Duolingo Alternative

Looking for a Duolingo Alternative for Speaking? Here's the Honest Take

Duolingo is genuinely good at some things. Building a daily habit and a vocabulary base is one of them. Getting you to actually speak in real conversations is not. If you've kept your streak alive for months but still can't hold a real conversation, this is for you.

Browser conversation demo coming soon.

Give credit where it's due

What Duolingo is actually good at

Let's be fair: Duolingo is excellent at building a habit. The streaks, the reminders, the bite-sized lessons — they get people to show up daily, which is half the battle in language learning. It's also a solid way to absorb early vocabulary and basic grammar patterns.

If you're starting from zero, that's a real head start. The problem isn't that Duolingo is bad. It's that it's optimized for recognition and retention, not for the messy, real-time skill of speaking.

The limitation

Where it falls short for speaking

  1. It's mostly recognition

    Tapping the right tiles trains you to recognize Spanish, not to produce it from scratch in conversation.

  2. Answers are scripted

    There's one correct response. Real conversation is open-ended, and that's the skill you need.

  3. Speaking exercises are limited

    Reading a sentence aloud isn't the same as forming your own thoughts under real-time pressure.

  4. No real back-and-forth

    You never have to react to something unexpected, which is exactly what trips people up in real life.

Side by side

Duolingo vs. conversation-first practice

Two tools for two different jobs. Here's how they compare for building speaking ability.

Vocabulary apps (Duolingo, etc.)Conversation practice (Parla)
Main skill trainedRecognition & vocabularyProduction & recall
FormatScripted exercisesOpen-ended conversation
Best forBeginners, habit-buildingIntermediate+ who need to speak
Handles the unexpectedNo — one right answerYes — real back-and-forth
Feedback on speakingMinimalFull post-session debrief

The move

What to use instead (or alongside it)

  1. 1

    Keep the vocab base

    If Duolingo built your foundation, great. You don't have to throw that away.

  2. 2

    Add real speaking reps

    Shift your time toward producing the language in actual conversations — that's the missing piece.

  3. 3

    Practice reacting, not reciting

    Choose a tool where you respond to the unexpected, not where you pick from set answers.

  4. 4

    Get feedback on output

    Use something that tells you what you got wrong when you spoke, not just whether you tapped right.

Try it now

The kind of practice Duolingo can't give you

No tiles, no set answer. Just respond out loud, in your own words.

  • ¿Por qué empezaste a aprender español?

    Why did you start learning Spanish?

  • ¿Qué es lo más difícil del idioma para ti?

    What's the hardest part of the language for you?

  • ¿Qué te gustaría poder decir que todavía no puedes?

    What would you like to be able to say that you can't yet?

Where Parla fits

Parla is the speaking practice Duolingo is missing

Not a replacement for building vocabulary — a replacement for the part where you actually learn to talk.

  • Open-ended conversation

    Respond to real, unscripted prompts instead of choosing from set answers.

  • For learners who know some Spanish

    Built for intermediate and advanced learners ready to use what they know.

  • Corrections after you speak

    Get a clear debrief on grammar, vocabulary, and phrasing — real feedback on real output.

  • No judgment, unlimited reps

    Practice as much as you want, fumbles and all, with no streak anxiety.

Try the speaking practice your streak never gave you

Keep the vocabulary. Add the conversation. Have your first real one in five minutes.