Empezar Past Tense Conjugation | Past Forms That Sound Right

In past-time Spanish, empezar becomes forms like empecé, empezaba, and he empezado depending on whether the start was completed, ongoing, repeated, or tied to now.

Empezar means “to begin” or “to start.” You’ll use it for classes, projects, jobs, habits, meetings, and stories. Past tenses are where people trip, mostly for two reasons: picking the wrong tense, and missing one spelling change.

This article fixes both. You’ll learn which past tense fits your meaning, how each form looks, and how to build sentences that don’t feel translated.

What Empezar Means In Everyday Spanish

Empezar points to the first moment of something. It works with nouns and with verbs.

  • Empezar + noun: Empezamos la clase. (We started class.)
  • Empezar a + infinitive: Empecé a estudiar. (I started to study.)

When you move into the past, Spanish asks what kind of “start” you mean: one completed starting point, a routine, a background action, or a start that matters now.

Empezar Past Tense Conjugation Basics In Spanish

This section uses the exact keyword once. Now let’s set your foundation: preterite for a finished starting point, imperfect for routine or background, plus a few compound past forms that show sequence.

Preterite: A Finished Starting Point

Use the preterite when “starting” is treated as a completed event on your timeline. The larger action can keep going, yet the start itself is a completed moment.

  • Empecé a trabajar a las ocho. (I started working at eight.)
  • La reunión empezó tarde. (The meeting started late.)
  • Empezamos el proyecto en enero. (We started the project in January.)

One spelling change appears here: z → c in the yo form: empecé. The rest of the preterite keeps z.

Imperfect: Routine, Background, Or A Start In Progress

Use the imperfect when you describe what used to happen, what was going on, or a start that was unfolding as background. The start is not treated as one completed point.

  • Cuando era niño, empezaba las tareas después de cenar. (I used to start homework after dinner.)
  • Yo empezaba a entender el tema. (I was starting to understand the topic.)
  • Siempre empezábamos con un repaso corto. (We always started with a short review.)

In the imperfect, empezar is regular. No spelling change shows up.

Full Past Conjugation Charts You’ll Use Most

Read these aloud once. It helps your ear catch what your eyes might skip.

Preterite Forms Of Empezar

  • yo: empecé
  • tú: empezaste
  • él/ella/usted: empezó
  • nosotros/nosotras: empezamos
  • vosotros/vosotras: empezasteis
  • ellos/ellas/ustedes: empezaron

Imperfect Forms Of Empezar

  • yo: empezaba
  • tú: empezabas
  • él/ella/usted: empezaba
  • nosotros/nosotras: empezábamos
  • vosotros/vosotras: empezabais
  • ellos/ellas/ustedes: empezaban

Past Forms That Add Timing And Sequence

Spanish has more than two ways to talk about the past. These come up all the time in school writing and real conversation.

Present Perfect: A Start Connected To Now

Use he empezado when the start matters now, or when the time period is still open.

  • He empezado un curso nuevo esta semana. (I’ve started a new course this week.)
  • Hemos empezado a preparar el examen. (We’ve started preparing for the exam.)

Past Perfect: A Start Before Another Past Moment

Use había empezado to place the start earlier than a later past action.

  • Cuando llegaste, yo había empezado la presentación. (When you arrived, I had started the presentation.)
  • Ellos habían empezado a salir juntos antes del verano. (They had started dating before summer.)

Progressive: A Start Happening In The Moment

To show “was starting” as an in-the-moment action, Spanish often uses estar + gerund: estaba empezando.

  • Yo estaba empezando a sentirme mejor. (I was starting to feel better.)
  • La clase estaba empezando cuando sonó el teléfono. (Class was starting when the phone rang.)

Empezar Past Tense Conjugation With Meaning Shifts

This heading uses the exact keyword a second time, in a natural way. Now use this idea: English often says “started” without telling you what kind of past you mean. Spanish makes you choose, and that choice changes how your sentence lands.

Table Of Past Forms And When They Fit

Use this table to pick a tense based on meaning. It’s broad on purpose, so you can match what you want to say without guessing.

Form You Use What It Communicates Sentence Pattern
empecé (preterite yo) A completed starting point Empecé a + infinitive
empezó (preterite él/ella) One start that moves the story forward Empezó + noun
empezaron (preterite ellos) A completed start by a group Empezaron a + infinitive
empezaba (imperfect) Routine or background; not a single completed point Empezaba + noun / a + infinitive
empezábamos (imperfect nosotros) Repeated habit in the past Siempre empezábamos con…
he empezado Start tied to now or an open time period He empezado + noun
había empezado Start that happened earlier than another past event Ya había empezado + noun
estaba empezando Start happening in the moment Estaba empezando a + infinitive

The One Spelling Change: Empecé

The preterite yo form is empecé, not empezé. Spanish spelling keeps sounds consistent, so z changes to c before é.

That change stays only in yo preterite. You still write empezaste, empezó, and empezaron.

Sentence Chunks That Sound Natural

Memorize these chunks and you’ll build clean sentences faster. They also help you avoid awkward word order.

Empezar A + Infinitive

  • Empecé a leer más en español.
  • Empezaron a hablar de otro tema.
  • Habíamos empezado a practicar todos los días.

Empezar Con + Noun

This means “to start with” as the first step or first item.

  • Empezamos con vocabulario básico.
  • La profesora empezó con un ejercicio corto.

Empezar Por + Noun Or Infinitive

Por points to the first action in a plan.

  • Empecé por repasar los verbos.
  • Empezaron por la parte más fácil.

How To Choose Preterite Vs Imperfect With Empezar

Use this two-question check when you hesitate.

  • Did you complete the start at a clear point? Use the preterite.
  • Are you describing routine, background, or an unfolding start? Use the imperfect or estar + gerund.

When Preterite Fits

  • A time stamp matters: Empecé a las ocho.
  • A story advances: La película empezó y todos callaron.
  • You list events in order: Empezamos, terminamos, celebramos.

When Imperfect Fits

  • A repeated routine: Empezaba temprano cada lunes.
  • Background action: Empezaba a llover cuando salimos.
  • A slow shift in learning: Empezaba a captar la idea.

Mini Practice That Builds Accuracy

Say each English sentence, pick the tense, then say it in Spanish. Keep your answer simple and direct.

Prompts

  1. I started studying at nine.
  2. We used to start class with a quiz.
  3. When you called, I had already started dinner.
  4. She was starting to feel confident.
  5. This month, they’ve started a new project.

Model Answers

  1. Empecé a estudiar a las nueve.
  2. Empezábamos la clase con un cuestionario.
  3. Cuando llamaste, yo ya había empezado la cena.
  4. Ella estaba empezando a sentirse segura.
  5. Este mes, han empezado un proyecto nuevo.

Table Of Common Mistakes And Clean Fixes

These are the errors that show up in writing and speech. Fix them and your Spanish sounds steadier right away.

Mistake Why It Happens Fix
empezé Missing the z → c change in preterite yo empecé
Preterite used for habits English “started” can hide repeated meaning empezaba / empezábamos
empezaba used with a single time stamp Imperfect turns the start into background empecé / empezó
Missing a before an infinitive English doesn’t use the connector empezar a + infinitive
Using ya in every sentence It can feel heavy when “already” doesn’t matter Use ya only when timing needs it
Mixing empezar and comenzar in one paragraph Both mean “to begin,” yet switching can feel choppy Pick one per paragraph

Accent Marks You Should Not Skip

Empecé has an accent on the last é. Empezó has an accent on the last ó. Those marks show stress and keep your writing correct.

If accents slow you down, type the word once with the accent, then copy it when you need it during practice. Repetition builds the habit.

Self-Check Before You Submit Writing Or Speak

  • Preterite for a completed start, imperfect for routine or background.
  • empecé with c and the accent mark.
  • empezar a stays together before an infinitive.
  • Time words match the tense you chose (ayer, cada día, esta semana, antes, mientras).

Three Lines To Memorize

These patterns let you produce dozens of sentences without stopping to think about structure.

  • Empecé a + infinitive. (I started to…)
  • Empezaba a + infinitive. (I was starting to… / I used to start to…)
  • Había empezado a + infinitive. (I had started to…)