The Verb Gustar (To Like)

Gustar is unique in Spanish. It literally means "to be pleasing" — the structure is backwards from English!

English: I like pizza.

Spanish (literal): Pizza is pleasing to me. → Me gusta la pizza.

Once you understand the reversed logic, gustar becomes easy!

The Structure: Indirect Object + Gustar + Subject

Formula: [Person] + gusta/gustan + [Thing]

Me gusta el español. (Spanish is pleasing to me = I like Spanish.)

Te gusta la pizza. (Pizza is pleasing to you = You like pizza.)

Le gusta el fútbol. (Soccer is pleasing to him/her = He/she likes soccer.)

Nos gusta viajar. (Traveling is pleasing to us = We like to travel.)

Key insight: Gustar ALWAYS agrees with the thing being liked, not the person!

Singular vs. Plural Conjugations

Gustar has only TWO forms you need to memorize:

Singular: gusta Me gusta el café. (I like coffee.)
Plural: gustan Me gustan los pasteles. (I like pastries.)

Remember: The thing being liked determines singular or plural!

Me gusta la montaña. (singular)

Me gustan las montañas. (plural)

Indirect Object Pronouns

Use these pronouns before gustar to show who likes something:

Me gusta = to me (I like)
Te gusta = to you (you like)
Le gusta = to him/her/you formal (he/she likes)
Nos gusta = to us (we like)
Os gusta = to you all (Spain, you all like)
Les gusta = to them (they like)

Gustar with Infinitives

To say you like doing something, use gusta (always singular!) + infinitive:

Me gusta correr. (I like to run.)

Te gusta estudiar español. (You like to study Spanish.)

Nos gusta viajar. (We like to travel.)

Important: With infinitives, ALWAYS use gusta (singular), even with nosotros!

When the "thing" being liked is an action (infinitive), it's grammatically singular.

Additional Information

To clarify or emphasize who likes something, add a prepositional phrase:

A mí me gusta el chocolate. (To me, I like chocolate. — emphasis)

A Juan le gusta la música. (To Juan, he likes music.)

A nosotros nos gustan los deportes. (To us, we like sports.)

Other similar verbs (that work like gustar):

  • encantar (to love/enchant) — Me encanta viajar.
  • interesar (to interest) — Te interesa el cine.
  • importar (to matter) — Le importa mucho.

Common Mistakes

Traps for English speakers

These are the errors English speakers make most often.

Yo gusto el fútbol
Me gusta el fútbol
Gustar works backwards — the thing liked is the subject.
Me gusta los perros
Me gustan los perros
A plural subject takes gustan.
Me gustan bailar
Me gusta bailar
Infinitives always take the singular gusta.

Key Takeaways

  • Gustar = "to be pleasing" — the structure is reversed from English.
  • Gustar only has two forms: gusta (singular) and gustan (plural).
  • The verb agrees with the thing being liked, not the person.
  • With infinitives, always use gusta (singular).
  • Use indirect object pronouns: me, te, le, nos, os, les.

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