CourseVerdict

Learn HTML vs Codecademy Learn JavaScript

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

Codecademy · Web Development

Learn HTML

3.8/ 5 · 26 opinions
14 positive7 neutral5 negative/ 26 total

Codecademy · Web Development

Codecademy Learn JavaScript

3.5/ 5 · 32 opinions
16 positive9 neutral7 negative/ 32 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.0 / 5

The curriculum covers HTML elements and structure, tables, forms with HTML5 validation, and semantic HTML across roughly four lessons and seven-to-nine hours of work. Reviewers consistently call it clear, well-structured, and genuinely understandable for people who have never touched code. The honest ceiling is depth: it is a fundamentals tour, not an advanced reference, and it teaches markup in isolation from the CSS and JavaScript that turn markup into a finished site.

Instructor3.6 / 5

There is no single named instructor — Codecademy uses a curriculum-by-committee model delivered through short written lessons, a three-panel code editor, and an AI Learning Assistant that gives instant feedback. That format is excellent for syntax drilling and keeps beginners moving, but several reviewers note the lack of a human voice explaining the why, and that the auto-grader can be unforgivingly strict about exact syntax.

Career impact3.2 / 5

As a standalone credential the impact is modest. The certificate is paywalled and, as multiple reviewers stress, not accredited — proof of completion rather than a verified qualification employers weigh heavily. HTML fundamentals are a real and necessary first rung, but on their own they do not make anyone employable; the career value comes only when this feeds into CSS, JavaScript, and project work.

Practical projects3.4 / 5

The lessons interleave guided practice and mini-projects, and learners praise how the practice makes retention noticeably easier. But the independent, portfolio-building projects are a Pro feature, and the free tier is repeatedly described as failing to guide you on applying the knowledge once the lessons end.

Value4.3 / 5

The core Learn HTML lessons are genuinely free, which is the single strongest argument in the corpus. The certificate of completion and the portfolio-grade projects require a Plus or Pro subscription (roughly $15-$40/month depending on plan and billing). For a fundamentals intro the free tier alone is hard to beat on price, though reviewers are clear that free content stops short of the projects that consolidate learning.

Content quality3.6 / 5

Eleven lessons covering variables, data types, conditionals, functions, loops, arrays, objects, and iterators — a clean, well-sequenced syntax tour for absolute beginners. The ceiling is scope: it teaches the language in isolation, not the DOM or the browser where most beginners expect to use it.

Instructor3.4 / 5

No single instructor — the curriculum-by-committee model means clear, bite-sized written lessons with instant feedback, but no voice walking you through the why. Strong for syntax drilling, weak for the conceptual glue that turns drills into understanding.

Value for money4.2 / 5

The core lessons are genuinely free, which is the single strongest argument in the corpus. Pro ($24/mo) unlocks the certificate, practice projects, and quizzes. For a syntax intro the free tier alone is hard to beat on price-to-value.

Projects3.2 / 5

Mini-projects (a whale-speech translator, a console cash register) are fun and confidence-building, but the meatier practice projects sit behind Pro. Reviewers repeatedly note you finish without knowing how to start your own unguided project.

Real-world use3.0 / 5

The loudest reservation in the corpus. Exercises run in a sandbox console and focus on syntax, not the DOM — so learners reach the end able to pass challenges but not to wire JavaScript into a real web page without further study.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.