In Spanish, “vas” fits a statement, and “ve” or “vaya” fits a command, with the level of formality shaping the choice.
“You go” looks small on the page, but it carries a lot of jobs in English. Sometimes it’s a calm fact (“you go to class on Mondays”). Sometimes it’s a push (“you go now”). Sometimes it’s a cheer (“you go!”). Spanish changes the wording with each job, so a one-size translation can sound off.
This guide gives you the Spanish forms that match real situations. You’ll see what to say, when to say it, and how to switch tone from friendly to formal without getting tangled up in verb forms.
If you only learn one trick, split the phrase into meaning and tone. Then pick the tense, the command form, and the pronoun.
What ‘You Go’ Can Mean In English
Before you pick Spanish words, pin down what “you go” is doing in the sentence. Spanish is picky about tense and mood, so this first step saves you from awkward guesses.
A Plain Statement About Movement
In a basic statement, “you go” often means “you are going” or “you go” as a routine. Spanish usually uses the verb ir (“to go”) in the present tense.
A Direction Or Permission
When you’re telling someone to go, English can sound soft even without extra words. Spanish uses command forms, and those forms change with the person you’re talking to.
A Turn-Taking Cue
“You go” can mean “you go first.” Spanish often adds primero (“first”) or a short phrase that points to turns in a game or line.
A Cheer Or Praise
As a cheer, “you go!” isn’t about movement at all. Spanish uses encouragement phrases, and they vary by region. You can keep it neutral with options that work across many places.
Cheer Lines That Work In Many Places
If you want a short shout that doesn’t sound stiff, lean on short phrases that people use with friends, classmates, and teammates. Pick one and pair it with a smile.
- ¡Eso! (That’s it!/Yes!)
- ¡Así se hace! (That’s how it’s done.)
- ¡Bien hecho! (Well done.)
- ¡Vamos! (Let’s go!/Go on!)
Choose The Right Verb Form For The Situation
Spanish “to go” starts with ir, but the form shifts based on what you mean. A statement uses one set of forms. A command uses another. A negative command uses yet another.
When You Mean “You Are Going” Right Now
If you mean the action is happening now or is already decided, Spanish uses the present tense: vas (you go/you’re going) for tú, or va for usted. Add a when a destination follows.
- Vas a casa. (You’re going home.)
- Usted va a la oficina. (You’re going to the office.)
When You Mean A Habit Or Routine
If “you go” means something you do as a routine, Spanish still uses the present tense. Time words do the heavy lifting: siempre, los lunes, a menudo.
- Vas al gimnasio los martes. (You go to the gym on Tuesdays.)
- Va a clases por la tarde. (You go to classes in the afternoon.)
When You Mean “You Go To…” As A Destination Pattern
English sometimes drops the destination because it’s obvious. Spanish can do that too, but it still helps to add it when you’re learning. Use ir a + place, event, or verb in the infinitive.
- Vas a la tienda. (You go to the store.)
- Vas a estudiar. (You’re going to study.)
Say It As A Command Without Sounding Rude
Commands are where learners stumble. English can say “you go” with a light tone and no extra grammar. Spanish needs the right command form, and the wrong one can sound sharper than you meant.
Friendly Singular Commands With Tú
For a casual command to one person, the base form is ve (go). If you mean “go away” or “get going,” Spanish often uses vete, which carries a different feel.
- Ve a la puerta. (Go to the door.)
- Vete, que llegamos tarde. (Get going, we’re running late.)
Formal Singular Commands With Usted
For formal speech, use vaya. This fits a teacher, a client, a stranger, or any setting where you want distance and respect.
- Vaya por aquí, por favor. (Go this way, please.)
- Vaya a la sala de espera. (Go to the waiting room.)
Plural Commands With Ustedes Or Vosotros
In most of Latin America, plural “you” is ustedes, so the command is vayan. In Spain, you may hear vosotros, and the command can be id.
- Vayan al salón. (Go to the room.)
- Id a casa. (Go home.)
Negative Commands Change The Form
To tell someone not to go, Spanish uses the present subjunctive forms: no vayas (tú), no vaya (usted), no vayan (ustedes). This is one of those spots where Spanish flips the pattern.
- No vayas todavía. (Don’t go yet.)
- No vaya por ahí. (Don’t go that way.)
- No vayan sin mí. (Don’t go without me.)
How To Say ‘You Go’ In Spanish With The Right Tone
Here are the most common Spanish choices for “you go,” grouped by what you mean. Read the “When It Fits” column first; it keeps you from picking a phrase that clashes with your tone.
| What You Mean In English | Spanish You Can Say | When It Fits |
|---|---|---|
| You go (statement, tú) | Vas | Casual statement about where someone goes or is going |
| You go (statement, usted) | Va | Formal statement in polite distance |
| You go to + place | Vas a + lugar | Destination is a place; add a before it |
| You go to + verb | Vas a + infinitivo | Plans or next action, like “you’re going to study” |
| You go (command, tú) | Ve | Friendly command to one person |
| You go (command, usted) | Vaya | Polite command to one person |
| You go (command, plural) | Vayan / Id | Plural command; choice depends on region |
| You go first | Vas primero / Pase usted primero | Turns, lines, doorways; add primero or a polite “go ahead” |
| You go now | Ve ahora / Vete ahora | Timing is the point; vete feels more like “get going” |
| You go! (cheer) | ¡Eso! / ¡Así se hace! | Cheering someone on after a win or brave moment |
Mini Dialogues That Sound Natural
Short dialogues help you lock in the right form. Say them out loud once or twice, then swap the noun or destination to make your own line.
At The Door
English: You go first.
Spanish:Vas primero.
English: No, you go.
Spanish:No, ve tú.
In A Hallway With Formal Tone
English: You go ahead, please.
Spanish:Pase usted, por favor.
English: Thanks.
Spanish:Gracias.
Making Plans
English: You go to the library today?
Spanish:¿Vas a la biblioteca hoy?
English: Yeah, I’m going after class.
Spanish:Sí, voy después de clases.
Giving A Clear Direction
English: You go to the left, then straight.
Spanish:Ve a la izquierda, luego sigue recto.
English: Got it.
Spanish:Listo.
Cheering A Friend
English: You go! You did it!
Spanish:¡Eso! ¡Lo lograste!
English: I was nervous.
Spanish:Estaba nervioso.
Conjugation Cheat Sheet For Statements And Commands
It helps to see statements and commands side by side. Use the “Statement” column for “you go/you’re going” facts. Use the “Command” column when you’re telling someone to go.
| Person | Statement Form | Command Form |
|---|---|---|
| Tú | Vas | Ve |
| Usted | Va | Vaya |
| Ustedes | Van | Vayan |
| Vosotros (Spain) | Vais | Id |
| Yo | Voy | — |
| Nosotros/Nosotras | Vamos | Vamos |
| Ellos/Ellas | Van | — |
Common Mix-Ups And Easy Fixes
Most mistakes come from mixing a statement form with a command form. Once you spot the pattern, the fixes are small.
Ve Vs Vas
Ve is a command: you’re telling someone to go. Vas is a statement: you’re saying that the person goes or is going. If you can add “now!” and it still feels right, you probably want a command form.
Ve Vs Vete
Vete is closer to “get out” or “get going.” It can sound sharp if your tone is not playful. If you mean a neutral “go to that place,” ve stays safer.
No Vayas Uses A Different Pattern
Negative commands do not use no + ve. They use no vayas, no vaya, or no vayan. If you’re learning, treat negative commands as their own set until they feel automatic.
Don’t Drop A In “Ir A”
English says “go the store” only in casual speech, and it still sounds clipped. Spanish needs a before the place or the verb: vas a la tienda, vas a estudiar.
Practice Steps That Make The Forms Stick
Practice works best in small loops. Pick one meaning of “you go,” say it three ways, then switch the person or the tone.
Swap The Person
Take one line and change only the person. This trains your brain to reach for the right ending.
- Vas a casa. → Va a casa. → Van a casa.
- Ve. → Vaya. → Vayan.
Change The Tone Without Changing The Meaning
Say the same instruction in a casual way, then in a formal way. The meaning stays the same, but Spanish changes the command form.
- Ve por aquí. → Vaya por aquí.
- No vayas todavía. → No vaya todavía.
One-Minute Speaking Loop
Set a timer for one minute. Say a destination, then say it as a statement and as a command.
- Statement: Vas a la tienda.
- Command: Ve a la tienda.
Then pick a new destination and repeat. After a few rounds, your mouth starts to pick the right form without a pause.
Pick The Right Phrase In Seconds
When you’re stuck, run through this short check. It keeps you from mixing tense and tone.
- Is it a fact about where someone goes? Use vas/va/van.
- Is it a direction you want them to follow? Use ve/vaya/vayan.
- Are you telling them not to go? Use no vayas/no vaya/no vayan.
- Do you mean “you go first”? Add primero or use pase usted for polite “go ahead.”
- Are you cheering? Use ¡Eso! or ¡Así se hace! with a smile and a steady tone.
Once you match meaning first, the Spanish form falls into place. After that, it’s just repetition and real conversation.