The simplest phrasing is “Es la una,” and you can add “en punto” when you mean exactly one o’clock.
Telling time in Spanish feels straightforward right up to one o’clock. Most hours lean on son las. Then one o’clock flips the pattern with es la. If you’ve ever paused mid-sentence and hoped nobody noticed, you’re not alone.
This lesson gives you a clean, repeatable way to say one o’clock, say it exactly, and plug it into real sentences. You’ll get the grammar behind the phrasing, the pronunciation that keeps it natural, and short drills you can reuse any time you want.
How to Say ‘It’s One O’Clock’ in Spanish
The standard Spanish phrasing for one o’clock is:
- Es la una.(It’s one o’clock.)
That’s the core line. It works in casual speech, in class, and in day-to-day talk. If you say only that, you’ll be understood.
How To Say It Exactly At One
If you mean exactly one o’clock, Spanish adds a small tag:
- Es la una en punto.(It’s one o’clock on the dot.)
En punto signals “exactly” without sounding stiff. It’s common in schedules and meetups, and it’s just as normal in conversation.
How It Sounds Out Loud
Pronunciation is where one o’clock can start to sound “textbook” if you over-separate the words. Try this rhythm:
- Es-la-u-na (smooth, light pauses)
- en-pun-to (clear pun, soft to)
If you speak fast, es la often blends. That’s fine. Clarity matters more than perfection. Keep the vowels clean and you’ll sound natural.
Why One O’Clock Uses “Es La”
Spanish treats the time like a noun phrase. Most hours are plural: “the two,” “the three,” “the four.” That’s why you get son las dos, son las tres, and so on.
One o’clock is singular: “the one.” So the verb goes singular, and the article goes singular.
Es La Vs Son Las
Use this rule and you’ll almost never miss:
- Es la + una (only for one o’clock)
- Son las + dos/tres/cuatro… (for every other hour)
It’s not a special exception that you just memorize and forget. It’s Spanish doing what it usually does: matching singular with singular, plural with plural.
Why It’s “La Una” And Not “El Uno”
This part surprises many learners: uno is masculine, yet time uses la una. Time phrases follow the feminine noun hora (hour), even when the noun isn’t spoken:
- Es la una ≈ Es la (hora) una
So you’re not “changing the number.” You’re matching the hidden word hora. That’s why it feels consistent once you see the pattern.
Saying One O’Clock In Spanish In Real Talk
Outside of the plain “It’s one,” people often talk about time with small shifts that fit the moment. These are simple, and they’re worth learning early because they show up everywhere.
Short Replies When Someone Asks The Time
If a friend asks ¿Qué hora es?, you can answer in a few natural ways:
- Es la una.
- Es la una en punto.
- Ya es la una.(It’s already one.)
- Casi es la una.(It’s almost one.)
Ya and casi are small words that make your Spanish sound lived-in. They’re common and easy to add.
Talking About Plans At One
When you mean “at one o’clock,” Spanish uses a la:
- La reunión es a la una.(The meeting is at one.)
- Llego a la una.(I arrive at one.)
- Nos vemos a la una en la entrada.(See you at one at the entrance.)
Notice the article stays singular: a la una. The structure matches es la una, just with a added to show time of an event.
When “One” Means One In The Afternoon
Spanish often leaves AM/PM unstated when context is clear. If you want to be explicit, two common options are:
- Es la una de la tarde.(It’s one in the afternoon.)
- Es la una de la mañana.(It’s one in the morning.)
In many places, daily life leans on the 24-hour clock too, especially in schedules. That leads to phrases like la una for 1:00 and trece for 13:00 in written timetables.
Before you expand into minutes, lock in the hour pattern. Once es la una feels automatic, everything else gets easier.
Time Phrases You’ll Hear Around One O’Clock
People rarely speak in perfect “:00” blocks all day. They round, they hedge, and they use set time phrases. These are common around one o’clock and fit neatly with what you already know.
Minutes Before And After One
Spanish has two main styles for minutes: “and” style (y) and “to” style (menos). Both are standard.
- Es la una y cinco.(1:05)
- Es la una y cuarto.(1:15)
- Es la una y media.(1:30)
- Es la una menos diez.(12:50)
- Es la una menos cuarto.(12:45)
The hour stays singular when you’re talking about the one o’clock hour. The minutes change, not the verb.
Rounding Like A Native Speaker
Rounding is normal in Spanish, just like in English. You’ll hear:
- Es la una y pico.(A little after one.)
- Es la una pasada.(Past one.)
- Como a la una.(Around one.)
Y pico is casual and common. Use it with friends or in relaxed talk. For work schedules, stick to exact minutes or en punto.
Common Time Expressions At A Glance
Here’s a wide set of phrases tied to one o’clock, plus nearby expressions you’ll reuse for other hours. Read it once, then use it as a pattern bank.
| When You Mean | What You Can Say | How It’s Used |
|---|---|---|
| It’s 1:00 | Es la una | Neutral, everyday |
| Exactly 1:00 | Es la una en punto | On-the-dot timing |
| Almost 1:00 | Casi es la una | Minutes before |
| Already 1:00 | Ya es la una | Late or time passing |
| At 1:00 | A la una | Plans and schedules |
| Around 1:00 | Como a la una | Approximate timing |
| A bit after 1:00 | Es la una y pico | Casual rounding |
| 1:15 | Es la una y cuarto | Quarter past |
| 1:30 | Es la una y media | Half past |
| 12:45 | Es la una menos cuarto | Quarter to one |
Building Full Sentences With One O’Clock
Knowing the phrase is step one. Using it in a sentence is what makes it stick. Spanish has a few go-to patterns that cover most real situations.
Asking The Time
The most common question is short and direct:
- ¿Qué hora es?(What time is it?)
Answer with the time phrase:
- Es la una.
- Es la una y diez.
- Es la una en punto.
If you want to be polite, you can add por favor or disculpa before the question. Keep the answer clean.
Stating When Something Happens
Spanish uses a to mark the time of an event:
- La clase empieza a la una.
- El tren sale a la una en punto.
- Mi descanso es a la una y media.
If you swap to other hours, the structure stays the same, only the verb phrase changes to a las for plural hours.
Talking About A Time Window
For “from” and “until,” two common patterns are:
- De doce a una.(From twelve to one.)
- Desde las doce hasta la una.
Notice the switch: las doce is plural, la una is singular. That contrast is a great built-in reminder.
Choose The Right Structure Fast
If you freeze mid-sentence, it’s usually because you haven’t decided if the hour is singular or plural. This small table helps you pick the right frame before you speak.
| What You’re Saying | Start With | One O’Clock Version |
|---|---|---|
| Current time | Es la / Son las | Es la una |
| Exact time | Es la / Son las | Es la una en punto |
| Time of an event | A la / A las | A la una |
| Minutes after | Es la / Son las + y | Es la una y diez |
| Minutes before | Es la / Son las + menos | Es la una menos cinco |
| Approximate time | Como a la / a las | Como a la una |
| Time range | De / Desde… hasta… | De doce a una |
Practice Drills That Make It Automatic
You don’t need a long study session to lock this in. You need repetition that’s small and frequent. Try these drills out loud. Say the Spanish line first, then the English meaning.
Ten Prompts To Say Out Loud
- It’s one o’clock.
- It’s exactly one.
- It’s almost one.
- It’s already one.
- The meeting is at one.
- See you at one at the entrance.
- It’s one fifteen.
- It’s one thirty.
- It’s twelve fifty.
- Around one is fine.
Now flip it: read the Spanish first. If you stumble, slow down and repeat the same line three times before you move on.
Two Mini Dialogues
Dialogue 1
—¿Qué hora es?
—Es la una en punto.
—Perfecto. Gracias.
Dialogue 2
—¿A qué hora es la reunión?
—A la una.
—Llego a la una y cinco.
These short exchanges train three things at once: the question, the answer, and the “at one” structure. That combo is where learners tend to hesitate.
Mistakes Learners Make With One O’Clock
Most one o’clock errors fall into a small handful. Fixing them once saves you from repeating the same slip for months.
Saying “Son La Una”
This mixes plural verb with singular hour. The fix is simple: one o’clock always takes the singular frame.
- Right: Es la una.
- Skip: Son la una.
Using “A Las Una”
Event time follows the same singular logic. One o’clock takes a la, not a las.
- Right: La cita es a la una.
- Skip: La cita es a las una.
Forgetting The Article
English can say “It’s one.” Spanish usually keeps the article in time expressions. Dropping it can sound clipped.
- More natural: Es la una.
- Less natural: Es una.
Es una can mean “It is one” in other contexts, like counting items. For time, stick with es la una.
Regional And Style Notes You May Notice
Spanish is shared across many countries, so you’ll hear light differences in how people express time. The good news: es la una is universal.
In parts of Spain, people may use a style that references the next hour when talking about “half past,” like a phrase tied to “half to two.” In many Latin American regions, you’ll more often hear the “and” style, like una y media. Both are understood. If you’re building a base, the forms you learned above are safe everywhere.
Written schedules may use 24-hour time. In that case, you’ll still say it as one o’clock when speaking, even if it’s written as 13:00. A calendar line might show 13:00, and a person might still say a la una in conversation.
Final Check Before You Speak
Use this quick mental step: ask yourself if the hour is one. If yes, go singular: es la, a la. If not, go plural: son las, a las. Once that choice is set, the rest is just numbers and minutes.
Say it out loud a few times today—on a walk, while cooking, while checking your phone clock. That tiny habit turns one o’clock from a rule you recall into a phrase you own.