Spanish for Beginners Free | Start Speaking From Day One

Start Spanish at no cost with one core course, daily listening, and short speaking drills that build A1 ability in 30 days.

If you searched for Spanish for Beginners Free, you want a clear starting point and a routine you can repeat. You can do both without paying. Pick a small set of resources, then run the same weekly rhythm until it feels automatic.

This page gives you a month-one target, a short list of free tools, and practice ideas that get you talking early. No fluff. Just a plan you can use today.

What free study can do in 30 days

Thirty days won’t make you fluent. It can give you a solid beginner base and a habit that lasts. By the end of a month, many learners can introduce themselves, ask simple questions, handle numbers and times, and catch familiar words in slow audio.

A practical target is CEFR A1, the first step on a widely used scale for language ability. You can read the level overview on Cambridge English:
CEFR levels overview.

  • Week 1: vowels, stress, hello and goodbye lines, numbers, and the verbs ser and tener.
  • Week 2: common present-tense verbs, question starters, and short answers you can say in one breath.
  • Week 3: short reading with audio, plus writing tiny messages and captions.
  • Week 4: longer listening, role-play, and a repeatable self-check.

It also helps to set expectations. The U.S. Department of State’s Foreign Service Institute shares training info for language learners:
Foreign Language Training.

Free Spanish for beginners plan that keeps you speaking

A free plan works when each resource has one job and you stick with it long enough to see change. Use one main course, then add small pieces for listening, meanings, and speaking practice.

Choose one spine course and finish it

Your spine course is the thing you do even on busy days. Audio-first lessons work well early because they train your ear and mouth, not just your eyes. A solid no-cost choice is Language Transfer’s Complete Spanish:
Complete Spanish course.

If you like app drills, add a short session on a free app. Apps are handy for repetition. Say each answer out loud before you tap or type it so your mouth stays involved.

Use short daily blocks you can repeat

Pick a daily time window and protect it. A 25-minute block is enough. When time is tight, do 10 minutes of listening and 5 minutes of speaking. That small session keeps momentum.

Speak from day one, even with tiny sentences

Early speaking is about muscle memory. Read short lines out loud, copy the rhythm, and repeat until you can say the line without pausing. Record yourself once a week and listen back so you can hear what changed.

Pronunciation rules that make spelling click

Spanish spelling feels friendlier once you lock in a few patterns. Start with vowels. A, E, I, O, U keep stable sounds, so you can trust what you see. Train them early and your speech gets clearer in a few days.

Vowels first, then vowel pairs

Say short pairs out loud: casa vs cosa, peso vs piso, papa vs papá. You’re teaching your ear to notice small changes and your mouth to land each vowel cleanly.

Stress and accent marks

Accent marks aren’t decoration. They show where the beat lands, and they can change meaning. Start with high-use pairs such as si/, tu/, and el/él. When you’re unsure, check spelling in a reliable reference like the
RAE dictionary.

Letters that often trip beginners

  • R: start with a soft tap in pero. Leave the rolled sound in perro for later.
  • J and G: practice a gentle throat sound in jamón and gente.
  • H: it is silent, so hola starts with the O sound.
  • B and V: both often sound close in Spanish. Copy one teacher voice and match it.

When you want a single word spoken by real people, a pronunciation site like
Forvo Spanish
can help. Search the word, pick one speaker, and copy the rhythm three times.