audio support

With regular review, these numbers become much easier to recognize in conversation, class exercises, beginner reading, and listening practice.


Why Spanish Numbers 1-500 Matter

The range from 1 to 500 gives you enough number knowledge to handle many everyday references with confidence. It is especially useful for larger prices, page references, addresses, and quantity statements that go beyond the beginner 1–100 range.

Once you feel comfortable with this page, the next step is to expand into the next chart range and then apply the numbers in dates, time, prices, and quizzes. That sitewide learning flow is what helps the pages feel connected instead of isolated.


Continue Learning Spanish Numbers

You can continue learning Spanish numbers with these pages.

You can also keep building practical number skills with these related lessons:

Use the chart pages, translate tools, and follow-up lessons together to turn Spanish numbers into long-term knowledge.

Further reference: RAE on cardinal numerals.