Canarian Accent Test
How close is your Spanish to a native Canarian speaker?
Record your voice for 15 seconds and our AI will give you a match score showing exactly how closely your pronunciation aligns with Canarian Spanish.
What makes the Canarian accent unique?
Canarian Spanish is the variety of Spanish most similar to Latin American Spanish spoken anywhere in Europe. Its seseo, /s/ aspiration, soft musical intonation and shared vocabulary with the Americas make it a unique bridge accent — and one of the most historically significant varieties in the entire Spanish-speaking world.
Consonants
Seseo — no /θ/ distinction
Like Latin American Spanish and Andalusian, Canarian uses seseo — a single /s/ sound for all sibilants, with no /θ/ distinction. This means c before e/i and z are pronounced as /s/, not /θ/ as in Castilian. For Latin American Spanish speakers, this makes Canarian immediately familiar — it is the only variety of European Spanish that fully shares this feature.
Aspiration
S aspiration and elision
Canarian Spanish consistently aspirates or drops syllable-final /s/ — "estos" becomes "ehtoh" or "etoh". This is the same feature found in Caribbean Spanish and is one of the strongest phonetic links between Canarian and Latin American varieties. Combined with seseo, it gives Canarian speech its characteristic soft, open quality that immediately distinguishes it from Castilian.
Intonation
Soft, melodic intonation
Canarian Spanish has a notably soft, melodic intonation — slower and more relaxed than Castilian, with a gentle musical quality. It is often described as the most "pleasant" or "gentle" Spanish accent in Spain. The intonation shares some features with Caribbean Spanish but has a distinctly Atlantic island character — unhurried, warm and musical without being as rapid as Cuban or Venezuelan.
Grammar
Ustedes and shared vocabulary
Like Latin American Spanish, Canarian uses ustedes (not vosotros) and features yeísmo. Beyond grammar, Canarian shares significant vocabulary with Latin America: guagua (bus), papa (potato), millo (maize), and many other words used throughout the Americas but absent in mainland Spain. This lexical overlap is direct evidence of the historical Canarian-American connection.
The Atlantic bridge to Latin America
What does your match score mean?
After recording, our AI compares your pronunciation against a model of native Canarian Spanish and returns a percentage match. Here's how to read your result.
80–100%
Very close match
Your pronunciation is strongly aligned with native Canarian Spanish. Key features — seseo, /s/ aspiration, intonation — closely match the Canarian target accent.
60–79%
Good match
You share many features with Canarian Spanish, but some regional or native-language influence is present. Your feedback will pinpoint exactly which features to work on.
40–59%
Partial match
Your Spanish has some Canarian features but is influenced significantly by another variety or your native language. Targeted practice on seseo and /s/ aspiration can close the gap quickly.
0–39%
Different variety
Your pronunciation patterns align more closely with a different Spanish variety. Try the full Spanish accent test to discover which accent you actually have.
Questions about the Canarian accent test
Canarian Spanish is characterised by seseo (single /s/ for all sibilants), consistent /s/ aspiration or elision, a soft melodic intonation, use of ustedes, and significant vocabulary shared with Latin America. It is the Spanish variety spoken in Europe most similar to Latin American Spanish and historically served as the bridge between Spain and the Americas.
Canarian Spanish sounds like Latin American Spanish because of direct historical connection. The Canary Islands were the mandatory Atlantic crossing point for all ships to the Americas. Canarian emigrants settled throughout the Caribbean and South America, particularly in Cuba, Venezuela and Puerto Rico, establishing communities that evolved in linguistic parallel. The shared features — seseo, aspiration, ustedes, vocabulary — are direct evidence of this centuries-long connection.
It's a free AI-powered challenge where you record your voice and receive a match score showing how closely your Spanish pronunciation aligns with native Canarian speakers. The higher the score, the closer your accent is to Canarian Spanish. You also receive detailed phonetic feedback on your seseo, /s/ aspiration and intonation.
The Canary Islands have approximately 2.2 million inhabitants. However, the Canarian diaspora in Latin America — particularly Venezuela, Cuba and Uruguay — is enormous relative to the islands' population, with millions of Latin Americans of Canarian descent whose Spanish retains Canarian features.
The Canary Islands were the mandatory last port before the Atlantic crossing, making them a key source of emigrants to the Americas. Cuban Spanish shows particularly strong Canarian influence. The shared features between Canarian and Caribbean Spanish — seseo, aspiration, vocabulary — reflect centuries of migration and linguistic exchange between the islands and the Americas.
The seven main Canary Islands are Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura, La Palma, La Gomera and El Hierro. Tenerife and Gran Canaria have the most recognised Canarian accent. The eastern islands of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura show slightly more conservative features. Our test is calibrated against the Gran Canaria-Tenerife variety as the most widely heard Canarian Spanish.
The key features are: use seseo consistently (single /s/ for all sibilants); aspirate or drop syllable-final /s/; adopt a soft, relaxed intonation — slower and gentler than Castilian; use ustedes instead of vosotros; and incorporate Canarian vocabulary (guagua for bus, papa for potato). Our test gives you a phonetic breakdown of exactly how your pronunciation compares to native Canarian speakers.