Expressing Necessity for Others: Neces
To ask others to do things, use `necesitar que` plus the Subjunctive to bridge your need and their action.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use 'Necesito que' followed by the Subjunctive to tell others what you need.
- Always include 'que' to link your need to their action.
- Flip verb endings: -ar verbs take -e, -er/-ir verbs take -a.
- If you are doing the action yourself, use the simple infinitive instead.
Quick Reference
| Subject (The Needer) | Necesitar (Present) | The Connector | Action (Subjunctive) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yo | necesito | que | tú hables |
| Tú | necesitas | que | yo coma |
| Él/Ella | necesita | que | nosotros vayamos |
| Nosotros | necesitamos | que | ellos ayuden |
| Usted | necesita | que | yo escriba |
| Ustedes | necesitan | que | ella esté |
Wichtige Beispiele
3 von 8Necesito que tú me ayudes con la maleta.
I need you to help me with the suitcase.
Necesitamos que usted firme este documento.
We need you to sign this document.
Necesito que vayas al supermercado ahora.
I need you to go to the supermarket now.
The 'Opposite' Rule
If the verb usually sounds like 'A' (Hablar), make it sound like 'E' (Hables). If it usually sounds like 'E/I' (Comer/Vivir), make it sound like 'A' (Comas/Vivas). It's a total flip!
The Ghost 'Que'
In English, we often drop 'that' (I need you [that] help me). In Spanish, 'que' is mandatory. If you drop it, the sentence collapses like a bad taco.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use 'Necesito que' followed by the Subjunctive to tell others what you need.
- Always include 'que' to link your need to their action.
- Flip verb endings: -ar verbs take -e, -er/-ir verbs take -a.
- If you are doing the action yourself, use the simple infinitive instead.
Overview
Imagine you are sitting at a dinner table. You want the salt. You could grab it yourself. But it is way over by your friend. You need them to pass it. This is where this grammar comes in. In Spanish, when you need someone else to do something, things get spicy. You cannot just use the normal "dictionary form" of the verb. You have to use the Subjunctive Mood. Think of it like a polite nudge. You are not saying they are doing it. You are saying you need them to do it. It is about influence and desire. It sounds fancy, but you will use it every single day. Whether you are at work or ordering coffee, this is your go-to tool for getting things done through others. It is the bridge between what you want and what someone else does.
How This Grammar Works
This pattern uses a specific "formula." You need two different people in the sentence. If you need to do something yourself, you just say Necesito comer. Easy, right? But if you need your brother to eat, you say Necesito que mi hermano coma. Notice that extra que? It acts like a glue. It connects your need to their action. The first part is in the normal present tense (Necesito). The second part, after the que, switches to the Subjunctive. It is like a grammar traffic light. The que tells the second verb to change its shape. You are essentially saying: "I have a requirement... that... person X performs action Y."
Formation Pattern
- 1Start with the verb
necesitar. Conjugate it for the person who has the need. Most often, this is you:necesito. - 2Add the magic word
que. Never skip this! It is the signal that the Subjunctive is coming. - 3Identify the person who needs to do the action. This is your second subject (e.g.,
tú,él,nosotros). - 4Conjugate the second verb in the Present Subjunctive.
- 5For
-arverbs: Use-erendings (e.g.,hablarbecomeshables). - 6For
-erand-irverbs: Use-arendings (e.g.,comerbecomescomas). - 7Put it all together:
Necesito+que+tú+ayudes.
When To Use It
Use this whenever you are delegating tasks. It is perfect for the office. "I need you to send the email." It is essential for chores at home. "I need you to wash the dishes." Use it when asking for favors. "I need you to help me with this bag." It is also great for social plans. "I need you to be there at eight." Basically, if you are the "boss" of the moment, you need this rule. It covers any situation where your peace of mind depends on someone else's muscles or brainpower. Even cats use this (internally) when they need you to open the tuna can.
When Not To Use It
Do not use the Subjunctive if you are the one doing the action. This is the biggest trap! If you say Necesito que yo vaya, native speakers will look at you funny. It is like saying "I need that I go." Just say Necesito ir. Simple is better. If there is only one person involved, stick to the infinitive (the -ar, -er, or -ir form). Also, do not use it for facts. If you are just stating that someone is doing something, use the normal present tense. Veo que tú trabajas (I see you are working) is a fact. Necesito que tú trabajes (I need you to work) is a requirement.
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting the
que: You cannot sayNecesito tú vengas. It sounds like "I need you come." Use the glue! - Using the normal tense: Saying
Necesito que tú vienesis the most common error. It sounds like a broken radio to a Spanish speaker. - Mixing up the endings: Remember,
-arverbs take-e, and-er/-irverbs take-a. It is a total swap. If you use the wrong ending, you might accidentally say something else entirely. - Same-subject confusion: Using this for yourself.
Necesito que yo coma(✗) vsNecesito comer(✓). Don't make it harder than it needs to be!
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Tener que: This is for general obligation.Tienes que estudiarmeans "You have to study." It is a fact of life.Necesito que estudiesis more personal. It is my need for you to do it.Hay que: This is for "one must." It is impersonal.Hay que limpiarmeans "Cleaning needs to happen." It doesn't point a finger at anyone.Necesito que limpiespoints a very specific finger at you.Quiero que: This is very similar!Quiero que vengasmeans "I want you to come."Necesito que vengasis stronger. It implies it is a necessity, not just a whim.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is it rude to use necesitar with friends?
A. Not at all! It is direct but perfectly normal. Just add a por favor if you want to be extra sweet.
Q. Can I use this with usted?
A. Yes! Just use the usted form of the verb: Necesito que usted firme aquí.
Q. What if I need more than one person to do something?
A. Use the ustedes or nosotros forms. Necesito que ustedes escuchen (I need you all to listen).
Q. Do I always have to say yo?
A. No! Spanish usually drops the yo. Just start with Necesito and everyone will know it's about you.
Reference Table
| Subject (The Needer) | Necesitar (Present) | The Connector | Action (Subjunctive) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yo | necesito | que | tú hables |
| Tú | necesitas | que | yo coma |
| Él/Ella | necesita | que | nosotros vayamos |
| Nosotros | necesitamos | que | ellos ayuden |
| Usted | necesita | que | yo escriba |
| Ustedes | necesitan | que | ella esté |
The 'Opposite' Rule
If the verb usually sounds like 'A' (Hablar), make it sound like 'E' (Hables). If it usually sounds like 'E/I' (Comer/Vivir), make it sound like 'A' (Comas/Vivas). It's a total flip!
The Ghost 'Que'
In English, we often drop 'that' (I need you [that] help me). In Spanish, 'que' is mandatory. If you drop it, the sentence collapses like a bad taco.
Start with 'Yo'
The easiest way to find the subjunctive stem is to think of the 'Yo' form in the present tense (Hago, Vengo, Tengo). Drop the -o and add your new endings (Haga, Venga, Tenga).
Politeness Check
While 'Necesito que...' is correct, using 'Me gustaría que...' (I would like that...) is a softer way to ask for things in a restaurant or with strangers.
Beispiele
8Necesito que tú me ayudes con la maleta.
Focus: ayudes
I need you to help me with the suitcase.
A very common way to ask for a favor in a hotel or airport.
Necesitamos que usted firme este documento.
Focus: firme
We need you to sign this document.
Formal use with 'usted'. Notice the -ar verb 'firmar' ends in -e.
Necesito que vayas al supermercado ahora.
Focus: vayas
I need you to go to the supermarket now.
'Ir' is irregular in the subjunctive: 'vayas'.
Mi jefe necesita que yo haga un informe.
Focus: haga
My boss needs me to do a report.
'Hacer' becomes 'haga' in the subjunctive.
✗ Necesito que tú vienes → ✓ Necesito que tú vengas.
Focus: vengas
I need you to come.
Don't use 'vienes' (indicative). 'Venir' uses the 'veng-' stem.
✗ Necesito que yo compre pan → ✓ Necesito comprar pan.
Focus: comprar
I need to buy bread.
If you are the one buying, don't use 'que' or the subjunctive.
Necesito que ustedes escuchen las instrucciones.
Focus: escuchen
I need you all to listen to the instructions.
Plural request for a group of people.
Necesito que me lo digas sinceramente.
Focus: me lo digas
I need you to tell it to me sincerely.
Pronouns 'me' and 'lo' go before the subjunctive verb.
Teste dich selbst
Complete the sentence to tell your friend to speak slower.
Necesito que tú ___ más despacio.
Since it is 'necesito que' + 'tú', we use the subjunctive form of 'hablar', which is 'hables'.
You want your sister to eat her vegetables.
Necesito que mi hermana ___ sus verduras.
'Comer' is an -er verb, so its subjunctive ending for 'ella' is -a. 'Coma'.
The teacher needs the students to be quiet.
El profesor necesita que los estudiantes ___ silencio.
'Hacer' is irregular. The 'ellos' form in the subjunctive is 'hagan'.
🎉 Ergebnis: /3
Visuelle Lernhilfen
One Person vs. Two People
Do I use Subjunctive?
Are there two different people involved?
Is the first part 'Necesitar que'?
Is the verb regular?
Switch the endings (-ar to -e, -er to -a)
Common Subjunctive Changes
-AR Verbs (End in -e)
- • Hable
- • Ayudes
- • Canten
-ER/-IR Verbs (End in -a)
- • Coma
- • Bebas
- • Escriban
Irregulars
- • Vaya (Ir)
- • Sea (Ser)
- • Haga (Hacer)
Häufig gestellte Fragen
21 FragenSpanish doesn't allow two conjugated verbs to sit next to each other like that without a connector. You need que and the subjunctive to show that the second action is a requirement, not a fact.
Yes, it is a universal structure. Whether you are in Spain, Mexico, or Argentina, everyone uses necesitar que for expressing needs regarding others.
No, this specific lesson covers the Present Subjunctive. If you needed someone to do something yesterday, you would need the Past Subjunctive (e.g., necesitaba que vinieras).
People will usually understand you, but it sounds very 'Tarzan-like'. For example, Necesito que tú hablas sounds like 'I need that you speaks'.
The verb ir is very irregular. You use vaya, vayas, vaya, vayamos, vayáis, or vayan. Example: Necesito que vayas al médico.
Yes! In the Present Subjunctive, yo hable and él hable are identical. You often include the subject pronoun to avoid confusion.
It is que. Think of it as the 'Subjunctive Alarm'. As soon as you say it after a verb of need, your brain should prepare to flip the next verb's endings.
Yes, but you should use the usted form. Necesito que usted vea este correo (I need you to see this email).
Technically yes, though it sounds a bit poetic or desperate. Necesito que llueva (I need it to rain). Useful for farmers!
Yes! Necesito que nosotros trabajemos juntos (I need us to work together). It shows a collective necessity.
Almost every verb changes. Even if they are irregular in the present, they usually follow the 'Opposite Rule' in the subjunctive once you have the stem.
Hay que is for general rules like 'one must'. Use necesitar que when you want a specific person to do a specific thing for you.
No comma is needed. It should be one smooth sentence: Necesito que vengas.
It's not standard. You might hear it in a song or a poem, but in daily life, just use necesito + infinitive for yourself.
They are both common. Querer que is a wish, while necesitar que is a requirement. If the dishwasher is overflowing, use necesitar!
Since 'be' (ser) is irregular, it becomes seas. So: Necesito que seas feliz.
Use the ellos form. Necesito que ellos terminen la tarea (I need them to finish the homework).
It's a big step because it's your first time using the Subjunctive. But once you get the 'flip' habit, it becomes second nature!
No, tener que is followed by an infinitive (Tengo que ir). It doesn't use que + Subjunctive in the same way.
Yes, use tener in the subjunctive: tengas. Necesito que tengas paciencia (I need you to have patience).
It is definitely hables. The 'e' ending is what makes it subjunctive for an -ar verb.
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