Top 15 Verbs That Always Trigger the Subjunctive

Top 15 Verbs That Always Trigger the Subjunctive

Top 15 Verbs That Always Trigger the Subjunctive

You know the feeling: you want to say something simple like “I want you to come,” but your brain stalls at the exact moment the verb should change. That freeze is normal. Spanish subjunctive often shows up right after everyday verbs of wanting, influence, emotion, and permission — so if you can recognise those trigger verbs fast, you can speak with a lot more confidence.

Quick answer: when a main clause expresses desire, influence, emotion, doubt, or permission about another person’s action, Spanish usually uses the subjunctive after que. The core pattern is:

[subject 1] + [trigger verb] + que + [subject 2] + [subjunctive]

But if the subject is the same on both sides, you usually use the infinitive instead:

Quiero venir. (I want to come.)
not *Quiero que yo venga.

That one rule saves you from a huge number of mistakes. And once you start drilling these patterns actively — not just recognising them — they become much easier to produce under pressure. That’s exactly the kind of muscle memory we build in VerbPal with spaced repetition, active recall, and typed production rather than passive multiple choice.

Quick facts: subjunctive trigger verbs
Main pattern[subject 1] + trigger verb + que + [subject 2] + subjunctive Same subjectUse the infinitive: Quiero venir (I want to come.) Most common groupsDesire, influence, emotion, permission, recommendation Best practice methodActive production with spaced repetition — the principle behind VerbPal

Why these verbs matter so much

These are not obscure grammar-book verbs. They’re the verbs you use in real life when you ask, suggest, recommend, hope, worry, permit, or forbid. In other words, they show up in everyday conversations all the time.

The Royal Spanish Academy’s corpus data through CREA and related corpus resources shows that high-frequency verbs like querer, poder, decir, necesitar, pedir, recomendar, sugerir, and permitir appear constantly in spoken and written Spanish. That means learning their subjunctive patterns gives you a very high return on effort. If you can handle these 15 triggers, you’ll cover a large chunk of the subjunctive situations you actually meet in conversation.

For a broader framework on when the subjunctive appears, pair this guide with our WEIRDO subjunctive acronym. If you want to go deeper into the verbs that create influence or pressure, see verbs of influence and the Spanish subjunctive and the best way to practice Spanish subjunctive. Inside VerbPal, this is also where our structured Journey module helps: instead of meeting these triggers as isolated facts, you process them in sequence from beginner patterns through advanced forms, including irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive, so nothing important gets skipped.

Actionable step: pick five verbs from this list that you hear often in your own life, and write one sentence for each with que + subjunctive.

1) Desire and will verbs: the most common triggers

These verbs express what you want, hope for, ask for, or insist on. They usually trigger subjunctive because the action belongs to someone else.

1. Querer que — to want that / to want someone to

Pattern:
Querer que + subjunctive

Key point: if the subject is the same, use the infinitive.

Actionable insight: if you hear quiero que, your brain should immediately expect a new subject and a subjunctive verb.

2. Necesitar que — to need someone to

Pattern:
Necesitar que + subjunctive

Why subjunctive? Because the help or arrival is not yet a fact — it’s desired or required.

Actionable insight: use necesitar que when you need another person’s action, not just an object or thing.

3. Esperar que — to hope that

Pattern:
Esperar que + subjunctive when the outcome is uncertain or future

Important nuance: if esperar means “to wait,” it does not trigger subjunctive by itself.

Actionable insight: esperar que usually means hope, and hope points to uncertainty, so the subjunctive follows.

4. Pedir que — to ask/request that

Pattern:
Pedir que + subjunctive

Notice the pattern: the request goes to another subject, so the verb after que changes.

Actionable insight: if you’re asking someone else to do something, pedir que is one of the safest subjunctive triggers to master early.

5. Insistir en que — to insist that

Pattern:
Insistir en que + subjunctive

Why it works: insistence creates pressure or influence on another person’s action.

Actionable insight: treat insistir en que like a stronger version of “request” — the grammar behaves the same way.

A useful shortcut: if the main verb is about controlling, wanting, or pushing someone else’s action, the subjunctive is usually waiting right after que. In VerbPal, this is exactly the kind of pattern we isolate in custom drills so you stop translating and start producing automatically.

Actionable step: say three quick sentences out loud with quiero que, necesito que, and insisto en que using three different subjects.

2) Recommendation and influence verbs: advice, suggestions, and control

These verbs are especially common in classrooms, workplaces, family conversations, and everyday advice-giving.

6. Recomendar que — to recommend that

Pattern:
Recomendar que + subjunctive

Actionable insight: recommendations often sound polite, but grammatically they still influence another person’s action — so subjunctive follows.

7. Sugerir que — to suggest that

Pattern:
Sugerir que + subjunctive

Watch the stem change: sugerir is irregular in the present subjunctive:

Actionable insight: once you know the trigger verb, the next step is getting the irregular subjunctive form right. That’s why we cover all conjugations in VerbPal — not just the easy present forms, but every tense, irregular pattern, reflexive verb, and the subjunctive system as a whole.

8. Permitir que — to allow that / to let someone

Pattern:
Permitir que + subjunctive

Why subjunctive? Because permission concerns another person’s action, not a settled fact.

Actionable insight: when you hear permitir que, imagine a gate opening or closing for someone else’s action — that mental image helps the grammar stick.

9. Prohibir que — to forbid that

Pattern:
Prohibir que + subjunctive

Actionable insight: prohibition is just influence in reverse — instead of allowing an action, you block it, and the subjunctive still follows.

Actionable step: make one mini set with recomendar, sugerir, permitir, and prohibir, then change only the second subject each time to force yourself to notice the pattern.

3) Emotion verbs: feelings about someone else’s action

These verbs trigger subjunctive because the speaker’s reaction is emotional, not factual.

10. Alegrarse de que — to be happy that

Pattern:
Alegrarse de que + subjunctive

Why subjunctive? Because your happiness is a reaction to a situation, not a statement of objective fact.

Actionable insight: emotional reactions like joy often open the door to subjunctive.

11. Temer que — to fear that

Pattern:
Temer que + subjunctive

Important note: this is often used for worry or fear about a possible outcome.

Actionable insight: if the emotion points to a possible future event, subjunctive is the default after temer que.

12. Sorprender que — to surprise that / to be surprising that

Pattern:
Sorprender que + subjunctive

Actionable insight: surprise is a classic subjunctive trigger because it expresses your reaction, not a neutral report.

13. Molestar que — to bother / annoy that

Pattern:
Molestar que + subjunctive

Actionable insight: annoyance is another emotional reaction, so the verb after que changes to subjunctive.

14. Importar que — to matter that / to care that

Pattern:
Importar que + subjunctive

Why it matters: this verb is about emotional importance or concern, so it fits the subjunctive pattern.

Actionable insight: if something matters to you emotionally, importar que usually wants subjunctive.

Actionable step: choose two emotion verbs from this section and write one positive sentence and one negative sentence with each.

4) One tricky verb: decir que can mean two different things

15. Decir que — report vs. command

Pattern A: reporting information
If you are just reporting what someone said, decir que often takes the indicative.

Pattern B: giving orders, requests, or instructions

If decir que means “to tell someone to do something,” it triggers the subjunctive.

How to tell the difference: ask yourself whether the clause after que is just a report or an instruction. If it’s an instruction, use subjunctive.

Actionable insight: decir que is one of the most common traps, so train yourself to look for “report” versus “command.”

🐶
Lexi's Tip

If the main verb is about controlling, wanting, or feeling about someone else’s action — subjunctive almost always follows. Lexi’s cheat code: WIF = Want, Influence, Feel. If you can label the main verb as one of those three, your brain should start looking for que + subjunctive automatically.

Actionable step: test yourself with three sentences using decir que and decide whether each one is a report or a command before you choose the mood.

The same-subject rule: when you should use the infinitive instead

This is the rule that saves learners from overusing the subjunctive.

When the subject on both sides is the same, Spanish usually uses the infinitive, not que + subjunctive.

Compare these pairs

Different subjects

Quiero que vengas. (I want you to come.)

Same subject

Quiero venir. (I want to come.)

More examples:

Actionable insight: before choosing subjunctive, check the subject. If it’s the same person doing both actions, the infinitive often wins.

Put it into practice

Knowing the rule is one thing — producing it under pressure is another. That’s the gap our drills are built to close.

In VerbPal, we designed our Journey module and drill sessions to make you practice the exact kind of pattern you just learned here: main verb + que + new subject + subjunctive. You see the trigger, you produce the form, and Lexi nudges you with tips at the right moment so the pattern sticks. Because we use spaced repetition based on the SM-2 algorithm, the verbs you miss come back when you’re most likely to retain them for the long term.

Just as important, we don’t stop at a few common forms. We cover all conjugations — every tense, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive — so the pattern you learn with querer que today still holds when you meet a harder tense tomorrow.

If you want to move from “I understand the rule” to “I can actually say it,” this is the kind of structured practice that gets you there.

How to spot the trigger fast in real conversation

When you’re listening or speaking, don’t search for a table first. Search for the relationship between the verbs.

Ask these three questions

  1. Is the main verb about desire, influence, emotion, permission, or advice?
  2. Is there a new subject after que?
  3. Is the action uncertain, requested, or controlled by someone else?

If the answer is yes, subjunctive is very likely.

Real-life mini examples

This is why we focus on active production at VerbPal. You don’t just “know” these patterns — you need to produce them fast, with the right verb form, before your brain has time to second-guess itself. That’s also why our practice includes more than flashcards: we use varied drills and interactive games to keep repetition useful instead of mindless.

Actionable step: the next time you hear que in Spanish audio, pause and ask those three questions before you decide whether the next verb should be subjunctive.

Common mistakes to avoid

1. Using indicative after a trigger verb

2. Using subjunctive when the subject is the same

3. Forgetting that some verbs change meaning

4. Memorising tables without practice

You can stare at venga, vengas, venga, vengamos, vengáis, vengan all day and still freeze in conversation. Active recall works better than passive review, which is why our approach at VerbPal prioritises production practice over passive recognition.

Actionable insight: every time you learn a trigger verb, practice it in at least three full sentences, not just as a conjugation line.

Fast reference list: the 15 trigger verbs

Here’s the full set from this guide:

If you want a broader strategy for choosing the right tense, our guide to how to practice the Spanish subjunctive is the best next step.

Actionable step: save this list and test yourself by covering the example and trying to produce it from the English meaning first.

FAQ

Do all verbs after que trigger the subjunctive?

No. Only certain trigger verbs, expressions, and structures do. Many clauses after que still use the indicative, especially when you report facts or statements.

Why does the same-subject rule use the infinitive?

Because Spanish doesn’t need a second finite verb when the subject is the same. Instead of Quiero que yo venga, Spanish simplifies to Quiero venir.

Is “decir que” always subjunctive?

No. If you’re reporting speech, it often takes the indicative. If you’re telling someone to do something, it usually takes the subjunctive.

What’s the fastest way to remember these trigger verbs?

Group them by meaning: desire, influence, emotion, and permission. Then drill full sentences, not isolated forms. That’s the most reliable way to make the pattern automatic, especially if you’re using a system that schedules review with spaced repetition and makes you produce the answer yourself.

Make these 15 subjunctive triggers automatic
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Keep building with [the WEIRDO subjunctive acronym](/blog/weirdo-spanish-subjunctive/) and [the best way to practice Spanish subjunctive](/blog/best-way-to-practice-spanish-subjunctive/).
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