Spanish Phrases for Buenos Aires Travelers

A quick phrasebook from your local team

To get a deeper connection with locals and a smoother landing into Argentine culture, having a few language tips in your pocket goes a long way. Below is a curated list of useful Spanish phrases for travelers that will open doors to many enjoyable experiences — and double as great icebreakers.

Many people in Buenos Aires speak English and will make an effort to help, but locals appreciate when visitors try to use a few Spanish words. Don’t worry about pronunciation — tap the next to any phrase to hear it spoken out loud.

Basic greetings

Start every interaction here. Locals notice the effort immediately.

Hello
Hola
Good morning
Buen día
Good afternoon
Buenas tardes
Good evening
Buenas noches
Goodbye
Adiós
See you tomorrow
Hasta mañana
Bye (very common, informal)
Chau

Being polite

Politeness opens many doors in Argentina — especially these eight phrases.

Please
Por favor
Thank you
Gracias
You're welcome
De nada
Yes, please
Sí, por favor
No, thank you
No, gracias
Excuse me
Disculpe / Permiso
I'm sorry
Lo siento
Could you help me?
¿Me puede ayudar?

At the hotel

Essentials for the front desk, concierge and room service.

The gym
El gimnasio
The restaurant
El restaurante
Room service
Servicio a la habitación
Can I book a tour, please?
¿Puedo reservar un tour, por favor?
What's the dollar exchange rate?
¿Cuál es la cotización del dólar?
Where can I find an ATM?
¿Dónde puedo encontrar un cajero automático?
Could you call me a taxi?
¿Me puede llamar un taxi?
What time is breakfast?
¿A qué hora es el desayuno?

Getting around

Taxis, Uber, the subway (subte), buses (colectivos) and asking for directions.

How much is the fare?
¿Cuánto sale el viaje?
Take me to this address, please
Lléveme a esta dirección, por favor
Stop here, please
Pare acá, por favor
Where is the subway station?
¿Dónde está la estación de subte?
Which bus goes to Recoleta?
¿Qué colectivo va a Recoleta?
Where is…?
¿Dónde queda…?
Is it far?
¿Queda lejos?
Turn left / right
Doblá a la izquierda / derecha
Straight ahead
Derecho / Todo recto
I need a SUBE card
Necesito una tarjeta SUBE

Shopping

Heads up: in Buenos Aires, haggling isn’t common at shops, malls or boutiques. You may get a cold answer if you try. Save it for street markets (and even there, be subtle).

Shopping center / mall
Centro comercial / Shopping
Currency
Moneda
Currency exchange
Casa de cambio
Exchange rate
Tipo de cambio
How much is it?
¿Cuánto cuesta?
Your change
Su vuelto
Shoe shop
Zapatería
Jewelry store
Joyería
Do you have my size?
¿Tiene mi talle?
I like it
Me gusta
I don't like it
No me gusta
I'll take it
Me lo llevo

Food & drinks

The phrases that make eating out in Buenos Aires effortless.

A table for two, please
Una mesa para dos, por favor
The menu, please
La carta, por favor
What do you recommend?
¿Qué me recomienda?
I'm vegetarian
Soy vegetariano / vegetariana
I have an allergy to…
Soy alérgico/a a…
A glass of red wine
Una copa de vino tinto
Sparkling water
Agua con gas
The check, please
La cuenta, por favor
It was delicious!
¡Estaba delicioso!

Emergencies

Hopefully you’ll never use these — but if something goes wrong, these are the phrases that get you help fast. Emergency numbers in Argentina: 911 (police), 107 (ambulance), 100 (fire).

Help!
¡Ayuda!
Call the police
Llame a la policía
I need a doctor
Necesito un médico
Where is the nearest hospital?
¿Dónde está el hospital más cercano?
I lost my passport
Perdí mi pasaporte
My wallet was stolen
Me robaron la billetera
I feel sick
Me siento mal
I need to call my embassy
Necesito llamar a mi embajada
Please, it's an emergency
Por favor, es una emergencia

One last tip: Argentine Spanish has its own flavor

In Buenos Aires you’ll hear «vos» instead of «tú» (e.g. ¿vos sabés? instead of ¿tú sabes?), and the «ll» / «y» sound a lot like the English «sh» (so calle sounds like cashe). Argentinians also use «che» the way English speakers use «hey». Don’t worry: locals are warm and will help you out.

Cultural tips beyond language

A few habits that’ll make you feel at home faster.

One kiss on the cheek

Argentinians greet with one kiss on the right cheek, friends and strangers alike, men with men too. A handshake from a foreigner is also fine if you prefer.

Tipping (propina)

Restaurants: 10% is standard, often added as «cubierto». Taxis: round up. Hotel porters: USD 1–2 per bag. Tour guides: USD 5–10 per person per half-day.

Late dinners

Dinner starts at 21:00–22:00. Restaurants open at 20:00 and most are empty until 21. Lunch is 13:00–15:30. Merienda (afternoon coffee + pastries) is at 17:00.

Mate etiquette

If someone offers you mate, say gracias only when you’ve had enough — that means «no more, thanks». Don’t stir the bombilla. Don’t wipe it. Share is care.

Cards vs cash

Most places accept credit/debit cards and contactless. Many also accept QR (MercadoPago). Carry a small amount of cash (USD or ARS) for taxis and small markets.

«Argentine time»

Social plans run 15–30 min late. Business meetings start on time. For tours, please be punctual — we plan around your hotel pickup.

Want a bilingual local guide?

All our Buenos Aires tours are led by guides who speak English, Spanish and Portuguese (Chinese on request). They’ll do the translating — you just enjoy the city.

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