The short version
Spanish question words are powerful because they turn vocabulary into conversation. A beginner who knows only a few words can still ask useful questions like "What does this mean?", "Where is the bathroom?", or "How do you say coffee?"
The useful next step is not memorizing every possible question form. It is learning the first six words, seeing one or two examples for each, and checking whether you can choose the right word without hints.
Why question words unlock real conversations
Beginner Spanish often starts with labels: food, colors, family, days, greetings. Those words matter, but they do not always help when you get stuck in a real moment. Question words help because they let you ask for missing information.
If you forget a word, cómo can help you ask how to say it. If you do not understand a sign, qué can help you ask what it means. If you lose the place, dónde can help you ask where something is.
That is why this lesson stays small. Six words are enough to make your Spanish more usable today.
Qué = what
Use qué when you want to ask "what." It is one of the first Spanish question words to learn because it helps with meanings, objects, and explanations.
What does it mean?
What is this?
Qué + verb or phrase. Use it when the missing answer is a thing, meaning, or idea.
Quién = who
Use quién when the answer is a person. It is useful for asking about identity, names, and who did something.
Who is it?
Who is speaking?
Use quién when the answer should be a person, not a place, time, or reason.
Cuándo = when
Use cuándo to ask about time. It can point to a day, hour, month, event, or any answer that tells you when something happens.
When does it start?
When is the class?
If the answer could be "today," "tomorrow," "at 8," or "on Monday," use cuándo.
Dónde = where
Use dónde to ask about location. It is one of the most practical beginner question words because travel, classrooms, restaurants, and simple directions all need it.
Where is it?
Where is the bathroom?
If the answer is a place, location, room, street, or country, dónde is probably the question word.
Por qué = why
Use por qué to ask for a reason. In a question, it is written as two words. The answer often starts with porque, which means "because" and is written as one word.
Por qué asks for the reason. Porque gives the reason.
Cómo = how
Use cómo to ask "how." For beginners, it is especially useful for asking how to say something, how someone is, or how something works.
How do you say "coffee"?
How are you?
Use cómo when the missing answer explains a method, state, manner, or expression.
Mini practice: choose the right question word
Do not just reread the list. Try to choose the question word before opening the answer. This is the quick check that shows whether the pattern is starting to stick.
1. ___ está la estación? = Where is the station?
¿Dónde está la estación? Use dónde because the answer is a place.
2. ___ significa esta palabra? = What does this word mean?
¿Qué significa esta palabra? Use qué because you are asking for a meaning.
3. ___ empieza la clase? = When does the class start?
¿Cuándo empieza la clase? Use cuándo because the answer is a time.
4. ___ es ella? = Who is she?
¿Quién es ella? Use quién because the answer is a person.
5. ___ estudias español? = Why do you study Spanish?
¿Por qué estudias español? Use por qué because the answer gives a reason.
6. ___ se dice "book" en español? = How do you say "book" in Spanish?
¿Cómo se dice "book" en español? Use cómo because you are asking how to say something.
What to learn next after question words
After the first six Spanish question words, the next lesson should not be random. Check which word felt slow or confusing, then choose the smallest pattern that fixes it.
Practice qué, quién, cuándo, dónde, por qué, and cómo.
Use a question you might actually need today.
Choose the question word before seeing the answer.
Return to the exact word or pattern that felt weak.
Learn how answers usually start: porque, en, a las, or con.
A good next step could be short answers, word order in simple Spanish questions, or useful classroom questions like "How do you say...?" and "What does this mean?"
How Aulo helps with Spanish question words
Aulo can turn these question words into short lessons and review the ones you miss. If qué and dónde are solid, but cuándo and por qué feel slow, the next lesson should respond to that evidence.
That is the loop: one focused next lesson, a quick check, an update to what Aulo thinks you know, then the next useful step. You do not have to decide whether to study more vocabulary, grammar, phrases, or review. The check gives the path a signal.
Frequently asked questions
What are the main Spanish question words for beginners?
The first Spanish question words beginners should learn are qué for what, quién for who, cuándo for when, dónde for where, por qué for why, and cómo for how. These six words let you ask simple questions about people, places, time, reasons, and meaning.
How do you ask questions in Spanish?
To ask simple questions in Spanish, start with the right question word, add a verb or short phrase, and use question marks at both ends. For example, ¿Qué significa? means "What does it mean?", and ¿Dónde está? means "Where is it?"
Do Spanish question words need accents?
Yes. In direct and indirect questions, Spanish question words usually use written accents: qué, quién, cuándo, dónde, and cómo. The accent helps mark the word as a question word.
What is the difference between qué and cuál?
Beginners can usually start with qué for "what," especially when asking for a meaning, object, or explanation. Cuál often means "which" or "which one," and it is useful later when choosing from a set.
How does Aulo help with Spanish question words?
Aulo can turn Spanish question words into short lessons, quick checks, and review steps. If you miss dónde, por qué, or cómo, Aulo can send you back to that exact pattern instead of making you repeat a whole grammar unit.