Preply German Tutoring vs Babbel Russian
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Preply · Languages
Preply German Tutoring
Babbel · Languages
Babbel Russian
Per-criterion
Preply's model is fully personalised 1-on-1 video lessons rather than a fixed curriculum, which the nocramming review rates as "effective for language learning." Strong German tutors deliver a structured exam-prep plan, per-lesson feedback documents, and heavy speaking practice — the preply.guide German guide recommends two 50-minute lessons weekly plus daily listening as the proven format. The weakness is that structure is entirely tutor-dependent: there is no platform-enforced syllabus, so a weak or disorganised tutor leaves the learner without a roadmap. The preply.guide warns against tutors with "generic profile descriptions" and "no stated teaching methodology," which is a real risk in a marketplace this large.
Preply lists 3,000+ German tutors, ranging from native speakers and hobbyists to certified Goethe-Institut and telc examiners, per the preply.guide German tutor breakdown. Standard-tier tutors (50–200 reviews, 4.85★+ averages) cost $18–$28/hour, and exam specialists run $55+/hour. The dominant theme across Trustpilot and the Deutschable analysis is that teaching quality itself is rarely the problem — the Deutschable review notes "nearly no complaints about teachers' personality and teaching styles." EduReviewer corroborates with student feedback like "tutors here are really qualified and have a good approach." The score is held below 4.5 because quality is genuinely inconsistent: success "depends heavily on luck in finding a compatible tutor," and one EduReviewer student reported changing six teachers in eight months before finding a fit.
On raw price, Preply is competitive: German lessons start around $7/hour for new tutors and sit at $18–$28/hour for experienced ones, far below in-person German schools. Preply's own efficiency study claims learners progressed "three times faster than industry expectations" with 94% reporting improved fluency after 24+ lessons. The value score is dragged down by the subscription mechanics rather than the per-hour rate: lessons are billed every 28 days, unused credits expire at the end of the cycle (confirmed in Preply's own Help Center), and the myengineeringbuddy review flags that "cost of the same classes starts to increase after a few sessions" as tutors raise rates. Trial lessons are paid, not free.
German exam preparation is one of Preply's stronger use cases. The platform has dedicated Goethe-Zertifikat and telc tutors, many of whom hold German-teaching degrees and exam-rater experience and use official exam materials. Tutor profiles and Preply's telc course page document students who "obtained the Telc B1 certificate with tutor support" and one who "prepared for the Goethe B2 exam within a month while overcoming fear of speaking." Exam-track lessons typically cost 20–30% more than conversational tutoring. The score reflects that outcomes are strong with the right specialist but require the learner to vet the tutor's actual exam credentials rather than trusting the marketplace blindly.
This is Preply's weakest dimension and the single largest source of negative reviews. Across Trustpilot (via Brighterly), nocramming, and myengineeringbuddy, the recurring complaints are confusing subscriptions, lesson-credit expiry, repeat charges, a stringent refund policy, and slow or AI-driven customer support. One Trustpilot reviewer reported "basically AI is replying to most messages and then they stop replying." Refunds are discretionary — "issued if the tutor agrees to do so, and there is no obligation on tutors to provide refunds." Tutor no-shows on unpaid trials are also reported. These billing and support frictions, not teaching quality, define most 1-star reviews.
Russian is one of Babbel's harder, less-resourced languages. The course handles the absolute-beginner phase well — gradual Cyrillic onboarding, an in-lesson Russian keyboard, and grammar woven into short dialogues — but reviewers who finished the whole tree report that explanations thin out after the first units and the later course leans heavily on single-word vocabulary drills. The notoriously complex Russian case system and perfective/imperfective verb aspect are introduced but not fully taught, so depth past A2 is the recurring weakness.
No live teacher — the "instructor" is Babbel's method. For Russian the short, direct grammar tips are valued precisely because the grammar is intimidating, and a native-speaker reviewer confirmed the app breaks difficult structures down without overwhelming beginners. The same method offers no one-on-one correction, and the deeper Slavic grammar that a human tutor would unpack is left underexplained.
Subscription runs roughly $8-18/month depending on plan length, cheaper on annual or lifetime commitments, with no permanent free tier beyond a single trial lesson per course. For Russian specifically the value question is sharper than for Spanish or Italian — the course is shallower, so learners pay a similar price for less total content and will likely need other resources to progress past the beginner stage.
The 10-15 minute lesson format keeps daily Russian practice sustainable, which matters more for a hard language where motivation tends to flag early. Varied drills — reading, listening, fill-in-the-blank, dialogues — keep sessions from feeling like rote memorisation in the early units. Once the course shifts to vocabulary-only drills later on, several reviewers found engagement dropped.
Email-only customer support with no live chat or phone line. The Russian course is maintained and works reliably across platforms, and the in-lesson Cyrillic keyboard removes a real setup friction for beginners. There is no in-app community or live tutoring, so learners who need conversation practice or grammar help must add italki or Preply as a separate tool.
Builds practical survival Russian — greetings, directions, everyday phrases — and a solid reading foundation in Cyrillic to roughly A2. A native-speaker reviewer cautioned that the app alone leaves learners sounding "a bit stiff" with real speakers, and speaking recognition is decent rather than best-in-class. Good groundwork for travel and reading; not a path to conversational fluency on its own.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.