Body parts vocabulary is one of the most practical areas of Spanish you can learn. You need it at the doctor, the pharmacy, the physiotherapist, the beauty salon, when describing pain or injury, and in dozens of everyday situations. This guide covers every major body part from head to toe, with medical phrases and the expressions you will actually use while travelling or living in a Spanish-speaking country.
The Head and Face (La Cabeza y La Cara)
| Spanish | English | Spanish | English |
| la cabeza | head | la cara / el rostro | face |
| el ojo | eye | la oreja / el oído | outer ear / inner ear |
| la nariz | nose | la boca | mouth |
| el labio | lip | el diente | tooth |
| la muela | molar/back tooth | la lengua | tongue |
| la mejilla | cheek | la frente | forehead |
| la barbilla / el mentón | chin | la mandíbula | jaw |
| la sien | temple (side of head) | el cuello | neck |
| el pelo / el cabello | hair (on head) | las cejas | eyebrows |
| las pestañas | eyelashes | la nuca | nape of neck |
Important Ear Distinction
Spanish distinguishes between two ear words: la oreja refers to the outer, visible ear; el oído refers to the inner ear and the sense of hearing. When you have an earache, it is usually me duele el oído. When a doctor looks at your ear, they look at la oreja.
The Torso (El Tronco)
| Spanish | English |
| el hombro | shoulder |
| el pecho | chest |
| la espalda | back |
| la cintura | waist |
| el abdomen / el vientre / la barriga | abdomen / belly / tummy |
| el ombligo | navel / belly button |
| la cadera | hip |
| el costado | side (of body) |
The Arms and Hands (Los Brazos y Las Manos)
| Spanish | English |
| el brazo | arm |
| el codo | elbow |
| la muñeca | wrist |
| la mano | hand |
| el dedo | finger |
| el pulgar | thumb |
| el índice | index finger |
| el dedo corazón / medio | middle finger |
| el anular | ring finger |
| el meñique | little finger / pinky |
| la uña | fingernail |
| la palma | palm |
| la axila / el sobaco | armpit |
The Legs and Feet (Las Piernas y Los Pies)
| Spanish | English |
| la pierna | leg |
| el muslo | thigh |
| la rodilla | knee |
| la pantorrilla | calf |
| el tobillo | ankle |
| el pie | foot |
| el talón | heel |
| el dedo del pie | toe |
| el dedo gordo del pie | big toe |
| la planta del pie | sole of foot |
| la ingle | groin |
| el glúteo / el trasero | buttock / bottom |
Internal Organs and Body Systems
| Spanish | English |
| el corazón | heart |
| el pulmón | lung |
| el hígado | liver |
| el riñón | kidney |
| el estómago | stomach |
| el intestino | intestine |
| el cerebro | brain |
| la sangre | blood |
| los huesos | bones |
| el músculo | muscle |
| la piel | skin |
| la columna vertebral | spine / backbone |
Describing Pain: Essential Medical Phrases
The most important phrase pattern for body parts is doler (to hurt) — which works like gustar:
- Me duele la cabeza. — My head hurts. / I have a headache.
- Me duele el estómago. — My stomach hurts.
- Me duelen los pies. — My feet hurt. (plural → duelen)
- Me duele la espalda. — My back hurts.
- Me duele mucho aquí. — It hurts a lot here. (point to the area)
- Tengo dolor de cabeza. — I have a headache. (alternative phrasing)
- Tengo dolor de garganta. — I have a sore throat.
- Me he torcido el tobillo. — I have twisted my ankle.
- Me he roto el brazo. — I have broken my arm.
- Me he cortado el dedo. — I have cut my finger.
- Me pica la piel. — My skin itches.
- Tengo la nariz tapada. — I have a blocked nose.
- Me duelen los oídos. — My ears hurt. (earache)
At the Doctor: Describing Symptoms
- ¿Dónde le duele? — Where does it hurt? (what the doctor asks)
- Señale dónde le duele. — Point to where it hurts.
- ¿Cuánto tiempo lleva así? — How long have you been like this?
- El dolor es constante / intermitente. — The pain is constant / intermittent.
- Me duele al respirar / al caminar / al tocar. — It hurts when I breathe / walk / touch it.
- Tengo hinchado el tobillo. — My ankle is swollen.
- Tengo un moretón / un cardenal. — I have a bruise.
Body Parts in Everyday Spanish Expressions
- no tener pelos en la lengua — to not mince words (no hairs on the tongue)
- costar un ojo de la cara — to cost an arm and a leg (an eye from the face)
- tomar el pelo a alguien — to pull someone's leg (to take someone's hair)
- meter la pata — to put your foot in it (to put the leg in)
- estar hasta los codos — to be up to your elbows in work
- hablar por los codos — to talk non-stop (to speak through your elbows)