Ir Preterite Conjugation Chart: Easy Guide for Beginners

The verb “ir” is super key in Spanish. It means “to go.” You use it all day long. But here’s the thing: when you talk about stuff that happened before, “ir” gets weird. Good news though? It looks scary. But it’s not actually. 

This guide shows you the whole chart. Simple words only. Real stuff you can use today. No big grammar talk. No longer boring stuff. Just easy steps that work.

Let’s make the past tense “ir” simple.

Why Ir in the Past Is Different

Most verbs follow rules.
“Ir” doesn’t.

In the past, “ir” and “ser” looked the same. Yep, same exact forms. Weird, right?

Like this:

“fui” can mean:
• I went
or
• I was

How do you know which? The rest of the sentence tells you. Easy!

Learn this chart once. Use it forever.

Ir Past Tense Chart

Tense Chart

Here it is. Learn the whole thing at once. It never changes.

yo fui
I went

tú fuiste
you went

él / ella / usted fue
he went / she went / you (polite) went

nosotros / nosotras fuimos
we went

vosotros / vosotras fuisteis
you all went (Spain only)

ellos / ellas / ustedes fueron
they went / you all went

Done! Just six forms. No accent marks. Nothing extra.

How to Learn This Chart Fast

Try these tricks:

  • “fui” starts with “f” – think “fast”
    • “fuiste” has “-iste” – that’s normal for “tú” past forms
    • “fue” is short and sweet
    • “fuimos” ends with “-mos” – that’s the “we” ending
    • “fuisteis” ends with “-teis” – Spain stuff only
    • “fueron” ends with “-ron” – normal for “they” past forms

Say it like a song:

fui, fuiste, fue,
fuimos, fuisteis, fueron

Smooth, right?

Ir vs Ser – They Look the Same!

Both use this chart:

 fui
fuiste
fue
fuimos
fuisteis
fueron

So how do you know “went” or “was”?

Look at these.

Check these out:

Yo fui profesor.
I was a teacher.
(that’s “ser”)

Yo fui al parque.
I went to the park.
(that’s “ir”)

Your brain figures it out quickly.

Common Phrases 

These pop up a lot:

fui de viaje
I went on a trip

fui a comer
I went to eat

fuimos a visitar a mi familia
we went to visit my family

fueron de compras
they went shopping

fue al trabajo temprano
he/she went to work early

fuiste al doctor
you went to the doctor

Perfect for real talk.

Make It Negative

Just add “no” before. Done.

Ellos no fueron contigo.
They didn’t go with you.

Super simple.

Time Words That Work Great

Work Great

These go perfect with past “ir”:

ayer
yesterday

anoche
last night

el lunes
on Monday

la semana pasada
last week

el año pasado
last year

hace dos días
two days ago

Also Read: Spanish Christmas Carols: Easy Guide to Songs, Meanings, and Warm Holiday Music

Quick Chats

Chat 1:
—¿Fue ella contigo?
—No, no fue.

Chat 2:
—¿Fuiste a clase ayer?
—No fui. Estaba enfermo.

Simple. Real. Useful.

Quick Study Chart

Here it is again:

 yo fui
tú fuiste
él / ella / usted fue
nosotros / nosotras fuimos
vosotros / vosotras fuisteis
ellos / ellas / ustedes fueron

Say it loudly. Like, three times. It sticks!

Also Read: Me Too en Español: Easy Guide to Say It Right in Any Situation

Practice Now

Fill these in:

Ayer yo ___ al cine.
¿Tú ___ a la fiesta?
Ella ___ a la reunión.
Nosotros ___ a la playa.
Ustedes ___ al restaurante.

Answers:

fui
fuiste
fue
fuimos
fueron

See? You got this!

Also Read: Spanish Speaking Singers: Your Easy Guide to Voices You Need to Know

Don’t Do These Things

Watch out for these:

  • Don’t write “yo fuí” (no accent! Never!)
    • Don’t use “iba” when you mean one done thing
    • Don’t mix up “ir” and “ser” meanings
    • Don’t forget “fuisteis” exists (if you need Spain Spanish)

“Ir” in the past looked weird at first. But you know what? It’s one of the easiest once you get the chart. You’ll use it every day. Talking about where you went. What you did. How your day was.

Remember this stuff:

  • fui, fuiste, fué, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron
    • no accents ever
    • same as “ser”
    • sentence tells you the meaning

Practice with real stuff. Use time words. Practice and it’ll get easier.

Now go talk about where you went yesterday… in perfect Spanish!

MD Shehad

Hi there! My name is Md Shehad. I love working on new things (Yes I'm Lazy AF). I've no plans to make this world a better place. I make things for fun.

Related Articles

Back to top button