Puerto Rico is a great place to study Spanish, with one potential drawback, which I’ll get to in a moment.

San Juan, the capital and largest city of this US Commonwealth territory, has several excellent Spanish schools. When you’re not studying, you’ll enjoy strolling the picturesque streets of Old San Juan or visiting the famous stretch of beach lined with casinos and nightspots.

There’s also a good language school in Bayomon, another town on the north coast of the island, and it’s actually not too far from San Juan.

If the environment is important to you when deciding where to study Spanish, Puerto Rico has it all: great weather all year round, beautiful beaches, fascinating rainforests, exciting cities and, above all, very friendly people who are proud to his island and rightly so. will go out of his way to make you feel welcome. And, if you’re a US citizen, you don’t even need a passport to go there.

But there is a possible negative, as I mentioned.

If you decide to study in Puerto Rico, you will have to be constantly on guard not to communicate in English most of the time. That’s because many Puerto Ricans are bilingual, and some can speak English just as well as they can speak Spanish.

Really learning the language means taking what you have studied in the classroom and using it on a daily basis with the people you meet on the streets, shops, restaurants, etc. Puerto Ricans tend to be so comfortable in two languages ​​that they can easily be seduced into not even trying their Spanish.

But if you have the willpower to avoid the trap of falling into English, you should definitely study Spanish in Puerto Rico. It will be a very rewarding experience.