Recomendations for places and ways to achieve spanish language immersion in south america

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Immersion is not just about being surrounded by the language but having to practice it constantly. Even in Spain, where I've spend most summers for over a decade, you should have had plenty of opportunity to be immersed. In a professional setting, many would have sufficiently good English to switch over when you struggled but the are so many more people who would not be able to switch to English. You mostly have to make an effort to talk to such people.

South America certainly has a higher percentage of people who don't understand English but you could easily fall into the same pattern of surrounding yourself and interacting by people who do. Generally, the more remote the area the less English is spoken, so by heading to smaller communities, you will get more forced immersion.

Peru and central Ecuador speak a clearer Spanish then most other South American countries. It is easier to learn here and you would have to practice when interacting with people in smaller towns. I was just in Cuenca and Loja a few weeks ago and did not hear any English at all other than a few tourists going through a town plaza. Cuenca used to have many more English-speakers before the pandemic because it is such an easy to access city and is safer than most other major cities in Ecuador. Peru has a huge tourism industry and so if you stay around the main corridor, it will be too easy for people to switch to English. You would have to further off the beaten path there. English is even more rare in Bolivia but I don't know how it compares for co-working spaces. Same goes for Paraguay. Argentina speaks a quite different Spanish and so I would not try to complete learning Spanish there. If you are willing to extend your search to Central America, Guatemala is a wonderful opportunity for immersion. English is rarely spoken and Spanish is very clear.

The main strategy is to go where people cannot communicate in English and ensure that you must interact with them. This became clear to me when I tried to learn Portuguese by going to Brazil. I spend a month watching shows on Netflix with Portuguese audio. Then I flew to Rio and started exploring Brazil. Each time when I had to talk to someone, I started in Portuguese. Within 2-3 sentences they switched to English, this happened from Rio to Salvador but once I reached further north, there was virtually no more English, some people switched actually Spanish, but with most the conversation went on in broken Portuguese. People encouraged me commenting that I spoke a little Portuguese, week 3 arrived and they said I almost spoke Portuguese, by week 7, I learned a new word when someone said that my Portuguese was Γ³timo (great)! To get there I had spend hours talking with people on the bus, plane, restaurants, hotels and even sitting on top of their buggy while they gave me a ride in Fernando de Norohna.

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