How long will it take me to become fluent in Spanish? Part 2

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How long will it take me to become fluent in Spanish? Part 2

 

Last week I blogged about the most popular question I get on an ongoing basis, which is “How long will it take me to become fluent in Spanish?”

I mentioned that there are numerous factors to consider, such as:

  • What is your experience & current level of Spanish?
  • Is Spanish a 2nd language for you or 3rd, 4th, 5th, etc.?
  • How much time do you have to dedicate to learning Spanish?
  • Will you be able to be consistent with your language learning or will you be taking breaks often?
  • How motivated are you to learn to speak Spanish?
  • What do you consider to be a fluent Spanish speaker?
  • What is your natural ability for languages?

I covered a few of these last week, and will cover the rest today.

Let’s start with:

What do you consider to be a fluent speaker?

  • For some people fluency means reaching a high intermediate level, which is the ability to speak with practically anyone about practically anything (it just may not be as fast paced, deep or as refined as an advanced speaker). If this is your goal, you could potentially get to a B2 level in 2 – 3 years; but again, it really depends on many factors.
  • Now if you consider fluency being able to attend college or do your job in Spanish, it will probably take you much longer, as there is a huge difference between these goals.

Please consider that according to several experts it takes between 600 and 1200 hours to learn Spanish (most say 780 hours). So let’s see, if you work on your Spanish for 3 hours a week, that’s 156 hours a year, so it would take about 5 years to reach fluency, if 780 hours is the target. If you work on your Spanish for 2 hours a week, it would take 7.5 years.

From what I have seen however, it usually takes 1-2 years of living abroad and listening to & speaking Spanish 18 hours a day to become fluent, or 10-15 years when you do not live in a Spanish speaking country.

Why so long? Because people have lives and tend to live them in their native language. To truly become fluent (not book fluent, but conversationally fluent), you need to live a good portion of your life in Spanish. The people I have seen become fluent in 5 years without living abroad, all have jobs where they use their Spanish on a consistent basis, or their significant other speaks Spanish, and it is the primary language they use. These people are using their Spanish 20-50% of the time, thus advancing at a much faster pace.

So bottom line, how long it takes for you to reach fluency often depends on how much time you devote to learning and using the language.

Whatever you do, don’t get discouraged. If you want to be PHENOMENAL at something, it takes a lot of hard work. I’m pretty sure that no Olympic Athletes got to where they are by practicing their sport a few hours a week for just a few years. Right?

Will you be able to be consistent with your language learning or will you be taking breaks often?

  • One of the biggest mistakes people make is to start and stop their language learning. The only way to make progress is to be consistent. The students who take breaks are often in the same level during most of their lifetime, because everytime they take a break (and I don’t mean 1-2 week breaks a few times a year), they forget quite a bit and have to start again. What a waste of time!

Now, life throws you curveballs all the time, which means that at some point Spanish may not be a priority in your life…and that’s ok. We all need to go with the flow; but remember that if you are consistent, you will advance much faster.

Ok chicos, I hope that this has been helpful in answering your questions!

Since we have an in-house polyglot (the amazing Octavi that speaks Spanish, Catalan, English, French, Italian, Korean & Japanese), I will ask him to write a few blog posts, sharing how he learned to speak all these languages.

Besitos,
Caro

To read part 1 of this post please visit: https://purabuenaonda.com/how-long-to-become-fluent-in-spanish/