Italian Numbers 1 to 100
Numbers are one of the first things you need in any language. Whether you are ordering two espressos, reading a train schedule, or haggling at a Florentine market, Italian numbers come up constantly. The good news is that once you learn the core numbers and a few simple patterns, you can count all the way to 100 and beyond.
This guide walks through Italian numbers from 1 to 100 with full pronunciation, explains the patterns that make higher numbers predictable, and covers the elision rules that trip up many learners. By the end, you will be able to say any number with confidence.
Numbers 1–10: The Foundation
These ten numbers are the building blocks of every number that follows. They must be memorized, but the good news is that most are short and rhythmic.
Pay special attention to the double consonants in quattro, sette, and otto. In Italian, double consonants are held slightly longer than single ones. Saying "sete" instead of "sette" changes the meaning from "seven" to "thirst."
Numbers 11–20: The Teens
Italian teen numbers have a unique structure. From 11 to 16, the unit comes before the root dici (from dieci). Starting at 17, the order reverses: dici comes first, followed by the unit. This switch point is one of the quirks learners need to internalize.
Notice the pattern shift at 17. For 11 through 16, think of it as "unit + dici": un-dici, do-dici, tre-dici. From 17 onward, it flips to "dici + unit": dici-assette, dici-otto, dici-annove. Also notice the double consonants that appear in 17 (diciassette) and 19 (diciannove) — these are phonetic bridges that make the words flow smoothly.
A helpful memory trick: numbers 11 to 16 put the small number first (like a child leading), while 17 to 19 put dieci first (like the parent taking charge). The switch happens right in the middle of the teens.
The Tens: 20, 30, 40... 100
Once you learn the tens, building any two-digit number becomes straightforward. The tens follow a satisfying pattern: after venti (20), they all end in -anta except for cento (100).
The pattern is clear: take the root of the base number and add -anta. Tre becomes trenta, quarant- becomes quaranta, cinqu- becomes cinquanta, and so on. Venti is the exception with its -enti ending, but from 30 onward the pattern is rock solid.
Building Numbers 21–99: The Compound Rules
To form any number between the tens, simply attach the unit to the tens word. For most numbers, this is a straight combination:
- Venti + due = Ventidue (22)
- Trenta + cinque = Trentacinque (35)
- Quaranta + nove = Quarantanove (49)
- Sessanta + sei = Sessantasei (66)
However, there are two important elision rules that change the spelling and pronunciation of certain combinations.
Elision Rule 1: Drop the Final Vowel Before Uno
When a tens number combines with uno (1), the final vowel of the tens is dropped:
- Vent
i+ uno = Ventuno (21), not "ventiuno" - Trent
a+ uno = Trentuno (31), not "trentauno" - Quarant
a+ uno = Quarantuno (41) - Cinquant
a+ uno = Cinquantuno (51)
Elision Rule 2: Drop the Final Vowel Before Otto
The same thing happens with otto (8), because it also starts with a vowel:
- Vent
i+ otto = Ventotto (28), not "ventiotto" - Trent
a+ otto = Trentotto (38), not "trentaotto" - Quarant
a+ otto = Quarantotto (48) - Cinquant
a+ otto = Cinquantotto (58)
The elision rule is about sound, not just spelling. Italian avoids having two vowels crash into each other at a word junction. This principle, called "elisione," appears throughout the language, not just in numbers. Understanding it here will help you recognize it in other contexts too.
Special Case: Tre Gets an Accent
When tre (3) is added to a tens number, it gets a written accent: trè. This does not change the pronunciation, but it is important for correct spelling:
- Venti + tre = Ventitré (23)
- Trenta + tre = Trentatré (33)
- Quaranta + tre = Quarantatré (43)
Complete Reference: 21–30
Here are numbers 21 through 30 to show all the patterns in action. Once you understand this decade, every other decade from 31–40 through 91–100 follows the exact same rules.
Practical Tips for Learning Italian Numbers
Knowing the rules is one thing; being able to recall numbers instantly is another. Here are strategies to build speed and fluency:
- Count out loud daily. Spend two minutes each morning counting from 1 to 50, then 50 to 100. Increase your speed over time.
- Practice with prices. When you see a price tag or a menu, read the number in Italian. A coffee for €1.50? Un euro e cinquanta centesimi.
- Use phone numbers. Read Italian phone numbers digit by digit, then try reading them in pairs (as Italians often do): 06-42-18 becomes zero sei, quarantadue, diciotto.
- Quiz yourself with math. Simple addition and subtraction in Italian forces your brain to process numbers actively: Dodici più otto fa venti (12 + 8 = 20).
- Listen for numbers. In Italian podcasts, news, or videos, pay attention every time a number is spoken. Try to write it down before your brain translates it to English.
Italians often read multi-digit numbers differently than English speakers. The year 1999 is read as "millenovecentonovantanove" (one continuous word), not broken into pairs like "nineteen ninety-nine." Prices, phone numbers, and addresses each have their own conventions that you will pick up with exposure.
Summary of Key Patterns
Here is everything you need to remember, distilled into four rules:
- 1–10: Memorize individually. These are the building blocks.
- 11–16: Unit comes before "dici" (undici, dodici, tredici...).
- 17–19: "Dici" comes before the unit (diciassette, diciotto, diciannove).
- 21–99: Tens + unit, with elision before uno and otto, and an accent on trè.
With these four rules and a bit of daily practice, you will have Italian numbers from 1 to 100 fully under your control. From there, expanding to hundreds, thousands, and beyond follows similarly logical patterns.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do some Italian numbers drop a letter when combined?
Italian uses elision to avoid awkward vowel combinations. When a tens number ending in a vowel combines with uno (one) or otto (eight), the final vowel of the tens number is dropped. For example, venti + uno becomes ventuno (not ventiuno) and trenta + otto becomes trentotto (not trentaotto). This makes the numbers flow more naturally when spoken.
How do you say zero in Italian?
Zero in Italian is "zero," pronounced "dzeh-roh." It is used in phone numbers, scores, temperatures, and mathematics just as in English.
What is the difference between Italian and English number patterns?
Italian numbers from 1 to 16 must be memorized individually, but from 17 onward they follow a predictable compound pattern (dici + sette = diciassette). English switches to a compound pattern earlier, at 13 (thirteen). Italian tens (venti, trenta, quaranta) also follow a more regular pattern than their English counterparts.
How are numbers used differently in everyday Italian life?
Italians use numbers constantly in daily life for prices (in euros and cents), telling time (using the 24-hour clock more frequently than in English), giving addresses, phone numbers, and dates. Knowing numbers well is essential for shopping at markets, reading train schedules, and understanding prices in restaurants.
Do Italian numbers have gender?
Most Italian numbers do not change for gender. The main exception is uno/una (one), which agrees with the noun it modifies: un libro (one book, masculine) vs una casa (one house, feminine). The number mille (one thousand) also has an irregular plural: duemila (two thousand).