Serving Spanish-speaking customers well starts with the right words. This guide gives you the vocabulary, phrases and dialogue examples to handle any customer interaction — from the opening greeting to closing the conversation. If you want to go broader, the business Spanish vocabulary guide covers the wider professional language that pairs well with customer-facing phrases. When you want to practise these phrases aloud, try pronunciation practice and guided roleplay sessions with Kippy.
Essential Spanish Words for Customer Service
Customer service agents need a solid base of everyday support vocabulary before anything else. The terms below appear constantly in retail, phone and online support interactions — learn these first and the rest will follow naturally.
Basic Customer Service Vocabulary in Spanish
The table below covers the core nouns every customer service agent needs, with a Spanish example sentence and its English translation for each.
Common Customer Service Actions
These are the high-frequency verbs you’ll use to describe what you’re doing for the customer — checking, resolving, sending, verifying. Each one appears in a natural support context.
Greeting Customers in Spanish
The opening of a customer interaction sets the tone for everything that follows. A warm, clear greeting in Spanish immediately puts customers at ease and signals that you’re ready to help — whether the interaction happens by phone, in a store, on chat or at a help desk.
Customer Service Greetings in Spanish
The phrases below are the most widely used Spanish greetings in customer service. Each one includes a natural example sentence showing how to extend it into a full opening line.
Understanding the Customer’s Problem
Before you can help, you need to understand exactly what went wrong. Ask clear, open questions that give the customer space to explain — and always listen carefully before jumping to a solution. When a customer mentions a specific term or reference you are not sure of, the instant translation tool lets you verify it quickly without interrupting the flow. Order and account numbers come up constantly — if reading them back in Spanish is a challenge, the Spanish numbers guide is worth reviewing first.
Asking Customers Questions in Spanish
Use these question phrases to gather the information you need. Each one is polite, direct and appropriate for phone, chat or in-person support.
Helping Customers in Spanish
Once you understand the issue, respond with language that is calm, reassuring and action-oriented. Spanish-speaking customers respond well to phrases that show you are actively working on their problem rather than just listening.
Helpful Customer Service Phrases
The phrases below signal to the customer that you are in control and taking action. Use them while you look up information, process a request or transfer a case.
Handling Customer Complaints in Spanish
Complaints require empathy above all else. Stay calm, acknowledge the customer’s frustration and apologise before moving to a solution. Skipping the apology — even when the problem is minor — often makes things worse.
Apologizing to Customers in Spanish
These are the most natural and widely accepted apology phrases in Spanish customer service. Pair each one with a concrete next step so the customer knows what happens after the apology.
Offering Solutions to Customers
After apologising, present the solution clearly and confidently. Customers want to know exactly what will happen next — use specific language rather than vague reassurances.
Solution Phrases in Spanish
The phrases below cover the most common customer service resolutions: refunds, replacements and investigations. Each one is direct and easy to follow.
Ending Customer Service Conversations in Spanish
A strong closing leaves the customer feeling valued and confident that the issue has been handled. Always check whether there is anything else the customer needs before signing off.
Closing Phrases in Spanish
Use these phrases to wrap up the interaction professionally. Ending well is just as important as opening well — it shapes the customer’s final impression of the service.
Customer Service Conversation Examples
Reading full dialogue examples is the fastest way to see how all the vocabulary and phrases come together in practice. The two examples below cover the most common customer service scenarios.
Example 1: Order Problem
Hello, I have a problem with my order.
Of course, can you give me your order number?
Yes, it is 45821.
Thank you. Let me check that.
Example 2: Damaged Product Complaint
The product arrived damaged.
I’m sorry for the inconvenience. We can send a replacement immediately.
Tips for Customer Service Conversations in Spanish
A few practical habits make a big difference when handling Spanish-speaking customers. Speak clearly and at a moderate pace — rushing makes it harder for the customer to follow. Use polite phrases throughout, not just at the start and end. Always confirm the customer’s details back to them before taking action, and repeat any important information such as dates, order numbers or next steps. When a customer is frustrated, stay calm and lower your tone slightly — it naturally de-escalates the conversation. For speaking practice in realistic support scenarios, try real-life scenarios or guided roleplay sessions with Kippy.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you say customer service in Spanish?
Servicio al cliente and atención al cliente are both correct. Servicio al cliente is more common in Latin America while atención al cliente is preferred in Spain. Both are understood across all Spanish-speaking regions.
What are common Spanish customer service phrases?
Key phrases include ¿En qué puedo ayudarle? (How can I help you?), PermÃtame revisar eso (Let me check that), Lamento el inconveniente (I’m sorry for the inconvenience), Gracias por su paciencia (Thank you for your patience), and ¿Hay algo más en lo que pueda ayudarle? (Is there anything else I can help you with?).
How do you apologize to a customer in Spanish?
Use Lamento el inconveniente (I’m sorry for the inconvenience) or Disculpe por el problema (Sorry about the problem). For a stronger apology, add Entendemos su preocupación (We understand your concern). Always pair the apology with a clear solution.
How do you greet customers in Spanish?
Use Hola, ¿en qué puedo ayudarle? for a standard greeting, or Buenos dÃas / Buenas tardes for time-specific openers. Bienvenido/a works well in retail or in-person settings. Always follow with an offer to help.