italki Korean (1-on-1 Online Tutors) vs Preply Spanish 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 Korean (1-on-1 Online Tutors)
Preply · Languages
Preply Spanish Tutoring
Per-criterion
The most-repeated structural criticism is that italki has no standardised Korean curriculum — what happens in a lesson is entirely up to the individual tutor you book, so there is no guaranteed step-by-step path from Hangul through TOPIK. Reviewers note you can request structured grammar, relaxed conversation, or test prep, but the coherence of that plan depends on the teacher. Better tutors take notes, send extra materials, and build a syllabus around you; community tutors often run unstructured conversation. The platform supplies free side resources (a notebook for corrections, language exchange, podcasts), but the core "content" is the tutor, not a designed course.
This is italki's strongest dimension and where the praise clusters. Korean tutor numbers have roughly doubled to nearly 600, the platform vets every teacher, and learners repeatedly report tutors who are punctual, well-prepared, take notes during lessons and send follow-up materials. The honest caveat every critical source raises is variance: quality is genuinely a "lucky dip" because anyone vetted can teach, ranging from certified professionals with thousands of lessons to university students earning side income. One blogger went through eight tutors before finding two they kept. The strong average hides real tutor-to-tutor spread.
Headline pricing is very affordable — Korean community tutors run roughly $5-16/hour and professional teachers $10-40+, with discounted 30-minute trial lessons around $5-8 to sample fit. Cumulative cost is where opinions split: two professional lessons a week can run $200+/month, native-from-US/UK/Australia tutors rarely offer the cheap trial, and reviewers flag processing fees that only appear after you pick a class. Whether it is "good value" depends heavily on whether you book a budget conversation partner or a premium certified teacher, and how many trials you burn finding a fit.
For a tutoring marketplace, the equivalent of "projects" is the practical output of each session — homework, the corrected notebook, follow-up materials, and structured TOPIK or conversation prep. Reviewers consistently say the best tutors send extra resources and notes that you would never get from a textbook, which makes lessons feel productive rather than a chat. But because there is no platform-mandated assignment system, the quality of this practical output is tutor-dependent: some run pure free-talk with no homework, others deliver a genuine personalised study plan.
The single best reason to use italki for Korean is live, one-on-one speaking time. Reviewers repeatedly say they speak far more per hour than in any group class, get instant correction the moment a grammar point or pronunciation won't stick, and practise with native speakers who are otherwise hard to find in everyday life. For building conversational confidence and TOPIK speaking readiness in Korean, this interactive practice is exactly what learners credit with real progress that apps and textbooks cannot replicate.
Like every marketplace, Preply has no curriculum of its own — content quality is whatever the tutor brings. Many Spanish tutors build a tailored lesson plan after the trial, and the platform nudges them to set goals and track progress, which gives Preply slightly more structure than a pure pay-as-you-go board. The ceiling is high (DELE prep, grammar plans, regional-dialect work), but the floor depends entirely on careful tutor selection and on the learner directing the sessions.
Preply's Spanish pool is enormous — over 13,000 tutors spanning certified teachers and native community tutors across Spain and Latin America. A well-chosen tutor is repeatedly named the single highest-leverage decision. The catch is vetting: reviewers note Preply does not control what or how tutors teach and not all tutors are certified, so the gap between an excellent teacher and a merely adequate one is real and falls on the learner to screen via trial lessons.
Spanish is one of Preply's deepest and cheapest markets — classes start around $3 and average roughly $15-16/hour, comparable to italki. Value is dented by two policies reviewers dislike: lessons are bought in packages (subscription credits) up front rather than one at a time, and tutors are not paid for the trial lesson. For committed weekly learners the per-lesson math is strong; for casual or irregular learners the credit model creates friction.
The subscription/weekly-credit model is the most polarising feature, and it cuts both ways on retention. Learners who pre-commit to a recurring slot describe it as the most durable Spanish habit they built — committing to a schedule means flaking less. Learners with busy, rotating schedules find the same model strict, and several flagged auto-renewal and expiring credits as a drag. Net positive for habit formation, with real friction for irregular schedules.
Scheduling, messaging and tutor-matching are reported as smooth, and the trial-lesson flow is praised. The weak spot is billing and cancellation: the cancellation window is strict, and a recurring complaint across user reviews is being charged after cancelling or struggling to stop the subscription. This is the most-cited support frustration and the main reason this score sits below italki's.
The clearest strength. Regular 1-on-1 conversation with a native Spanish speaker is the most direct route from app-bound recognition to real speaking, and learners describe twice-weekly sessions cementing concepts they had struggled with and raising confidence sharply. The format exposes gaps (preterite at speed, ser/estar, subjunctive) that apps never surface, and tutors adapt vocabulary to each learner's actual goals.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.