25 Best Disney Movies in Spanish [with Catchy Soundtracks]

Disney movies are timeless, magical and enjoyable for all ages. Luckily, for Spanish learners, most of them are available in Spanish, complete with top-tier voice actors and catchy Spanish songs.

Watching Disney movies in Spanish can be a whole new experience—plus, there are Disney movies that focus on Spanish-speaking cultures, like Colombia and Mexico.

In addition to the post below, you can also check out this video from the Lingflix Spanish YouTube channel :

1. Mulán — Mulan

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

In this Disney classic, Mulan is a young Chinese girl who disguises herself as a man and replaces her father in the army. Determined to bring honor to her family, she goes through training and faces numerous challenges, ultimately becoming a skilled warrior (with the help of her dragon companion Mushu).

Its iconic song “Reflection” has a Spanish version here called “Mi Reflejo ,” which shows her struggle to find her true self.

Key Vocabulary:

deber — duty disfraz — disguise ejército — army entrenamiento — training espada — sword

2. La Sirenita — The Little Mermaid

Available on: Amazon Prime , YouTube

This well-loved movie features the spunky Ariel, a mermaid princess who’s fascinated with the human world. She becomes smitten with Prince Eric and strikes up a risky deal with the sea witch Ursula, becoming human herself in exchange for her voice. To remain human, though, she has to get a “true love’s kiss” from Eric.

The soundtrack is fun and upbeat, especially “Bajo el Mar” (Under the Sea), which is all about the beauty of living underwater.

Key Vocabulary:

barco — ship, boat bruja — witch cangrejo — crab cantar — to sing mar — sea

3. Toy Story

Available on: YouTube , Amazon Prime , Disney+

“Toy Story” was the first full movie made with CGI (computer-generated imagery).

Woody, a cowboy doll, is the favorite toy of a boy named Andy, but he feels threatened when Buzz Lightyear—a new toy—arrives. They go from rivals to friends, though, when they get separated from Andy and have to find a way back.

The movie’s signature song, “You’ve Got a Friend in Me,” actually has separate versions for European and Latin American Spanish .

Key Vocabulary :

alcancía — piggy bank juguete — toy perdido — lost soldado — soldier vaquero — cowboy

4. Encanto

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube , Amazon Prime

“Encanto” does a great job at portraying Colombian culture ( slang included).

The Madrigal family lives in an enchanted house called the Encanto . Everyone in the family has their own magical gift, except for Mirabel. When the Encanto ’s magic starts to fade, Mirabel takes it upon herself to save her family and their home.

“No Se Habla de Bruno” (We Don’t Talk About Bruno) is the movie’s standout song—you’ll hear different family members pitching in and singing.

Key Vocabulary:

abuela — grandma casa — house colorido — colorful don — gift encanto — charm, spell

5. Pocahontas

Available on: Amazon Prime , Disney+

For stunning traditional animation, “Pocahontas” is your must-watch Disney film.

It’s the 17 th century, and Pocahontas, a native American princess, encounters English settlers. She falls in love with one of them—Captain John Smith­—as they try to understand each other’s cultures. This leads to conflicts, though, between the settlers and Pocahontas’s tribe.

“Colores en el Viento “ (Colors of the Wind) is a breathtaking song where Pocahontas teaches John Smith about the sacredness of nature.

Key Vocabulary:

árbol — tree bosque — forest colonia — colony, settlement descubrimiento — discovery explorar — to explore

6. Hércules — Hercules

Available on: Amazon Prime , Disney+

“Hercules” might be about Greek mythology, but it’s great for kids at heart. I enjoyed the jokes here!

Hercules is a half-mortal son of Zeus. Raised on Earth, he sets out on a journey to become a hero and reclaim his immortality. Along the way, he battles mythical creatures and even finds love.

The soundtrack makes you want to sing along, especially “No Importa la Distancia” (Go the Distance).

Key Vocabulary:

alma — soul aprendiz — apprentice, novice campeón — champion destino — destiny dios — god

7. La Bella y la Bestia — Beauty and the Beast

Available on: Amazon Prime , Disney+

It’s been more than 30 years, but “Beauty and the Beast” still gives me butterflies.

Belle, a bright young woman, dreams of a more adventurous life—only to become imprisoned by a Beast in his castle. The Beast is actually a cursed prince, though, who must learn how to love.

Even with a 2017 remake, the original still wins out in terms of music. Make sure to listen to “ La Bella y la Bestia” (The Beauty and the Beast)!

Key Vocabulary:

baile — dance biblioteca — library candelabro — candelabra castillo — castle festín — feast

8. Aladín — Aladdin

Available on: Amazon Prime , Disney+ , YouTube

This Disney film is packed with plenty of action and comedy.

Aladdin lives out in the streets, but his fortunes change when he finds a magic lamp that summons a genie. The genie grants Aladdin three wishes, so he asks to become a prince, with the goal of winning the heart of Princess Jasmine, the Sultan’s daughter.

One of my favorite scenes is when Aladdin and Jasmine sing “Un Mundo Ideal” (A Whole New World) as they fly on their magic carpet.

Key Vocabulary:

alfombra — carpet, rug cueva — cave genio — genie hechicero — sorcerer ladrón — thief

9. Enredados — Tangled

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube , Amazon Prime

“Tangled” is a fresh 3D take on the “Rapunzel” fairytale.

Rapunzel is a princess with magical long hair, but she has been locked away in a tower her entire life. Luckily, a charming thief named Flynn Rider stumbles upon her tower, and she seizes the chance to escape with him.

The most magical moment in the movie would be when they discover their feelings for each other while singing “Veo en Ti la Luz” (I See the Light).

Key Vocabulary:

caballo — horse cabello — hair camaleón — chameleon corona — crown flor — flower

10. Coco

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube

Coco is another essential Disney film for Spanish learners because it’s all about Mexican culture and tradition.

Miguel has a deep passion for music, but for some strange reason, his family strictly forbids it. The night before Día de los Muertos , he’s magically transported to the Land of the Dead, where he must uncover what exactly happened with his family before.

You’ll hear different versions of the song “Recuérdame” (Remember Me) all throughout, with the touching message of love going on beyond death.

Key Vocabulary:

abuelo — grandad cantar — to sing cementerio — graveyard, cemetery cruzar — to cross espíritu — spirit

11. Las Locuras del Emperador — The Emperor’s New Groove

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube , Amazon Prime

“The Emperor’s Groove” is absolute comedic gold, with slapstick-style animation. It has even inspired tons of memes.

Kuzco is a spoiled, self-centered Incan emperor who gets betrayed by his advisor and turned into a llama. He has no choice but to rely on Pacha, a down-to-earth peasant, to help him return to his palace and reclaim his throne. This forces him to learn about humility and the importance of treating others with respect.

The European Spanish title (“El Emperador y Sus Locuras”) literally means “The Emperor and His Madness.”

Key Vocabulary:

ardilla — squirrel campesino — peasant cima — top consejera — advisor fea — ugly

12. Bichos — A Bug’s Life

Available on: Disney+ , Apple TV

“A Bug’s Life” is among the most popular Disney films in Spanish-speaking countries.

To defend his ant colony against a gang of attacking grasshoppers, Flik turns to warrior bugs for help. The problem is he mistakenly enlisted a group of circus insects instead. Now he has to find a way to get everyone together to stand up against the gang and its leader Hopper.

The Spanish version impressively retains the wordplay from the original. For example, an ant named Thorny is called “Espina” in Spanish (meaning thorn).

Key Vocabulary:

araña — spider circo — circus comida — food hoja — leaf hormiga — ant

13. El Rey León — The Lion King

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime , YouTube

“The Lion King” has got to be one of the best animated films of all time.

Simba is a young lion prince who’s destined to be king. He runs away after his father dies tragically, believing that it’s his fault.

Still, he eventually has to reclaim his place in the kingdom and free it from his treacherous uncle Scar.

The soundtrack here is phenomenal. Even the movie opening, with “El Ciclo sin Fin” (Circle of Life) playing, is gorgeous.

Key Vocabulary:

fuego — fire heredero — heir hiena — hyena jabalí — warthog, wild boar sabana — savanna

14. Frozen

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

“Frozen” is one of the most commercially successful Disney movies ever.

Elsa is a princess with a magical ability to control ice and snow. Because she’s scared of her abilities, she isolates herself in any icy fortress and ends up causing an eternal winter throughout the land. Her sister, Anna, is determined to find her and bring back summer.

The film’s main song, “¡Suéltalo! (Europe)” or “Libre Soy (LatAm)” (Let It Go), became viral. If you love the English version, then check out the Spanish version.

Key Vocabulary:

Frozen (2013): Elsa, Anna, Olaf, Arendelle, Ice, Let It Go, Sister, Snowman, Adventure, Love.

amor — love aventura — adventure congelar — to freeze hermana — sister hielo — ice

15. Buscando a Nemo — Finding Nemo

Available on: Amazon Prime , YouTube

This award-winning film had me chuckling when I first watched it, and I still love it now as an adult.

A clownfish named Marlin has had his son, Nemo, captured and placed in a fish tank in a dentist’s office in Sydney. He’s all set on traveling across the ocean to find Nemo, and Dory—an optimistic blue fish with a bad memory—offers to help him.

One of the most memorable lines comes from Dory: ¡Sigue nadando! (Just keep swimming!)

Key Vocabulary:

arrecife — reef buzo — diver dentista — dentist medusa — jellyfish nadar — to swim

16. Los Increíbles — The Incredibles

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

“The Incredibles” is an amazing superhero family movie.

The Parr family seems normal on the outside, but they actually have superpowers. Bob Parr, once known as Mr. Incredible, misses his superhero days. When he’s lured into a trap, his wife Helen (formerly known as Elastigirl) and their three kids set out to rescue him.

Most of the characters have the same names in the Spanish version, but funnily enough, one superhero character—Frozone—is translated as “Frozono.”

Key Vocabulary:

capa — cape elástico — elastic invisible — invisible máscara — mask rescatar — to rescue

17. Moana

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

As a 3D movie, “Moana” features spectacular views of the Pacific Islands and colorful underwater scenes, with cool special effects.

Moana, an adventurous Polynesian teenager, has been chosen by the ocean to save her people from a spreading destructive force. To do this, she needs to restore a mystical gemstone owned by an island goddess and travel across the vast Pacific Ocean.

Its main song, “Cuán Lejos Voy” (How Far I’ll Go) is very soulful, describing Moana’s longing to explore beyond her island.

Key Vocabulary:

brillo — shine, sparkle bote — boat collar — necklace concha — shell isla — island

18. Tarzán — Tarzan

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube

Here’s another movie that’s based on a classic novel, and it comes with fast-paced forest fight scenes.

Tarzan is an unusual young boy: he’s raised by gorillas in the jungle. He’s forced to grapple with his human identity, though, when he encounters a group of people—including Jane, a British girl who’s extremely curious about him.

A musical highlight in the movie is when Tarzan’s gorilla mother sings a tender lullaby to him called “En Mi Corazón Vivirás” (You’ll Be in My Heart).

Key Vocabulary:

aprender — to learn campamento — camp cazador — hunter comunicarse — to communicate escopeta — shotgun

19. Intensa-mente — Inside Out

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

“Inside Out” shows how complex emotions can be—and how feeling sad is okay and even normal.

It’s creatively set inside the mind of an 11-year-old girl named Riley. The main characters are her core emotions: Joy, Sadness, Anger, Fear and Disgust. As she tries to adjust to moving to a new city with her family, Joy and Sadness try to restore the balance among her emotions.

The Latin American Spanish title is “Intensa-mente” (Intense Mind/Intensely), while the European Spanish version is a literal translation (“Del Revés”).

Key Vocabulary:

alegría — joy, happiness desagrado * — displeasure enojo — anger miedo — fear tristeza — sadness

* Desagrado is the name given to Disgust in the Spanish versions.

20. Cars

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube

“Cars” is another Disney movie that ended up being even more popular in Spanish-speaking countries.

Lightning McQueen, a successful but arrogant race car, dreams of winning a prestigious championship. However, he gets lost on his way to the final race and ends up in a forgotten town.

As he spends time with the town’s quirky residents, including a rusty tow truck and a spirited Porsche, Lightning discovers a slower pace of life and gradually realizes that winning isn’t everything.

Key Vocabulary:

carrera — race carretera — highway coche — car ganador — winner grúa — tow truck

21. Valiente — Brave

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube

Merida from “Brave” is the first Disney princess without a love interest.

She’s a Scottish princess who would rather have freedom and adventure over royal duties and marriage. When her mother disapproves of this, she turns to an eccentric witch for help and accidentally transforms her mother into a bear. She has to reverse the spell soon, or it might become permanent.

Many of the songs in the film feature Celtic music, including “Viento y Cielo Alcanzar” (Touch the Sky).

Key Vocabulary:

arco — bow, arch Escocia — Scotland flecha — arrow hermano — brother luces — lights

22. El Jorobado de Notre Dame — The Hunchback of Notre Dame

Available on: Disney+ , YouTube

“Hunchback of Notre Dame” comes with some serious social themes. It’s based on Victor Hugo’s novel!

Quasimodo is locked up and treated cruelly by his guardian, Judge Frollo, because of his deformed appearance. Still, a gypsy dancer becomes his friend, showing him kindness and acceptance. When Judge Frollo launches a campaign against the gypsies, it’s up to Quasimodo to defy him and save the city of Paris.

“Afuera” (Out There) is Quasimodo’s ultimate song, and it’s so heartfelt that it’s even offered as a karaoke track.

Key Vocabulary:

asilo — asylum, sanctuary cabra — goat campana — bell capitán — captain catedral — cathedral

23. Lilo y Stitch — Lilo and Stitch

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

Lilo, a lonely girl living in Hawaii, adopts a ‘dog’ named Stitch. What she doesn’t know is Stitch is actually a genetically engineered alien meant to cause destruction. Despite this, Lilo refuses to give him up, and her acceptance of him starts to change him.

Whether in Spanish or English, the tagline is just as beautiful: “ Ohana significa familia, y tu familia nunca te abandona ni te olvida.” (Ohana means family. Family means nobody gets left behind or forgotten.)

Key Vocabulary:

azul — blue bailar — to dance científico — scientist, scientific extraterrestre — alien, extraterrestrial galaxia — galaxy

24. El Planeta del Tesoro — Treasure Planet

Available on: Disney+ , Amazon Prime

“Treasure Planet” is another great Disney film filled with warm, lively visuals.

Jim Hawkins, a rebellious teenager, discovers a map to the legendary Treasure Planet, which is said to hold vast riches. To find it, he goes aboard a solar-powered spaceship and joins a quirky crew as they search for the planet.

Sigo Aquí (I’m Still Here) is Jim’s theme song, and it’s a powerful ballad that expresses his inner struggles.

Key Vocabulary:

adolescente — teenager, adolescent botín — loot, booty leyenda — legend luna — moon mapa — map

25. Zootopia

Available on: Amazon Prime , YouTube , Disney+

“Zootopia” is set in a vibrant, modern city where the residents are animals.

Judy Hopp is the first rabbit to join the Zootopia Police Department. Eager to prove herself, she takes on a mysterious case where several predators disappeared unexpectedly. She partners up with Nick Wilde, a cynical fox who seems like her opposite.

Fun fact: For this film, Colombian pop superstar Shakira voices Gazelle, a famous pop singer in Zootopia. She even sings the main theme— “Intenta Todo” (Try Everything)—in both English and Spanish versions!

Key Vocabulary:

averiguar — to find out borrego — sheep conejo — rabbit flor — flower investigar — to investigate

Tips for Learning with Disney Movies in Spanish

Here are some practical tips that’ll help you make the most out of Spanish Disney movies:

  • Be mindful of which type of Spanish the movie uses . Most Disney movies come with different versions for European and Latin American Spanish , often with different translations and voice actors.
  • Pay attention to the theme songs. Disney movie songs are made for singing along to, with repetitive (and emotional) lyrics. The most popular ones have Spanish versions.
  • Start with a movie that you already know. If you’re still getting the hang of watching Spanish movies, choose a Disney movie that you’ve seen before so you’ll understand the context right away.

These Disney movies are all well-loved, with wholesome storylines and carefully crafted animation.

From classics like “Lion King” to more recent hits like “Frozen,” watching these movies in Spanish will have you immersed in the language. You might even get addicted to the Spanish soundtrack.

To keep on learning Spanish through authentic media (and pop culture), you can find more Spanish video clips on Lingflix . Lingflix takes authentic videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons. You can try Lingflix for free for 2 weeks. Check out the website or download the iOS app or Android app. P.S. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

And One More Thing…

If you've made it this far that means you probably enjoy learning Spanish with engaging material and will then love Lingflix.

Other sites use scripted content. Lingflix uses a natural approach that helps you ease into the Spanish language and culture over time. You’ll learn Spanish as it’s actually spoken by real people.

Lingflix has a wide variety of videos, as you can see here:

Lingflix brings native videos within reach with interactive transcripts. You can tap on any word to look it up instantly. Every definition has examples that have been written to help you understand how the word is used. If you see an interesting word you don’t know, you can add it to a vocab list.

Review a complete interactive transcript under the Dialogue tab, and find words and phrases listed under Vocab .

Learn all the vocabulary in any video with Lingflix’s robust learning engine. Swipe left or right to see more examples of the word you’re on.

The best part is that Lingflix keeps track of the vocabulary that you’re learning, and gives you extra practice with difficult words. It'll even remind you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. Every learner has a truly personalized experience, even if they’re learning with the same video.

Start using the Lingflix website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the Lingflix app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

ဗီဒီယိုကြည့်ရှုခြင်းကို ဘာသာစကားကျွမ်းကျင်စွာတတ်မြောက်ရာလမ်းကြောင်းအဖြစ် ပြောင်းလဲဖို့ အဆင်သင့်ဖြစ်ပြီလား။

ပျော်ရွှင်စွာဖြင့် ဘာသာစကားများ သင်ယူနေကြသည့် ထောင်နှင့်ချီသော အသုံးပြုသူများနှင့် ယခုပါဝင်လိုက်ပါ။

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အကန့်အသတ်မရှိ အားလုံးသော အင်္ဂါရပ်များကို အပြည့်အဝအသုံးပြုခွင့်