💡Both tenses talk about the past, but they are used in different situations. The key is understanding when and why we use each one!
| Feature | Present Perfect | Past Simple |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Action connects past and present – result or experience matters now | Action happened in the past – finished, no connection to now |
| Time Expression | Unfinished period / no exact time: ever, never, just, already, yet, lately, recently, so far, up to now, today, this week/month/year, since, for, in the last few days/weeks/months/years | Finished time / exact moment: yesterday, last night/week/month/year, ago, in 2018, on Monday, when I was a child, two days ago, this morning (if it's finished), the other day, then |
| Experience | Used to talk about something you have done at least once in your life (time not important) | Not used for general experience – only for specific past events |
| Ongoing Actions | Started in the past and still continuing: uses for / since | Already finished in the past |
| Result Now | Past action has an effect now | No current effect – finished action |
| Structure | have / has + past participle | verb + -ed (regular) / 2nd form (irregular) |
🔗Use the Present Perfect when a past action has a connection to the present moment. The result, experience, or effect is important now.
📝Examples with Time Expressions:
🕰️Use the Past Simple for actions that happened and finished at a specific time in the past. There is no connection to now.
📝Examples with Time Expressions:
🆚Compare these sentences: