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How to Respond to ¿Cómo Estás? (Not Just Bien)

June 3, 2026 SpanishNow 6 minute read

How to Respond to ¿Cómo Estás? (Not Just Bien)
Table of Contents
  1. First, what ¿cómo estás? really is
  2. The two rules that instantly make you sound natural
  3. Answers sorted by mood
  4. Three quick grammar fixes
  5. Mistakes to avoid

You learned exactly one answer to ¿cómo estás?, and it was bien. So now, every single time someone greets you, you fire back a flat bien and the conversation dies on the spot. The problem isn’t that bien is wrong — it’s perfectly correct. The problem is that natives almost never just say it. They wrap it, soften it, or swap it out, and that tiny difference is what separates “studied Spanish in school” from “actually talks to people.”

Here’s the good news: fixing this is cheap. You don’t need to memorize twenty phrases. You need two habits and a short menu of go-tos sorted by mood, so you can grab the right one in the half-second you actually have.

First, what ¿cómo estás? really is

In most of the Spanish-speaking world, ¿cómo estás? is a greeting ritual, not a health questionnaire. It’s much closer to English “How’s it going?” than to “How are you really feeling?” The asker expects a short, upbeat, reciprocated reply — not a report on your back pain. Pour out your real troubles to a shopkeeper and you’ll read as oversharing. (Among close friends and family it can be a sincere check-in — context decides.)

The verb ending also tells you which register to answer in. Mirror it: if they usted you, usted them right back.

They askWho it addressesYou bounce back
¿Cómo estás? one person, informal (tú) ¿y tú?
¿Cómo está usted? one person, formal (usted) ¿y usted?
¿Cómo están? a group (ustedes) ¿y ustedes?
¿Cómo estáis? a group, Spain (vosotros) ¿y vosotros?

If that /usted split feels shaky, our guide on how to say “you” in Spanish untangles exactly when to use each — it’s the same call you make when you bounce the question back.

The two rules that instantly make you sound natural

These are the spine of the whole thing. They’re free, they work everywhere, and they fix the “robot voice” faster than any vocabulary list.

Rule 1 — Add gracias. A bare bien can land as curt. Bien, gracias is warm, complete, and never wrong. The gracias acknowledges that the person bothered to ask — it’s the social glue. (Skip it when your answer is negative; you don’t thank someone while telling them you feel awful.)

Rule 2 — Bounce it back with ¿y tú? A reply that doesn’t return the question stalls the exchange and can read as self-absorbed. Bien, ¿y tú? keeps the ritual alive. Formal version: muy bien, gracias, ¿y usted?

Stack them and you get the native-sounding template: bien, gracias, ¿y tú? This one line is the entire upgrade from “beginner” to “natural” for about 90% of encounters. Notice it’s built on estar — the same verb hiding inside estás — which is exactly why your answer should be estoy bien, never soy bien.

Answers sorted by mood

Here’s the part the flat 25-item lists get wrong: you can’t scan an alphabetical wall of phrases mid-conversation. So pick your mood, grab one line, and go.

When you’re great. Step up from plain bien without overthinking it. Muy bien and excelente are safe anywhere; de maravilla (“wonderfully”) is warm and a little expressive.

SpanishEnglish
muy bien very well / great
excelente excellent
de maravilla wonderfully, great
todo bien all good, everything's fine

When you’re fine — the everyday default. This is where natives quietly outclass beginners. Instead of a third bien in a row, they reach for no me quejo (“can’t complain”) or tranquilo — as in todo tranquilo, “all chill.” Both are positive without being loud.

SpanishEnglish
bien, gracias fine, thanks
no me quejo can't complain
todo tranquilo all calm, all chill
aquí, trabajando just here, working

That last pattern — aquí + what you’re doing (aquí, estudiando, aquí, cocinando) — is one of the most natural moves in the language and almost no course teaches it.

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When you’re so-so. The classic native “meh” is más o menos (“more or less”), which beginner courses skip almost entirely. Regular (“okay, nothing special”) and ahí voy (“getting by,” literally “there I go”) do the same gentle, honest job.

SpanishEnglish
más o menos so-so, more or less
regular okay, nothing special
ahí voy getting by, hanging in there
como siempre same as always

When you’re having a rough day. You can say mal (“not well”) or estoy fatal (“I feel awful”), but read the room first. With a stranger or acquaintance, a softened un poco cansado (“a little tired”) or just más o menos is kinder than dropping fatal on someone — otherwise you restart the whole “wait, are you okay?” loop. Save the heavy words for friends who’ll actually ask why.

Three quick grammar fixes

These prevent the three slips that instantly out a beginner.

Say estoy, not soy. Feelings are passing states, so they take estar, never ser. Soy bien would wrongly claim “good” is your permanent identity. If you want the deeper logic, our ser vs. estar guide is the clean version: ser = who you fundamentally are, estar = how you are right now.

Make it agree with you. A man says estoy cansado; a woman says estoy cansada. The same swap hits estresado/a, contento/a, ocupado/a. The safe words — bien, mal, regular, genial, fatal — never change at all, which is half of why beginners love them.

Use mal, not malo. To say you’re not doing well, use the adverb mal, not the adjective malo. Estoy malo often means “I’m ill” in many regions, and estoy bueno means “I’m tasty/hot” — not what you meant. And mind the accents: it’s ¿cómo estás? with marks on Có- and -tás, or you’ve written “I eat… these.”

Mistakes to avoid

  • One-word bien. Correct but cold. Add the two upgrades.
  • Answering or no. ¿Cómo? means “how,” not a yes/no question — answer with a state word.
  • Forgetting to bounce it back. No ¿y tú? and the conversation stalls.
  • Mismatching formality. Don’t your professor; mirror the register you were handed, and lean toward usted with elders and officials.

That’s the whole game. Closing the loop politely matters in Spanish, which is why the ways to say “you’re welcome” beyond de nada pair so naturally with this — they’re the same small-talk muscle.

This week, retire your reflex bien exactly once. Pick one new go-to — maybe no me quejo or ahí voy — and let it out the next time someone asks. The first time it lands and the conversation keeps rolling, you’ll feel the difference.

Mini quiz

Quick check: answering ¿cómo estás?

4 quick questions to see what stuck.

Question 1 of 4
  1. Which reply sounds the most natural to a native ear?

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