The Eiffel Tower in Paris, illustrating a guide to avoir conjugation in French

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Avoir Conjugation: All Tenses and How to Use It (French)


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Want to get avoir conjugation straight once and for all, across every tense you'll actually use?

In this article I'll walk you through the full avoir conjugation: the present, the past tenses, the future, the conditional, the subjunctive, the imperative, and the participles, all laid out in clean tables. Then I'll show you the two things that make avoir the single most useful verb in French: it's the main helper verb behind almost every past sentence you'll ever say, and it powers a whole family of everyday expressions like avoir faim (to be hungry) and il y a (there is).

A quick reassurance before we dive in. Avoir means “to have”, and yes, it's irregular, so you can't just bolt regular endings onto a stem and hope for the best. But here's the good news: it's so common that the forms stick fast. You'll be using j'ai and il y a within your first hour of speaking French, and the rest follows from there. You really only need to memorise a handful of forms cold; the patterns carry the rest.

I've leaned on avoir from my very first conversations in French. When I was living in Paris finding my feet, j'ai and il y a were doing most of the heavy lifting in everything I said, long before I had the fancier tenses. That's the whole point: a couple of avoir forms get you talking for real on day one.

Let's get into it.

Avoir in the Present Tense (Présent)

Start here. These six forms are the ones you'll say most often in the whole language, so over-learn them.

FrenchEnglish
j'aiI have
tu asyou have (informal)
il / elle / on ahe / she / one has
nous avonswe have
vous avezyou have (formal/plural)
ils / elles ontthey have

A couple of pointers. J'ai is pronounced like “zhay”, and that little ai sound comes back again and again, so it's worth nailing now. Watch ils ont (they have) carefully: that final -ont is the giveaway form, and it's easy to confuse with ils sont (they are) from être. One letter, completely different verb.

Example sentences:

  • J'ai un frère et deux sœurs. → I have one brother and two sisters.
  • Tu as raison. → You are right. (literally “you have reason”, more on that later)
  • Ils ont une grande maison. → They have a big house.

Avoir in the Passé Composé (j'ai eu)

The passé composé is the everyday past tense, the one you'd use to say “I had”. And here's a lovely twist: avoir is its own helper verb. So “I had” is j'ai eu, literally “I have had”.

The past participle of avoir is eu (pronounced like a short “uh”), which looks nothing like the infinitive, so just learn it as a one-off.

FrenchEnglish
j'ai euI had
tu as euyou had
il / elle / on a euhe / she / one had
nous avons euwe had
vous avez euyou had
ils / elles ont euthey had
  • J'ai eu peur. → I was scared. (literally “I had fear”)
  • Nous avons eu de la chance. → We were lucky.

Avoir in the Imparfait (Imperfect)

The imparfait is the “used to” / “was having” past tense, for ongoing or background states. The stem is av- and the endings are the standard imperfect set, so this one is beautifully regular.

FrenchEnglish
j'avaisI had / used to have
tu avaisyou had
il / elle / on avaithe / she / one had
nous avionswe had
vous aviezyou had
ils / elles avaientthey had
  • Quand j'étais petit, j'avais un chien. → When I was little, I had a dog.
  • Elle avait toujours faim. → She was always hungry.

If you want to go deeper on this tense and when to reach for it over the passé composé, we've got a full guide to the French imparfait.

Avoir in the Futur Simple (Simple Future)

The future stem of avoir is the irregular aur-. Learn that stem and the rest is just the standard future endings.

FrenchEnglish
j'auraiI will have
tu aurasyou will have
il / elle / on aurahe / she / one will have
nous auronswe will have
vous aurezyou will have
ils / elles aurontthey will have
  • Demain j'aurai le temps. → Tomorrow I will have time.
  • Vous aurez des nouvelles bientôt. → You will have news soon.

Avoir in the Conditionnel Présent (Conditional)

The conditional is the “would have” tense. It uses the same aur- stem as the future, but with imperfect endings tacked on. Learn the future and you get the conditional almost for free.

FrenchEnglish
j'auraisI would have
tu auraisyou would have
il / elle / on auraithe / she / one would have
nous aurionswe would have
vous auriezyou would have
ils / elles auraientthey would have
  • J'aurais besoin d'aide. → I would need help.
  • Avec plus d'argent, nous aurions une plus grande maison. → With more money, we would have a bigger house.

Avoir in the Subjonctif Présent (Subjunctive)

The subjunctive turns up after expressions of doubt, emotion, wishing and necessity, very often after que (“that”). Avoir has irregular subjunctive stems (ai- and ay-), so this is one to memorise rather than derive.

FrenchEnglish
que j'aiethat I have
que tu aiesthat you have
qu'il / elle / on aitthat he / she / one has
que nous ayonsthat we have
que vous ayezthat you have
qu'ils / elles aientthat they have
  • Il faut que tu aies de la patience. → You need to have patience.
  • Je doute qu'il ait raison. → I doubt that he is right.

For the bigger picture on when and why the subjunctive shows up, see our guide to the French subjunctive.

Avoir in the Impératif (Commands)

The imperative is for giving orders and encouragement. Avoir borrows its subjunctive stems here, which makes these forms look unusual, so they're worth a quick memorise. There are three forms (tu, nous, vous), and the negative simply wraps them in ne … pas.

AffirmativeEnglishNegative
aiehave (informal)n'aie pas
ayonslet's haven'ayons pas
ayezhave (formal/plural)n'ayez pas
  • Aie confiance ! → Have confidence! / Trust me!
  • N'ayez pas peur. → Don't be afraid.

Avoir in the Passé Simple (Literary Past)

You'll mostly meet the passé simple in books, fairy tales and formal writing rather than in conversation, so you only really need to recognise it. The forms come from an e- stem and look quite different from everything else.

FrenchEnglish
j'eusI had
tu eusyou had
il / elle / on euthe / she / one had
nous eûmeswe had
vous eûtesyou had
ils / elles eurentthey had

You can safely file this under “read, don't speak” until you're well along.

The Participles: Ayant and Eu

Two forms worth pinning down, because they show up constantly:

  • Participe présent: ayant (having). As in Ayant faim, il a mangé → “Having been hungry, he ate.”
  • Participe passé: eu (had). This is the form you've already met in the passé composé (j'ai eu), and it's also the one you use in every other compound tense.

The Big One: Avoir as the Helper Verb for Past Tenses

Here's why avoir is the most valuable verb to learn early. Most of the time, when you talk about the past in French, you do it with avoir plus a past participle. This is the passé composé, and the vast majority of French verbs build it with avoir.

The recipe is simple: avoir (in the present) + past participle.

FrenchEnglish
j'ai mangéI ate / I have eaten
tu as finiyou finished
il a parléhe spoke
nous avons vuwe saw
vous avez faityou did / made
ils ont pristhey took

Get avoir solid and you've essentially opened up the past tense for thousands of verbs at once. That's a huge return on six little forms.

The same avoir + participle pattern also drives the other compound tenses. Swap the tense of avoir and you change the tense of the whole thing:

  • Plus-que-parfait (had done): j'avais mangé → I had eaten (imparfait of avoir + participle)
  • Futur antérieur (will have done): j'aurai mangé → I will have eaten (future of avoir + participle)
  • Conditionnel passé (would have done): j'aurais mangé → I would have eaten (conditional of avoir + participle)

One verb, every compound tense. That's the payoff.

Avoir vs Être: Which Verbs Don't Take Avoir

Now the one catch, and it's a small one. A short list of verbs use être (to be) as their helper instead of avoir. These are mostly verbs of movement and change of state, plus all reflexive verbs.

The classic memory trick is DR & MRS VANDERTRAMP, where each letter is a verb that takes être:

VerbMeaning
Devenirto become
Revenirto come back
Monterto go up
Resterto stay
Sortirto go out
Venirto come
Allerto go
Naîtreto be born
Descendreto go down
Entrerto enter
Rentrerto return
Tomberto fall
Retournerto return
Arriverto arrive
Mourirto die
Partirto leave

So you'd say je suis allé (I went), not j'ai allé. On top of these, every reflexive verb takes être too: je me suis levé (I got up).

The simple rule to walk away with: if a verb isn't on that short list and isn't reflexive, it takes avoir. That covers the overwhelming majority of French verbs, which is exactly why avoir is the helper verb you'll lean on most.

Avoir Idioms: Where French Says “Have” and English Says “Be”

This is the part that surprises every learner, and it's pure gold once it clicks. A whole set of everyday feelings and states that English expresses with “to be” are expressed in French with avoir (to have). You don't are hungry in French; you have hunger.

FrenchLiteralEnglish meaning
avoir faimto have hungerto be hungry
avoir soifto have thirstto be thirsty
avoir froidto have coldto be cold
avoir chaudto have hotto be hot
avoir peur (de)to have fear (of)to be afraid (of)
avoir raisonto have reasonto be right
avoir tortto have wrongto be wrong
avoir sommeilto have sleepinessto be sleepy
avoir besoin deto have need ofto need
avoir envie deto have desire ofto want / to feel like
avoir l'airto have the airto seem / to look
avoir mal (à)to have pain (at)to hurt / to ache

Two of these deserve a special mention because you'll use them constantly:

Telling your age with avoir. In French you don't are a certain age, you have it. “I am thirty years old” is j'ai trente ans (literally “I have thirty years”). Forgetting this and reaching for être is one of the most common beginner slips, so lock it in early.

Il y a → “there is” / “there are”. This little phrase is built from avoir (the a in the middle is “has”) and it's everywhere. Il y a un problème means “there is a problem”. Il y a deux chats means “there are two cats” → note that French uses the same il y a whether it's one thing or many. Bonus: il y a also means “ago” when you put a time after it, as in il y a deux ans (two years ago).

These expressions are the kind of thing that makes you sound genuinely French fast, because natives use them in every conversation.

Common Mistakes with Avoir (and How to Dodge Them)

A few traps catch nearly everyone. Spot them now and you'll skip the usual stumbles.

  1. Using être for feelings and age. This is the big one. It's j'ai faim (not je suis faim) for “I'm hungry”, and j'ai vingt ans (not je suis vingt ans) for “I'm twenty”. When the meaning is a bodily state or your age, French reaches for avoir.
  2. Mixing up ont and sont. Ils ont (they have) versus ils sont (they are). Same rhythm, one letter apart, opposite verbs. Slow down on that o sound.
  3. Forgetting the past participle is eu, not avé. The participle of avoir is the irregular eu, so “I had” is j'ai eu, never j'ai avé.
  4. Using avoir where the verb actually takes être. It's je suis allé (I went), not j'ai allé. When in doubt, run through that short être list above.
  5. Dropping the de after besoin and envie. It's j'ai besoin de and j'ai envie de, with the de baked in. J'ai besoin un café is wrong; j'ai besoin d'un café is right.

How to Lock In Avoir (the Fast Way)

Avoir rewards a little focused effort more than almost any other verb, because you use it constantly. Here's how I'd approach it:

  1. Over-learn the present tense first. Those six forms (j'ai, tu as, il a, nous avons, vous avez, ils ont) are the foundation for every compound past tense, so make them automatic.
  2. Grab il y a and j'ai … ans straightaway. Two phrases, instantly useful, and they make you sound natural from your very first conversation.
  3. Learn the idioms as whole chunks. Don't translate avoir faim word by word in your head, just learn “j'ai faim = I'm hungry” as a single ready-made unit.
  4. Learn the être exceptions as a set. Once the DR & MRS VANDERTRAMP list is familiar, you know that everything else takes avoir, which is most verbs.
  5. Use it out loud, today. Order food (je voudrais…, j'ai faim), say your age, point things out with il y a. Real speaking beats any drill, and avoir gives you loads to say from day one.

Once avoir is solid, build out from there. A stock of common verbs, a handful of useful French phrases, the difference between tu and the formal vous, and a sense of when to use the imparfait versus the passé composé. Avoir threads through all of it.

That speaking-from-day-one approach is the heart of how I learn every language. If you want a structured way to go from your first French words to real conversations with real people, that's exactly what we build inside the Fluent in 3 Months Bootcamp, a community and a method, with coaching, that gets you speaking French with a human being, fast.

For now, though, you've got the full avoir conjugation and, more importantly, the two big jobs it does: powering your past tenses and giving you a stack of everyday expressions. Go and put avoir to work.

author headshot

Benny Lewis

Founder, Fluent in 3 Months

Irish polyglot, nomadic since 2003 and an international best-selling author. Benny believes the best approach to language learning is to speak from day one. See where Benny is travelling right now, or give him a consultation call!

Speaks: Spanish, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Esperanto, Mandarin Chinese, American Sign Language, Dutch, Irish

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