Spanish is the dominant language of Argentina — but it’s Spanish with a personality all its own. From the Italian-tinged lilt of Buenos Aires to a homegrown slang that delights in turning words inside out, the way Argentines talk is one of the country’s quiet pleasures. Here’s what to listen for, plus a few phrases worth packing for the trip.
Argentina is the world’s fourth-largest Spanish-speaking country (after Mexico, Colombia and Spain), but the local dialect — known as rioplatense, after the River Plate region around Buenos Aires — sounds noticeably different from the Spanish you’ll hear elsewhere in Latin America. A huge wave of Italian immigration around the turn of the 20th century left a lasting mark, lending the speech a melodic, almost sing-song cadence. Learn to talk like a porteño — a “person of the port,” as Buenos Aires natives are called — and you’ll feel right at home.
The most distinctive feature is the “sh” sound. Where most Spanish speakers pronounce “ll” and “y” as a soft “y,” porteños turn them into a “sh.” So pollo (chicken) comes out as “po-sho” rather than “po-yo,” and calle (street) becomes “ca-she.”
You’ll also hear vos in place of tú for “you” — a feature called voseo, which comes with its own verb forms (vos tenés rather than tú tienes). While voseo turns up in pockets across Latin America, from Central America to neighboring Uruguay, nowhere is it more proudly standard than in Argentina, where you’ll see it everywhere from street signs to advertising.
Travel here long enough and you’ll bump into lunfardo, a colorful slang born in the working-class neighborhoods of Buenos Aires in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and later immortalized in tango lyrics. It borrows from Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and beyond. One of its trademark moves is vesre — flipping the syllables of a word (fittingly, the name vesre is itself revés, “reverse,” turned back to front). So café becomes “feca” and tango becomes “gotán.”
A few words you might catch in the wild:
Spanish may dominate, but it’s far from the only language spoken in Argentina. Italian is still widely understood thanks to that immigrant heritage, and a number of Indigenous languages live on — especially in the north and the Patagonian south. You’ll find Quechua in the northwest, Guaraní in the northeast (particularly Corrientes and Misiones), Mapudungun of the Mapuche people in Patagonia, and others such as Wichí and Qom. Across the tourism industry, meanwhile, English is widely spoken.
You don’t need to be fluent to travel well in Argentina, but a handful of phrases goes a long way — locals genuinely appreciate the effort. If you’d like to brush up, free apps like Duolingo let you practice Spanish on the plane, and programs like Rosetta Stone or a “Spanish for Travelers” class at a local community center work well too. Even a few words learned the night before will earn you a warm smile.
And since no trip to Argentina is complete without a proper asado (barbecue), here’s how to order your steak exactly the way you like it:
In most hotels and tourist spots the staff speak English, and every one of our guides is English-speaking — so you can lean into the culture with confidence. Ready to put your new vocabulary to the test? Browse our Argentina tours and start planning.