In brief
- Infinitive: avere — irregular verb, one of the two pillars of Italian conjugation alongside essere
- In the present: ho, hai, ha, abbiamo, avete, hanno (forms without the ‘v’ of the infinitive)
- Dual role: full verb (expressing possession, age, states) and auxiliary for forming compound tenses
- Past participle: avuto — used in all compound tenses of avere
- Common pitfall: the forms ho, ha, hanno are written with a silent ‘h’; it is purely a spelling convention, not an aspirated sound
Avere is one of the first verbs to learn in Italian. Irregular in the present, it appears in almost every sentence: to say that you own something, to express a physical or emotional state, and to build the compound tenses of the vast majority of Italian verbs. A complete overview of its forms and uses, from the indicative to the subjunctive, with concrete examples at every step.
Avere: an irregular verb with two roles
Avere belongs to the second group of Italian verbs — those ending in -ere. But unlike most of them, it does not follow the regular conjugation rules: its present indicative forms are built on a base that differs from the infinitive, with the ‘v’ disappearing.
This verb performs two distinct functions in Italian, just as its English equivalent does.
Full verb: it expresses possession, age, hunger, fear, sleepiness and many other states. Ho una macchina (I have a car), ho vent’anni (I am twenty years old), ho fame (I am hungry).
Auxiliary: it is used to form the compound tenses of the vast majority of Italian verbs. Ho mangiato (I have eaten), avevo dormito (I had slept), avrò finito (I will have finished). To understand which verbs take avere as an auxiliary rather than essere, a solid grasp of Italian conjugation as a whole is helpful.
Avere in the present indicative (presente)
The present is the most used form. The six persons have entirely irregular forms, very distant from the infinitive. Three of them are written with an initial ‘h’ (ho, ha, hanno): this ‘h’ is silent and serves only to distinguish these forms from homophones (o = or, a = to, anno = year).
| Pronoun | Form | Translation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| io | ho | I have | Ho due gatti. |
| tu | hai | you have | Hai freddo? |
| lui / lei | ha | he / she has | Ha trent’anni. |
| noi | abbiamo | we have | Abbiamo una casa grande. |
| voi | avete | you (pl.) have | Avete tempo? |
| loro | hanno | they have | Hanno molti amici. |
The form abbiamo is the only one to retain a trace of the stem ‘av-‘ from the infinitive. All the others stand apart: ho, hai, ha, avete, hanno share no visible connection with avere. This is why these forms must be memorised one by one, without trying to apply a rule.
Avere in the imperfect (imperfetto)
The imperfect is regular and follows the standard model of -ere verbs: stem av- + endings -evo, -evi, -eva, -evamo, -evate, -evano. It is one of the most stable tenses in the conjugation of avere.
| Pronoun | Form | Translation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| io | avevo | I had | Avevo paura del buio. |
| tu | avevi | you had | Avevi ragione. |
| lui / lei | aveva | he / she had | Aveva un cane enorme. |
| noi | avevamo | we had | Avevamo poco tempo. |
| voi | avevate | you (pl.) had | Avevate fame? |
| loro | avevano | they had | Avevano molta esperienza. |
Avere in the present perfect (passato prossimo)
The present perfect of avere is formed with avere itself as the auxiliary, followed by the past participle avuto. This is one of the rare cases where a verb uses its own auxiliary.
| Pronoun | Form | Translation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| io | ho avuto | I have had | Ho avuto un incidente. |
| tu | hai avuto | you have had | Hai avuto fortuna. |
| lui / lei | ha avuto | he / she has had | Ha avuto un’ottima idea. |
| noi | abbiamo avuto | we have had | Abbiamo avuto molto lavoro. |
| voi | avete avuto | you (pl.) have had | Avete avuto problemi? |
| loro | hanno avuto | they have had | Hanno avuto una bella notizia. |
Avere in the simple future (futuro semplice)
The future of avere is irregular: it is formed on the contracted stem avr-, to which the standard future endings are added (-ò, -ai, -à, -emo, -ete, -anno).
| Pronoun | Form | Translation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| io | avrò | I will have | Avrò più tempo domani. |
| tu | avrai | you will have | Avrai successo. |
| lui / lei | avrà | he / she will have | Avrà bisogno di aiuto. |
| noi | avremo | we will have | Avremo una riunione. |
| voi | avrete | you (pl.) will have | Avrete tutto il necessario. |
| loro | avranno | they will have | Avranno finito presto. |
Avere in the simple past (passato remoto)
The simple past of avere is irregular and rarely used in speech in northern and central Italy, where the present perfect replaces it. It remains common in writing, in literary texts and in the South of the country.
| Pronoun | Form | Translation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| io | ebbi | I had | Ebbi una grande opportunità. |
| tu | avesti | you had | Avesti coraggio. |
| lui / lei | ebbe | he / she had | Ebbe un ruolo importante. |
| noi | avemmo | we had | Avemmo molte difficoltà. |
| voi | aveste | you (pl.) had | Aveste una risposta rapida. |
| loro | ebbero | they had | Ebbero grandi risultati. |
Avere in the pluperfect and future perfect
These two compound tenses combine the imperfect and the future of avere respectively with the past participle avuto.
Pluperfect (trapassato prossimo)
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | avevo avuto |
| tu | avevi avuto |
| lui / lei | aveva avuto |
| noi | avevamo avuto |
| voi | avevate avuto |
| loro | avevano avuto |
Future perfect (futuro anteriore)
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | avrò avuto |
| tu | avrai avuto |
| lui / lei | avrà avuto |
| noi | avremo avuto |
| voi | avrete avuto |
| loro | avranno avuto |
Avere in the conditional (condizionale)
The present conditional of avere is also built on the contracted stem avr-, like the future, but with the conditional endings (-ei, -esti, -ebbe, -emmo, -este, -ebbero). The past conditional combines the present conditional of avere with avuto.
Present conditional
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | avrei |
| tu | avresti |
| lui / lei | avrebbe |
| noi | avremmo |
| voi | avreste |
| loro | avrebbero |
Past conditional
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | avrei avuto |
| tu | avresti avuto |
| lui / lei | avrebbe avuto |
| noi | avremmo avuto |
| voi | avreste avuto |
| loro | avrebbero avuto |
Avere in the subjunctive (congiuntivo)
The subjunctive is used after verbs of opinion, doubt, wish, or in subordinate clauses introduced by che. Avere is irregular in the present subjunctive: the first three persons of the singular share the same form, abbia.
Present subjunctive
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | abbia |
| tu | abbia |
| lui / lei | abbia |
| noi | abbiamo |
| voi | abbiate |
| loro | abbiano |
Imperfect subjunctive
| Pronoun | Form |
|---|---|
| io | avessi |
| tu | avessi |
| lui / lei | avesse |
| noi | avessimo |
| voi | aveste |
| loro | avessero |
Examples of the subjunctive used with avere:
| Italian sentence | Translation |
|---|---|
| Penso che tu abbia ragione. | I think that you are right. |
| Spero che abbiate tempo. | I hope that you have time. |
| Sebbene avesse paura, continuò. | Even though he was afraid, he continued. |
| Vorrei che avessero più pazienza. | I would like them to have more patience. |
Avere in the imperative
The imperative of avere is not often heard in everyday conversation, but appears in certain fixed expressions and in formal recommendations.
| Person | Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| tu | abbi | Abbi pazienza! (Have patience!) |
| lui / lei (polite form) | abbia | Abbia fiducia. (Have confidence.) |
| noi | abbiamo | Abbiamo coraggio! (Let’s have courage!) |
| voi | abbiate | Abbiate rispetto. (Have some respect.) |
| loro | abbiano | Abbiano cura di sé. (May they take care of themselves.) |
Uses of avere: possession, age and physical states
Beyond conjugation, understanding in which contexts avere is used as a full verb is a key point for English-speaking learners. Three main categories.
Possession. This is the most direct use, mirroring English.
| Italian sentence | Translation |
|---|---|
| Ho una macchina rossa. | I have a red car. |
| Hai un fratello? | Do you have a brother? |
| Abbiamo una casa in campagna. | We have a house in the countryside. |
Age. In Italian, age is expressed with avere, not with essere as in English. This often surprises learners: where English says “I am twenty-five”, Italian says ho venticinque anni (literally “I have twenty-five years”).
| Italian sentence | Translation |
|---|---|
| Ho venticinque anni. | I am twenty-five years old. |
| Quanti anni hai? | How old are you? |
| Ha già settant’anni. | He is already seventy years old. |
Physical states and sensations. Where English uses “to be” (I am hungry, I am cold, I am sleepy), Italian consistently uses avere.
| Italian expression | Translation |
|---|---|
| avere fame | to be hungry |
| avere sete | to be thirsty |
| avere freddo | to be cold |
| avere caldo | to be hot |
| avere sonno | to be sleepy |
| avere paura | to be afraid |
| avere fretta | to be in a hurry |
| avere voglia di | to feel like / to want |
| avere bisogno di | to need |
| avere ragione | to be right |
| avere torto | to be wrong |
| avere mal di testa | to have a headache |
Avere as an auxiliary: forming compound tenses
The vast majority of Italian verbs form their compound tenses with avere as the auxiliary. This is the case for almost all transitive verbs (which take a direct object) and for many intransitive verbs. In this role, avere is followed by the past participle of the conjugated verb, which remains invariable.
| Verb | Present perfect with avere | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| mangiare | ho mangiato | I have eaten |
| parlare | hai parlato | you have spoken |
| vedere | ha visto | he has seen |
| finire | abbiamo finito | we have finished |
| leggere | avete letto | you have read |
| scrivere | hanno scritto | they have written |
The verbs that take essere as auxiliary instead of avere are mainly verbs of movement (andare, venire, partire…), verbs of state (stare, rimanere…) and all pronominal verbs. To go deeper into this distinction and better understand the whole verbal system, the page on Italian conjugation covers the essential ground.
Summary table: avere at every tense
| Tense | io | tu | lui/lei | noi | voi | loro |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | ho | hai | ha | abbiamo | avete | hanno |
| Imperfect | avevo | avevi | aveva | avevamo | avevate | avevano |
| Present perfect | ho avuto | hai avuto | ha avuto | abbiamo avuto | avete avuto | hanno avuto |
| Simple past | ebbi | avesti | ebbe | avemmo | aveste | ebbero |
| Pluperfect | avevo avuto | avevi avuto | aveva avuto | avevamo avuto | avevate avuto | avevano avuto |
| Simple future | avrò | avrai | avrà | avremo | avrete | avranno |
| Future perfect | avrò avuto | avrai avuto | avrà avuto | avremo avuto | avrete avuto | avranno avuto |
| Present conditional | avrei | avresti | avrebbe | avremmo | avreste | avrebbero |
| Present subjunctive | abbia | abbia | abbia | abbiamo | abbiate | abbiano |
| Imperfect subjunctive | avessi | avessi | avesse | avessimo | aveste | avessero |
| Imperative | — | abbi | abbia | abbiamo | abbiate | abbiano |
Practice exercise
Test your knowledge of avere conjugation:
Question 1: What is the correct form of avere at the 3rd person singular in the present?
Question 2: How do you say ‘we had’ in Italian?
Question 3: Which sentence means ‘I will have time’?
Question 4: Which of these expressions is NOT used with avere in Italian?
Question 5: What is the form of avere in the present subjunctive for tu?
Question 6: How do you say ‘they have had a lot of luck’ in Italian?



