Spanish Phrase
Es muy informativo.
Meaning
The sentence means 'It is very informative.' It is used to praise the amount or quality of information conveyed by a book, lecture, video, article, or any other content.
When to use
Use this phrase after you have consumed something that gave you a lot of useful facts or explanations—like a documentary, a news report, a classroom lesson, or a detailed guide. It works in both formal and informal settings.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Esmuyinformativo.
Ser (es)
Use the verb ser to describe inherent or permanent qualities; here it states that something is inherently informative.
Muy (adverb)
Muy intensifies adjectives; it means 'very' and does not change form.
Informativo (adjective)
Describes something that provides information; it agrees in gender and number with the noun it modifies.
🗨In Conversation
¿Qué te pareció la presentación de hoy?
What did you think of today's presentation?
Es muy informativo.
It’s very informative.
✕Common Mistakes
Está muy informativo.
Use ser (es) for permanent qualities; estar (está) would imply a temporary state, which sounds odd with 'informativo'.
Es mucho informativo.
When intensifying an adjective, use 'muy', not 'mucho'.
↔Alternatives
Es bastante informativo.
It is quite informative.
Resulta muy informativo.
It turns out to be very informative.
Tiene mucho contenido informativo.
It has a lot of informative content.
Cultural Tip
In Spanish, 'informativo' is often used for content that delivers facts or data, while 'educativo' leans more toward teaching or moral instruction. Choose 'informativo' when you want to stress the richness of information rather than the pedagogical aim. The phrase works across most Spanish‑speaking countries, but in some regions people might say 'muy útil' (very useful) as a more casual alternative.

