Spanish Accent Test
Find out which Spanish accent you have
Record your voice for 15 seconds and our AI will analyse your pronunciation to identify your Spanish accent.
Discover your Spanish accent in 3 steps
Record your voice
Speak naturally for a few seconds. You can read a text or talk freely.
⏱ 15 secondsGet your accent profile
Our AI compares your pronunciation with thousands of native speakers and identifies your accent with a match percentage.
◎ Your accent + match %Receive AI feedback
Get detailed phonetic feedback with personalised suggestions for each feature of your accent.
✦ Personalised phonetic feedbackWhat makes each Spanish accent unique?
Consonants
Seseo and Distinción
The difference between pronouncing /θ/ for ⟨z⟩ and ⟨c⟩ (Castilian distinction) or merging them with /s/ (Latin American and Canarian seseo) is one of the most recognisable features of Spanish.
Final vowels
The Final S
In the Caribbean and Southern Cone, /s/ at the end of a syllable is aspirated or dropped entirely, creating that distinctive rhythm. By contrast, Mexico and Peru maintain a crisp, clear /s/.
Palatal
Yeísmo and Sheísmo
The merger of ⟨ll⟩ and ⟨y⟩ into a single palatal phoneme (yeísmo) occurs across almost all of Latin America. Rioplatense goes further: that phoneme is pronounced as [ʃ] or [ʒ], the famous porteño sheísmo.
Prosody
Intonation and Rhythm
Each variety has its own melody. The Mexican accent is steady and musical; the Argentine uses descending patterns with emphatic tonic stress; Caribbean Spanish is fast with reduced syllables.
How close are you to each Spanish accent?
Spanish is the second most spoken language in the world, with over 500 million native speakers across 21 countries. Far from being a uniform block, Spanish manifests in a rich diversity of regional accents shaped by centuries of history, contact with indigenous languages, and distinct phonetic evolution. Pick an accent below and find out how closely your pronunciation matches a native speaker — across 13 regional varieties from Castilian to Caribbean Spanish.
🌎 Latin America
Тест акцента Mexican
Clear S, reduced vowels, musical intonation with slight stress on tonic syllables.
Test my match →Тест акцента Argentine
Porteño sheísmo, Italian-influenced intonation, voseo and cadenced rhythm.
Test my match →Тест акцента Colombian
Rich internal variety: musical paisa, neutral rolo, aspirated costeño.
Test my match →Тест акцента Cuban
Dropped final S, alveolar r, syncopated rhythm with African heritage.
Test my match →Тест акцента Chilean
High speed, softened ch, reduced vowels and a very distinctive local slang.
Test my match →Тест акцента Venezuelan
Aspirated S, Caribbean rhythm, open vowels and rising intonation.
Test my match →Тест акцента Peruvian
Clean S, clear vowels, Andean intonation with Quechua influence.
Test my match →🇪🇸 Spain
Тест акцента Castilian
θ/s distinction, separate ll and y sounds, circumflex peninsular intonation.
Test my match →Тест акцента Andalusian
Seseo or ceceo by zone, consonant aspiration and elision, rich internal dialectal variety.
Test my match →Тест акцента Canarian
Seseo, soft Atlantic-influenced intonation, close to Caribbean Spanish.
Test my match →Тест акцента Galician
Very melodic intonation, Galician interference and gheada in some areas.
Test my match →Тест акцента Basque
Very marked syllabic rhythm, rising intonation and Basque influence on articulation.
Test my match →Тест акцента Catalan
Flat intonation, neutral vowels and rhythm shaped by Catalan phonology.
Test my match →Everything about the Spanish accent test
Our model achieves over 89% accuracy on native speakers, evaluated on a corpus of more than 50,000 voice samples. For non-native speakers accuracy remains high, though it may vary depending on proficiency level. The more natural and fluent the audio, the better the results.
The system currently identifies 13 regional varieties: Mexican, Argentine (Rioplatense), Colombian, Venezuelan, Chilean, Peruvian, Cuban, Castilian, Andalusian, Canarian, Catalan-accented, Basque-accented, and Galician-accented Spanish. We continue to expand the model with new varieties.
Yes, with consistent practice and phonetic guidance. The personalised feedback you receive after the test pinpoints exactly which phonetic features to work on — /s/ aspiration, /r/ pronunciation, intonation, and more. Many users report noticeable improvement within a few weeks of targeted practice.
Yes. The basic test — recording, accent identification, and match percentage — is completely free and requires no signup. The full phonetic report with analysis history, pronunciation exercises, and progress tracking is available on the Pro plan.
Absolutely. The test is especially useful for Spanish learners, as it identifies which regional variety influences your pronunciation most and which features of your native language filter through into your Spanish. It is a valuable tool for both language teachers and independent learners.
There is no truly neutral accent — every speaker has one. So-called "neutral Spanish" is an artificial standard created for broadcast media, inspired primarily by educated Mexican Spanish. What varies is the familiarity with which listeners perceive a given accent, not the phonetic neutrality of the speaker.
Linguists identify over 20 distinct regional varieties of Spanish across the 21 countries where it is spoken natively. The main groupings are Peninsular Spanish (Castilian, Andalusian, Canarian, and contact varieties such as Catalan, Basque, and Galician-accented Spanish) and Latin American Spanish (Mexican, Caribbean, Andean, Rioplatense, and Chilean, among others). Our test currently identifies 13 of the most widely spoken varieties. While linguists sometimes use the term dialect to describe these varieties, our test focuses specifically on the phonetic accent — how your Spanish sounds, not just the words you use.
The main differences between Spanish accents lie in four areas: consonants (whether /s/ is clear, aspirated or dropped; whether /θ/ is distinguished from /s/), vowels (how open or reduced they are), intonation (rising, falling or circumflex melody patterns), and vocabulary and grammar (voseo vs. tuteo, regional slang). For example, Castilian Spanish distinguishes /θ/ and /s/, while all Latin American accents merge them — one of the most recognisable differences between European and American Spanish.
For most learners, Mexican Spanish and Colombian (Bogotá) Spanish are considered the easiest to understand. Both feature clear /s/ sounds, well-defined vowels, and a moderate speaking pace. This is why both accents dominate Spanish-language media and dubbing. By contrast, Chilean and Caribbean accents — with their high speed, aspirated consonants and reduced syllables — are often rated as the hardest for non-native speakers to follow.
By number of speakers, the Mexican accent is the most common Spanish accent in the world — Mexico alone has over 130 million Spanish speakers, more than any other country. It is also the most globally recognised accent thanks to Mexico's dominance in Spanish-language television, film and music. In terms of geographic spread, however, Latin American Spanish as a whole accounts for roughly 90% of all native Spanish speakers worldwide.