Present Perfect Tense

Often, the action being described is still continuing into the present (e.g., John continues to take Sarah's advice). This is how the present perfect tense differs from the simple past tense.

Table of Contents

More Examples of the Present Perfect Tense

Video Lesson

Here is a short, 1-minute video on the present perfect tense. video lesson

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Comparing the Present Perfect Tense and the Simple Past Tense

Forming the Present Perfect Tense

The present perfect tense is formed: "has" or "have" [past participle]

Forming the Past Participle (Regular Verbs)

If it's a regular verb, the past participle is the same as the simple past tense. In other words, it is formed like this:

Forming the Past Participle (Irregular Verbs)

The Negative Version

If you need the negative version, you can use the following construction: "has not" or "have not" [past participle]

The Question Version

If you need to ask a question, you can use the following word order for a yes/no question: "has" or "have" [past participle] [question word] "has" or "have" [past participle]

Infographic for the Present Perfect Tense

present perfect tense

Interactive Verb Conjugation Tables

The tables below show all 12 tenses so you can see the present perfect tense among the other tenses. (You can change the verb by clicking one of the green buttons.)

Top 10 Regular Verbs

want look use work start try ask need talk help

Top 10 Irregular Verbs

see say go come know get give become find think

All 4 Past Tenses

The simple past tense is for a completed activity that happened in the past.

The past progressive tense is for an ongoing activity in the past. Often, it is used to set the scene for another action.

The past perfect tense is for emphasizing that an action was completed before another took place. The past perfect progressive tense is for showing that an ongoing action in the past has ended.

All 4 Present Tenses

The simple present tense is mostly for a fact or a habit. The present progressive tense is for an ongoing action in the present.

The present perfect tense is for an action that began in the past. (Often, the action continues into the present.)

The present perfect progressive tense is for a continuous activity that began in the past and continues into the present (or finished very recently).

All 4 Future Tenses

The simple future tense is for an action that will occur in the future. The future progressive tense is for an ongoing action that will occur in the future. The future perfect tense is for an action that will have been completed at some point in the future.

The future perfect progressive tense is for an ongoing action that will be completed at some specified time in the future.

The Other Present Tenses

The present perfect tense is one of four present tenses. This table shows all four of the present tenses:

The 4 Present Tenses Example
simple present tense I go
present progressive tense I am going
present perfect tense I have gone
present perfect progressive tense I have been going

This page was written by Craig Shrives.