The molecular structures, vibrational spectra (IR and Raman), electronic spectra (UV–Vis and DOS), and NMR spectra (13C and 1H) of p-anisaldehyde, m-anisaldehyde, and o-anisaldehyde have been studied by using the B3LYP density functional and the 6-311++G** basis set. While p-anisaldehyde has been found to contain two stable conformers at room temperature, m-anisaldehyde and o-anisaldehyde contain four stable conformers. In agreement with the calculated ground-state energetics and small transition barriers, the comparison of the experimental and calculated spectra of the anisaldehydes indicates equilibrium between all conformers at room temperature. However, the two conformers of o-anisaldehyde, in which the methoxy group lies out of the ring plane, are too rare at the equilibrium. The equilibrium conditions of the conformers of the anisaldehyde isomers have been shown readily accessible through UV–Vis and 13C NMR spectral studies but requiring very detailed vibrational analyses. The effect of the solvent has been found to red-shift the electronic absorption bands and to make the anisaldehydes more reactive and soft. Molecular electrostatic potential maps of the anisaldehydes show that their oxygen atoms are the sites for nucleophilic reactivity. Compared with the most sophisticated NBO method, ESP charges have been found mostly reliable while Mulliken charges fail badly with the present large 6-311++G** basis set. The present calculations reproduce not only the experimental spectral characteristics of the anisaldehydes but also reveal their several structural features.