The Local Way to Say It
Imagine you're haggling for a vintage coat at El Rastro or chatting with a friend about property prices in La Latina. That's when valer in the future tense comes in handy. It's all about asking or stating what something will be worth, literally or figuratively. For instance, if you're looking at an old painting, you might ask, "¿Cuánto valdrá esto en unos años?" (How much will this be worth in a few years?). Or maybe you're planning a trip and someone says, "Ese viaje no valdremos mucho la pena si no vamos a la playa" (That trip won't be worth much if we don't go to the beach). It’s about value, in a way that feels natural to a Madrileño, expressing future usefulness or cost.The 'Grammar Math'
Forget complex rules; let's simplify! The trick with valer in the future tense is its irregular stem. Instead of adding future endings directly to the infinitive, you swap the 'e' for a 'dr'. Think of it as: Valer – 'e' + 'dr' + Future Endings. So, valer becomes valdr-. This simple swap is key to sounding authentic and avoiding the common trap of saying 'valere', which sounds completely off to a native ear.Then, you just add the standard future endings:
Yo: valdré
Tú: valdrás
Él/Ella/Usted: valdrá
Nosotros/as: valdremos
Vosotros/as: valdréis
Ellos/Ellas/Ustedes: valdrán
Easy, right? Just remember that 'dr'!