CourseVerdict

italki Portuguese Tutoring vs Super Duolingo

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 Portuguese Tutoring

4.1/ 5 · 31 opinions
23 positive6 neutral2 negative/ 31 total

Duolingo · Languages

Super Duolingo

3.5/ 5 · 47 opinions
18 positive14 neutral15 negative/ 47 total

Per-criterion

Content quality3.8 / 5

There is no italki Portuguese curriculum — lesson quality is whatever the tutor brings. Professional teachers arrive with structured grammar plans, graded readers and homework between sessions; community tutors lean on free-form conversation. Reviewers consistently describe the ceiling as high — tutors who explain grammar, everyday speech and culture in a relaxed manner — but the floor depends entirely on careful tutor selection and on the learner directing the sessions. The most useful learners pair italki with a separate resource and use the tutor to drill it, rather than expecting a syllabus. A Portuguese learner's first real decision — Brazilian versus European Portuguese — is left to the learner with no platform guidance, which makes self-direction harder than the absence of a curriculum alone would suggest.

Instructor / method4.3 / 5

The strongest dimension. italki's Portuguese pool is deep — reviewers cite 400+ tutors spanning Brazil and Portugal, so you can practise the exact variety you need, which apps almost never offer. Many hold teaching credentials; community tutors are native speakers without certification. Reviewers converge that a well-chosen Portuguese tutor is the single highest-leverage thing they did, with learners reporting fluent conversation after 70-100+ lessons with a single teacher. Verification screens out the worst, but reviewers are blunt that you may need to trial several tutors before finding one that fits your learning and personality style — the pool runs from long-time professionals to brand-new teachers, and the platform does not standardise quality.

Value for money4.4 / 5

Portuguese is one of italki's better-supplied and cheaper markets because so many tutors are based in Brazil. Brazilian community tutors run as low as $5-7/hour — one Rio-based tutor is cited at $7 for a 60-minute session — with most professional teachers landing around $10-15. European Portuguese tutors tend to run slightly higher, toward $25 at the professional end, reflecting the smaller pool. Trial lessons typically cost $5-18 so you can test a teacher before committing. No subscription required — pay per lesson. Reviewers repeatedly describe italki as an effective and affordable way to learn Portuguese, well below the cost of local classes or in-person tutoring.

Support3.6 / 5

Platform support is functional but thin, and the experience is dominated by your tutor, not italki itself. Many tutors extend support beyond live instruction with tailored study plans and homework between sessions, which reviewers value. The pre-paid credit system is the main friction: refunds are limited — trial-lesson credits can be refunded up to twice, but loaded credit and completed lessons generally are not refundable and credit cannot be withdrawn as cash, only spent on the platform. Reviewers also flag inconsistent tutor-side conditions (variable internet, background noise) and that the platform offers no placement test or progress tracking, so accountability rests entirely on the learner and tutor.

Real-world fluency4.5 / 5

The clearest signal in the sample. Real conversation with a native Portuguese speaker is the most direct path to spoken fluency, and Portuguese learners repeatedly describe italki as the step that moved them from app-bound recognition to actual conversation. italki's live tutors force you to produce Portuguese out loud, which matters especially for European Portuguese where pronunciation and reduced vowels are a major barrier. Reviewers report going from no Portuguese to conversing fluently over 166 lessons, growing confidence massively over six weeks of intensive lessons, and holding conversations with Brazilian friends across a wide range of topics while understanding films and TV. The variety choice means you practise the Portuguese you actually need — carioca Brazilian for travel and media, or Lisbon European for living in Portugal.

Content quality3.4 / 5

Vocabulary coverage is broad and the spaced repetition loop is well-built, but reviewers consistently flag missing grammar explanations, slow new-vocab introduction and shallow per-topic depth — especially noticeable past the early units.

Instructor / method3.2 / 5

There is no instructor — the method is gamified drill-and-feedback. It works as a habit engine for vocabulary, but multiple reviewers note the lessons "don't explain much unless you dig into submenus" and the website tips are stronger than the in-app teaching.

Value for money3.6 / 5

The free tier is genuinely strong and is the right starting point for most learners. Super Duolingo at roughly $13/month or $84/year mainly buys ad removal, unlimited hearts and Practice Hub — useful for heavy daily users, marginal for casual ones.

Retention & motivation4.2 / 5

The single strongest part of the product. Streaks, leaderboards, push notifications and daily quests genuinely keep people learning — multi-year streaks are common across the sample. The same gamification, though, has tipped toward attention manipulation for many long-time users.

Real-world fluency2.9 / 5

Reviewers converge that Duolingo gets motivated learners to roughly A2, occasionally B1 reading, and rarely further on its own. Hundreds-of-hours users report being unable to hold a conversation without supplementing with tutors, comprehensible input or immersion.

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