italki Japanese Tutoring vs Duolingo Japanese Course
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 Japanese Tutoring
Duolingo · Languages
Duolingo Japanese Course
Per-criterion
Highly personalised instruction: tutors build lesson content around the learner's specific goals — conversational Japanese, business Japanese, JLPT preparation, anime comprehension, kanji drilling or pronunciation correction. The content quality ceiling is as high as the tutor's quality; the floor depends on careful tutor selection. Japanese-specific reviewers consistently report that the right tutor makes the difference between structured progress and expensive conversation practice.
italki hosts professional teachers (with verified teaching credentials) and community tutors (native speakers with high language proficiency). Japanese professional teachers typically charge $25-60/hour; community tutors from $10-20/hour. The ratings system clusters heavily at 4.5-5.0 stars across both categories, making tutor selection challenging without reading lesson reviews carefully. Once the right tutor is found, instruction quality is consistently praised.
Japanese tutors start from around $10-15/hour for community tutors, with professional teachers at $25-60/hour. No subscription required — pay per lesson. Trial lessons are available at discounted rates from most tutors. For the access it provides to native Japanese speaker instruction, the per-hour cost is competitive with any alternative and significantly cheaper than local language schools or in-person tutoring.
Learning outcome depends heavily on the learner-tutor relationship. Learners who find a good tutor quickly report high engagement and consistent weekly or twice-weekly schedules; learners who need several trial lessons before finding the right match report an initial period of low motivation. The flexibility of scheduling is consistently praised — any time zone, any device, book 24-48 hours in advance.
italki's platform support handles payment, scheduling, cancellation and dispute resolution effectively. Language-learning community features (notebooks, posts, language exchange) are active but not the platform's core strength. The 24-hour cancellation window is fair; refund and rescheduling processes are reported as straightforward.
Real conversation with a native Japanese speaker is the most direct path to real-world Japanese fluency. The personalisable lesson content — which can target JLPT, business Japanese, casual conversation or any specific goal — means the skills developed are directly applicable to the learner's actual Japanese use context. Consistently the highest-rated applicability dimension across Japanese language learning resources.
Strong on the early basics — hiragana and katakana are introduced and reinforced well, and vocabulary exposure is broad. But reviewers repeatedly flag thin kanji coverage (no readings, radicals, or stroke order) and the absence of structured grammar, which matters far more for Japanese than for European languages.
There is no instructor. The method is implicit pattern-matching, and multiple reviewers say it "does not explain why sentences are structured the way they are." For a language whose grammar differs sharply from English, that hands-off approach is the app's biggest teaching weakness.
The core course is genuinely free, which is its strongest selling point — zero-cost exposure to kana and basic vocabulary. Super at ~$13/month only removes ads and adds hearts; reviewers agree it does not fix the structural gaps, so the value is in the free tier.
Gamification is the standout. Streaks, points, and reminders genuinely build a daily habit, and the spaced-repetition loop reinforces kana and vocab. The catch is the well-documented plateau around month 3-4, where recognition keeps improving but real ability stalls.
This is the weakest area. There is no genuine speaking or conversation practice — exercises ask you to repeat pre-written sentences — and reviewers agree the app cannot prepare you for real Japanese conversation. It is a supplement, not a path to fluency on its own.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.