Busuu Premium vs Babbel English
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Busuu · Languages
Busuu Premium
Babbel · Languages
Babbel English
Per-criterion
Busuu's CEFR-aligned curriculum (A1–B2, with some C1 paths) and grammar integration earn consistent praise from reviewers. Multiple independent blog reviewers describe the grammar lessons as "accurate, easy to understand, yet short and sweet" and praise the use of native-speaker video clips throughout lessons. The main weakness is quality inconsistency across languages — Spanish and French are comprehensive, while Chinese, Turkish, and Arabic are notably thinner.
There is no live instructor, but the community correction system acts as a substitute: completed writing and speaking exercises are sent to native speakers for feedback. In popular languages like Spanish this works well; in less-common languages (Dutch, Turkish), reviewers note that few native correctors are active and some exercises never receive a response. AI-powered grammar tracking and smart review are positives, but unreliable speech recognition drags down the speaking-practice dimension.
The annual plan at roughly $60–$70/year (approximately $5–$6/month) is frequently described as affordable relative to competitors, and Busuu regularly offers 33–50% discounts. However, the free tier is so limited — locked out after lesson 5, no grammar lessons, intrusive ads — that the paywall is effectively mandatory. Severe customer-service complaints around auto-renewal charges, refusal to refund, and opaque cancellation flows materially hurt the value-for-money perception for a significant minority of users.
Busuu's personalized study plans and goal-setting improve habit formation, and the community feedback loop creates a social incentive to keep submitting exercises. However, the app lacks Duolingo's gamification engine — no streaks by default, no leaderboards — so motivation relies more on personal discipline. Reviewers who used Busuu for 300+ days (one Medium writer logged 380 consecutive days) credit the community feature as the main hook; casual users tend to drift without an external forcing function.
Reviewers broadly agree that Busuu builds solid reading, writing, and listening foundations at the beginner-to-intermediate level, and the practical, scenario-based lesson themes (ordering at a restaurant, discussing travel) feel relevant to real life. The hard ceiling is speaking: multiple reviewers from different sources note that completing every Busuu unit does not prepare you for real-time conversation, and one 2026 review summarised this crisply — "you can complete every Busuu unit and still struggle to order coffee." Content stops at B2, so advanced learners outgrow it quickly.
The English course is built by linguists and scaffolds grammar into real-life dialogues — ordering, travel, work, meeting people. Reviewers consistently call the curriculum clear, progressive and conversation-first. The main gap is that material thins out and feels repetitive once you pass A2/B1.
No live teacher — Babbel's method is the "instructor". Direct grammar explanations and scaffolded dialogues are widely described as feeling "designed by language instructors" rather than statisticians. Strong for self-learners, but there is no one-on-one correction in the base product.
At roughly $8-15/month (cheaper on longer plans, with a lifetime option) it is solid value for structured learning, and EU funding historically kept it competitive. The drag is the lack of any permanent free tier versus Duolingo, and a curriculum that plateaus after you finish your language's tree.
Short, varied 10-15 minute lessons and frequent review keep daily practice sticky for adults who dislike streak pressure. The flip side, noted repeatedly, is that with no gamification you must "bring your own motivation" — some learners quietly drift off.
Standard email/help-centre support for the app; no live tutor in the base subscription. Live conversation and teacher feedback sit behind the separate Babbel Live tier (around $99/month). For the core English app, support is adequate but not a standout.
Dialogues teach English you would actually use and build early speaking confidence, and the formal/business slant suits work and travel. But speech recognition only gives pass/fail feedback and there is little genuine conversation, so the app alone won't get you to natural casual fluency.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.