100 in Swedish
Nearby Swedish Numbers
100 in Other Languages
About 100 in Swedish
When speaking Swedish, 100 is expressed as hundra. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is hundrade.
100 divides evenly by two. In Swedish-speaking environments, 100 is the kind of number you'll hear and need to use regularly, from market prices to building floor numbers.
Numbers such as 100 are foundational to Swedish fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.
Learning Numbers in Swedish
What makes Swedish numbers challenging
The two-gender system for 'one' (en/ett) requires knowing noun genders. The pronunciation of sju (7) uses a uniquely Swedish 'sj' sound that does not exist in most other languages and is notoriously difficult for non-natives. Eleven (elva) and twelve (tolv) are irregular. Swedish compound numbers are written as single words (tjugofyra = 24), which can look intimidating. The similarity between sex (6) and sju (7) — both short words starting with 's' — causes frequent confusion.
Tips for learning Swedish numbers
Swedish numbers are very regular after 12 — focus on memorizing 1-12 and the tens, then the compound pattern handles everything else. Practice the 'sj' sound in sju (7) — it is one of the most distinctive sounds in Swedish. For the en/ett distinction, learn common noun genders gradually. Swedish numbers are nearly identical to Norwegian, so learning one language's numbers gives you a head start on the other. Prices in kronor (SEK) make excellent everyday practice.