italki Italian Lessons (1-on-1 Tutoring) vs Preply 1-on-1 Tutoring
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 Italian Lessons (1-on-1 Tutoring)
Preply · Languages
Preply 1-on-1 Tutoring
Per-criterion
italki is a marketplace, not a fixed syllabus, so "content" means what each Italian tutor brings: their lesson plans, materials and structure. With 500-plus Italian teachers — all native speakers — reviewers consistently report well-prepared tutors who take notes, send follow-up materials and tailor lessons around your goals (grammar drilling, exam prep or pure conversation). The flip side is variance: the content is only as good as the individual you book, and there is no guaranteed progression path unless you build one with your tutor or pair the lessons with self-study.
Teaching quality is the heart of italki and the most praised — and most variable — dimension. Reviewers describe finding "extremely well-prepared" Italian tutors who are patient, encouraging and clear, with Trustpilot users naming specific teachers (Roberta, Paola, Giusy) for engaging, effective lessons. The recurring caveat is that quality is uneven: one well-rated tutor "seemed to be watching the clock," and several reviewers stress that ratings are inflated because learners are reluctant to leave negative reviews. Trial lessons are the universally recommended way to manage this.
The pay-per-lesson model is the strongest value point: no subscription, no contract, and Italian lessons typically run roughly USD 8-20/hour for community tutors and USD 15-40/hour for professional teachers, with trial lessons discounted. Reviewers repeatedly call it "an easy and affordable way to converse with native speakers" and far cheaper per hour of actual speaking time than group classes. The main value frictions are the no-refund credit policy, payment-processing fees, and irregular lesson prices against round-figure deposits that leave odd balances on the account.
For a tutoring platform, "practice quality" is the live speaking time itself, and this is where italki shines for Italian. Reviewers calculate they speak far more per hour than in group or university classes (one cites roughly nine minutes of speaking per student in a group session versus a full hour one-on-one), and value exposure to a "wider variety of people whose regional accents, interests and backgrounds differ." The limitation everyone notes: results only come if you do self-study between lessons — booking sessions and hoping the language sticks does not work.
italki is built around the single most overlooked skill — speaking — and reviewers credit it with real conversational gains: better pronunciation and more confident speaking within about three months of one weekly lesson plus self-study, everyday conversations by six months. It exposes learners to authentic native Italian and regional accents you would not get from an app. The honest ceiling, noted by FluentU, is that it is "the closest thing you can get to a real-world environment online" but still not the spontaneous, unscripted Italian of a market stall or café.
No curriculum — content is whatever the tutor brings. Preply's package model nudges teachers toward longer engagements and marginally more structured plans than italki's pay-per-lesson default, but variance is still large and the platform does not vet pedagogy.
Broad global tutor pool, strong supply in English-as-a-second-language and major European languages. Reviewers find tutors for less-common languages like Khmer at $10-15/hour. Vetting remains the student's job — most learners trial 2-4 tutors before settling.
Per-hour rates ($10-30) overlap with italki, but subscription-style packages and aggressive cancellation friction pull effective value down. Reviewers describe pricing that "always comes up higher, never lower" and packages that can expire on tutor reschedules.
The subscription mechanic is the biggest contrast with italki — pre-paid weekly packages create real commitment that helps learners who would otherwise drift. The same mechanic frustrates anyone who changes tutors or pauses; works for steady users, against churning ones.
Same speaking-and-correction engine as italki and the same outcomes — multiple Hacker News commenters credit weekly Preply tutors with breaking them out of Duolingo plateaus into actual conversation. The product is the tutor, and the tutor works.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.