italki Chinese Tutoring vs Babbel French
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
italki · Languages
italki Chinese Tutoring
Babbel · Languages
Babbel French
Per-criterion
There is no italki Chinese curriculum — content is whatever the tutor brings. Professional teachers arrive with HSK/HSKK prep plans, tone drills, character worksheets and homework; community tutors lean on free-form conversation. Mandarin reviewers note the ceiling is high (tone correction, pinyin-to-character bridging, business Chinese, exam prep) but the floor depends entirely on tutor selection and on the learner directing the sessions. Tones, characters and grammar internalisation still require structured self-study between lessons.
The strongest dimension. italki's Mandarin pool exceeds 1,000 teachers spanning professional teachers with verified credentials and native community tutors, roughly three-quarters from mainland China with a smaller cohort from Taiwan. Reviewers converge that a well-chosen tutor who corrects tones in real time is the single highest-leverage thing they did. Verification screens out the worst, but the gap between an excellent teacher and a merely adequate one is real, and personality fit matters as much as credentials.
Mandarin is one of italki's best-supplied and cheapest tutor markets. Mainland-China community tutors often run $5-10/hour (trial lessons from $5); professional teachers $15-40, and Taiwan-based teachers start higher (around $15 trial, $30/hour). No subscription — pay per lesson. Reviewers repeatedly call $10/hour for a native Mandarin tutor one of the best deals in language learning, far below local classes. The China/Taiwan price-and-accent split is a real decision to make before booking.
No streaks or gamification — you book and show up, or you don't. Learners who pre-commit to a weekly slot describe it as the most durable Mandarin habit they built; without a schedule it lapses. The pre-paid credit system acts as a mild commitment device. The lack of a built-in progression path is the most-cited drag on long-term motivation, and Mandarin's long runway (FSI estimates ~2,200 hours to professional proficiency) makes a sustained habit especially hard.
Platform support handles payment, scheduling, cancellation and dispute resolution effectively. The 24-hour cancellation window is fair and rescheduling is reported as straightforward. The robust teacher filtering (language, lesson type, price, time, origin country) is repeatedly praised as the feature that makes finding a Mandarin tutor manageable. The main support gripe is the no-refund-on-loaded-credit policy.
The clearest signal in the sample. Real conversation with a native Mandarin speaker who corrects tones and pronunciation in real time is the most direct path to spoken fluency, and learners repeatedly describe italki as the step that moved them from app-bound recognition to actual conversation. Tones and pronunciation are the single biggest stumbling block in Mandarin, and they are precisely what a live tutor surfaces and fixes that apps cannot. Several reviewers report HSK progress after consistent use.
Lessons are designed by linguists and scaffold grammar into real-life dialogues with a strong spaced-review system. Reviewers liken the French tree to a digital A1-B2 textbook. The main gap is thinner material once you pass the beginner tracks.
No live teacher — the "instructor" is Babbel's method. Short, direct grammar tips and scaffolded dialogues are widely called effective and well-paced for self-learners. The method is strong but offers no one-on-one correction or live conversation.
At roughly $8-15/month it is cheaper than Pimsleur or Rosetta Stone for comparable structure. Some reviewers still find the monthly fee steep versus free Duolingo, and the absence of any permanent free tier is the main drag.
Short 10-15 minute lessons, varied drill types and frequent review keep daily habits sticky without aggressive streak pressure. The calmer, ad-free design suits adults but motivates less by gamification than Duolingo.
Dialogues teach French you would actually use, building real confidence to A2/B1. But speaking practice is limited — there are no full simulated conversations — so the app alone won't carry you to fluency past B1.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.