Reflexive Verbs

A reflexive verb describes an action you do to yourself. In the dictionary they end in -se: levantarse (to get up), ducharse (to shower).

Me levanto a las siete. (I get up at seven.)

Te duchas por la mañana. (You shower in the morning.)

Se llama Ana. (Her name is Ana — literally "she calls herself Ana".)

Quick rule: reflexive pronoun + conjugated verb. The pronoun matches the subject.

The Reflexive Pronouns

Each subject has its own reflexive pronoun, placed before the verb:

yome levanto
te levantas
él / ella / ustedse levanta
nosotrosnos levantamos
vosotrosos levantáis
ellos / ustedesse levantan

The verb itself conjugates normally — the pronoun is an extra piece in front.

Daily Routine Verbs

Reflexives dominate the daily-routine vocabulary:

despertarse (to wake up) — Me despierto a las seis.

levantarse (to get up) — Me levanto en seguida.

ducharse (to shower) — Te duchas con agua fría.

vestirse (to get dressed) — Se viste rápido.

cepillarse (to brush) — Nos cepillamos los dientes.

acostarse (to go to bed) — Se acuestan a las once.

Reflexive or Not?

Many verbs exist in both forms — the -se changes the meaning:

lavar (to wash something) — Lavo el coche. (I wash the car.)

lavarse (to wash yourself) — Me lavo las manos. (I wash my hands.)

llamar (to call someone) — Llamo a mi madre. (I call my mother.)

llamarse (to be called) — Me llamo Pedro. (My name is Pedro.)

Note: with body parts, Spanish uses the article, not a possessive: me lavo las manos (not "mis manos").

Word Order & Negation

The pronoun sits directly before the conjugated verb; "no" goes before the pronoun:

Me ducho por la noche. (I shower at night.)

No me ducho por la mañana. (I don't shower in the morning.)

¿Te levantas temprano? (Do you get up early?)

With an infinitive, the pronoun may attach to the end: Voy a ducharme or Me voy a duchar — both are correct.

Stem-Changing Reflexives

Some routine reflexives also change their stem (you will study stem changes fully later):

despertarse (e → ie): me despierto, te despiertas… nos despertamos

acostarse (o → ue): me acuesto, te acuestas… nos acostamos

vestirse (e → i): me visto, te vistes… nos vestimos

Tip: the nosotros/vosotros forms keep the original stem — nos acostamos, never "nos acuestamos".

Common Mistakes

Traps for English speakers

These are the errors English speakers make most often.

Yo levanto a las 7
Yo me levanto a las 7
Reflexive verbs need the pronoun (me).
Voy a lavar mis manos
Voy a lavarme las manos
Use the reflexive + definite article, not a possessive.
Se llamo Juan
Me llamo Juan
First person is me llamo.

Key Takeaways

  • Reflexive = action done to yourself; infinitive ends in -se
  • Pronouns: me, te, se, nos, os, se — always before the conjugated verb
  • Negation: no + pronoun + verb (No me levanto tarde)
  • Body parts take the article: me lavo las manos
  • Same verb, different meaning: lavar vs lavarse, llamar vs llamarse
  • With infinitives the pronoun can attach to the end: voy a levantarme

Practice →