Tu opinión me importa mucho.

Breakdown of Tu opinión me importa mucho.

tu
your
me
to me
importar
to matter
la opinión
the opinion
mucho
really

Questions & Answers about Tu opinión me importa mucho.

Why is it tu and not ?

Because tu without an accent is a possessive adjective: your.

  • tu opinión = your opinion

with an accent is the subject pronoun meaning you.

  • Tú hablas = You speak

So in this sentence, tu is correct because it is describing opinión.

Why does opinión have an accent mark?

Because Spanish stress rules would normally make a word ending in -n stressed on the second-to-last syllable. But opinión is stressed on the last syllable: o-pi-nión.

The written accent shows that irregular stress.

It also helps you pronounce it correctly:

  • o-pi-NYON
Why is it me importa instead of something like mi importa or importo?

Because importar works like gustar.

In this structure:

So in:

the parts are:

  • tu opinión = the thing that matters
  • me = to me
  • importa = matters

A very literal breakdown is:

  • Your opinion matters to me a lot

That is why me is used, not mi.

  • me = to me / me
  • mi = my
Why is it importa and not importan?

Because the subject is tu opinión, which is singular.

  • Tu opinión me importa mucho = Your opinion matters to me a lot
  • Tus opiniones me importan mucho = Your opinions matter to me a lot

The verb agrees with the thing that matters, not with me.

What exactly is me doing in the sentence?

Me is the indirect object pronoun meaning to me.

It tells you who is affected by the verb importar.

So:

  • me importa = it matters to me
  • te importa = it matters to you
  • le importa = it matters to him/her/you (formal)

This is one of the most important patterns to get used to in Spanish, because it is very common with verbs like:

  • gustar
  • interesar
  • molestar
  • importar
What does mucho mean here? Is it much or very?

Here mucho means a lot or very much.

It is working as an adverb, modifying importa:

  • me importa mucho = it matters to me a lot / very much

It does not mean many here.

Compare:

  • Tengo mucho trabajo = I have a lot of work
    Here mucho is an adjective.

  • Te quiero mucho = I love you very much / a lot
    Here mucho is an adverb.

Can I change the word order to Me importa mucho tu opinión?

Yes, absolutely. That version is very natural too.

Both are correct:

  • Tu opinión me importa mucho
  • Me importa mucho tu opinión

The difference is mostly about focus or emphasis:

  • Tu opinión me importa mucho puts your opinion first
  • Me importa mucho tu opinión starts with the feeling or reaction: it matters to me a lot

Spanish often allows this kind of flexibility more than English.

Is tu opinión the subject of the sentence?

Yes.

Even though an English speaker may feel that me is somehow central, the grammatical subject is tu opinión.

You can test it by changing singular to plural:

  • Tu opinión me importa
  • Tus opiniones me importan

The verb changes according to opinión/opiniones, so that is the subject.

Could I also say Tu opinión es muy importante para mí?

Yes. That is also correct, but it is slightly different in style.

  • Tu opinión me importa mucho is very natural and idiomatic.
  • Tu opinión es muy importante para is a bit more explicit and sometimes sounds slightly more formal or deliberate.

Both express a similar idea, but the first one is a very common everyday Spanish way to say it.

How would I say this formally in Spain?

You would usually say:

Here su means your in the formal usted form.

So:

  • Tu opinión... = informal, talking to someone you use with
  • Su opinión... = formal, talking to someone you use usted with

In Spain, this distinction is still important depending on the situation and the relationship.

Do I need an article, like la, before opinión?

No. In this sentence, tu already determines the noun, so you do not use an article.

  • tu opinión = correct
  • la tu opinión = incorrect

This is similar to English, where you say your opinion, not the your opinion.

How is the sentence pronounced in Spain?

A simple pronunciation guide is:

too oh-pee-NYON meh eem-POR-tah MOO-choh

A few points:

  • tu sounds like too
  • opinión is stressed on the last syllable: nyon
  • importa is stressed on por
  • mucho in Spain has the same ch sound as in church

So the rhythm is:

tu o-pi-NIÓN me im-POR-ta MU-cho

AI Language TutorTry it ↗
What's the best way to learn Spanish grammar?
Spanish grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Spanish

Master Spanish — from Tu opinión me importa mucho to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions