Duolingo turned language learning into something people do on the bus. The Pittsburgh-based company, public since 2021, offers structured courses in over 40 languages through five-minute lessons that mix translation, listening, and speaking drills, all tied together by streaks, leagues, and an insistent green owl.
The pedagogy is real, if bounded. Courses follow a curriculum aligned to the CEFR framework, and the company publishes efficacy research on its site. Nobody becomes fluent from Duolingo alone, but as a daily habit-builder that takes you from zero to a solid A2 or B1 in a major language, it works, and the free tier remains one of the most generous in education apps.
Building a daily habit from zero
The streak mechanic is the product's core invention. Lessons fit into gaps of a few minutes, and the app's reminders are famously persistent. For learners who have failed to stick with textbooks, this structure alone can be worth the install.
Preparing for a trip
A few months of consistent practice covers greetings, ordering, directions, and basic reading in most major courses. The speaking exercises, while forgiving, at least get your mouth moving before you land.
Supplementing a real course
Students taking classroom language courses use Duolingo for vocabulary reinforcement. Duolingo for Schools lets teachers assign lessons and track progress, and the classroom version disables ads for students.
Bite-size structured lessons
Each unit teaches a small set of vocabulary and grammar through varied exercise types. Mistakes cost hearts on the free tier, which caps how long a session can go wrong before you take a break or review.
Streaks, leagues, and quests
Daily streaks, weekly leaderboards, and timed challenges do the motivational heavy lifting. They are effective and occasionally manipulative; the app is upfront that engagement is the product.
Listening and speaking practice
Exercises include listening comprehension and speech recognition. Pronunciation grading is lenient, so treat it as practice rather than assessment.
Stories and DuoRadio
Short interactive stories and podcast-style audio episodes bridge the gap between drills and real comprehension in the larger courses. These are among the most useful parts of the app and much of this content is free.