A1 A2 B1

A1 Spanish Business News — Graded Reading Practice

A1 Spanish business reading practice — real articles about money, work, and companies adapted to CEFR A1. Build practical business vocabulary from complete beginner level, no prior Spanish needed.

Business Spanish at A1 level is more accessible than it sounds. Articles focus on straightforward news — a company opening, a price change, a job announcement — using present tense and concrete numbers that anchor meaning even before vocabulary is fully established. You will meet high-frequency words early: empresa, trabajo, dinero, precio, producto. These appear across every business story, which means each article reinforces the same core set rather than scattering new words unpredictably. Economic journalism tends to follow repeatable patterns — who did what, how much it cost, what happens next — and that predictability is an advantage for beginners. A1 adapted articles keep sentences short and remove complex subordinate clauses, so the structure is easy to parse. Reading real business news from day one builds confidence that Spanish is not a topic for advanced learners only — it is usable immediately.

Live from the library

Real Spanish articles — read at your level, right now

Proof of method: these are genuine news articles adapted by Lectura to A1 (Beginner), A2 (Elementary), B1 (Intermediate) Spanish. Each article below is fully readable in your browser. Use the level tabs to switch between versions — the same story, rewritten for three different CEFR levels. Sign up free to add any article from any news site to your own reading feed.

133 words

Fondos de inversión en acciones con alta rentabilidad generan debate entre expertos

En el último año, un tipo de fondo de inversión ganó mucha popularidad. Se llaman "covered call ETFs". Estos fondos ofrecen ganancias mensuales atractivas a los inversionistas.

Sin embargo, los expertos advierten que no todos los fondos son iguales. Algunos tienen buenos resultados. Otros no cumplen con lo prometido. Por eso, es importante analizar cada opción con cuidado.

Los "covered call ETFs" funcionan vendiendo opciones sobre acciones. Esto genera ingresos adicionales para los fondos. Pero también significa que los inversionistas pueden perder dinero si las acciones bajan mucho.

Según los analistas, estos fondos son una novedad. Muchos inversionistas nuevos no entienden bien cómo funcionan. Por eso, recomiendan buscar asesoría financiera antes de invertir.

El mercado de estos fondos sigue creciendo. Pero los expertos piden precaución. No todas las promesas de ganancias son reales.

More from the library

Browse additional adapted articles and open any full version in the reader.

A1 A2 B1

Micron gana dinero otra vez

Micron vende chips para móviles y computadoras. Los chips son piezas pequeñas pero muy importantes.

A1 A2 B1

Empresa de seguros gana más dinero en 2026

Línea Directa es una empresa de seguros en España.

A1 A2 B1

Nueva empresa de inteligencia financiera en Seeking Alpha

Seeking Alpha ahora tiene una nueva empresa llamada Go Finance Intelligence.

How it works

Read any business article in Spanish — at your level.

Convert any business article from any publication you already read and get it rewritten in Spanish at A1, A2, and B1 simultaneously. This is real journalism, adapted to your exact level, not toy sentences or simplifications far removed from real news.

Business and economics vocabulary is essential for any Spanish learner with professional goals. Terms like empresa, mercado, inversión, beneficios, and crecimiento appear in virtually every edition of every major newspaper. Mastering this register opens doors across 20 Spanish-speaking nations.

Spain and Latin America are deeply integrated into global trade. Economic journalism covers everything from Argentine debt negotiations to Mexican manufacturing and Spanish renewable energy investments. The vocabulary is remarkably consistent, making each article build on the last.

Change level

Same business articles — different level

Every article is adapted at A1, A2, and B1 simultaneously. Switch when you're ready to push yourself further.

Already in the library

Sample business articles — or convert your own

These are already adapted in the Lectura library. But you can convert any article URL from any publication and get it in Spanish at A1, A2, and B1 instantly.

Keep reading

More A1 Spanish reading

Browse related A1 topics or read business at a different level

Keep exploring

More A1 topics in Spanish

From the Lectura blog

Related articles

FAQ

Common questions about reading Business in Spanish

A1: What makes A1 Spanish business reading effective?

Yes. At A1, articles use the 500 most common Spanish words, short sentences, and present tense only. Business vocabulary — trabajo (work), empresa (company), dinero (money), mercado (market) — is among the highest-frequency in the language. You encounter it constantly and absorb it through repetition without needing to study lists. Treat this level as a progression step and move up only when comprehension stays stable.

A1: What Spanish business vocabulary will I build at A1?

The core language of working life: trabajo (work), empresa (company), mercado (market), dinero (money), precio (price), producto (product), cliente (client), and economía (economy). These words appear in almost every A1 business article and form a foundation that scales directly to A2 and B1 Spanish reading. Treat this level as a progression step and move up only when comprehension stays stable.

A1: How does A1 Spanish business reading differ from A2?

A1 uses only present tense, very short sentences, and around 500 high-frequency words. A2 introduces past and future tenses, longer paragraphs, and around 1,000 words. A1 is where you build the reading habit — A2 is where it starts to feel natural. Most learners move from A1 to A2 business reading within two to three months of consistent daily practice. Treat this level as a progression step and move up only when comprehension stays stable.

Read business stories at your level.

Free to start. No credit card required.

Free to start  ·  No credit card