
May 01, 2026
Prepositions in, on, at: a simple explanation with examples
Prepositions **in**, **on**, and **at** are one of the most common sources of mistakes for English learners. In Russian, we often say “в”, “на”, and “у”, but in English the choice depends on how native speakers imagine the place or time.
Don’t try to find one universal rule. It’s better to learn a few fixed patterns and common phrases.
In: inside a space or period
**In** is often used when we imagine something inside boundaries:
- in a room — в комнате;
- in a city — в городе;
- in a country — в стране;
- in a bag — в сумке.
With time, **in** often means “inside a period”:
- in the morning;
- in May;
- in 2026;
- in winter.
The phrase **in the morning** is more useful than an abstract rule. Add it to your flashcards as a whole phrase.
On: on a surface or on a specific day
**On** is often connected with a surface:
- on the table;
- on the wall;
- on the floor;
- on the page.
With time, **on** is used with days and dates:
- on Monday;
- on Friday evening;
- on May 1;
- on my birthday.
Important: we say **on Monday**, but **in the morning**. So it’s better to memorize ready-made combinations.
At: a point, an address, exact time
**At** often shows a point:
- at home;
- at work;
- at school;
- at the station;
- at the door.
With time, **at** is used for exact time:
- at 7 o'clock;
- at noon;
- at night;
- at the weekend in British English.
Mini cheat sheet
For place:
- **in** — inside: in a room;
- **on** — on a surface: on the table;
- **at** — a point: at the station.
For time:
- **in** — months, years, parts of the day: in April, in 2026;
- **on** — days and dates: on Monday, on April 5;
- **at** — exact time: at 8 pm.
How to practice
Don’t do 50 exercises in a row. Take 10 phrases from your own life:
- I work at home.
- I live in Moscow.
- I have a meeting on Friday.
- I wake up at 7.
- The book is on the table.
Repeat them in flashcards until the preposition starts to sound natural.
The main thing
**In**, **on**, and **at** should be learned not as translations, but as sets of common patterns. The more ready-made phrases you see and remember, the less you have to guess.