Preply Kids 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.
Preply · Languages
Preply Kids
Preply · Languages
Preply 1-on-1 Tutoring
Per-criterion
There is no fixed curriculum — each tutor builds the lessons. For motivated kids with a strong tutor that means fully personalized, age-appropriate material (games, exam prep like DELF Junior). But it is a marketplace, so structure and quality vary from one tutor to the next.
The instructor is the whole product, and it is the strongest part. Kids tutors average 4.93/5 across nearly 194,000 reviews, and parents repeatedly praise patience, engagement, and the ability to keep young or shy learners involved. The flip side: you have to find the right one.
Lessons start around $3/hour and average roughly $14/hour — cheaper than most live kids tutoring. But the 28-day subscription model, lessons that expire if unused, and refund friction when a tutor is unavailable pull the perceived value down for some families.
1-on-1 accountability and a tutor who feels like family keep many kids engaged far better than a self-study app. The risk is churn from tutor mismatch — a poor fit slows progress until you switch — and from rigid scheduling that punishes busy families who miss the 28-day window.
Live speaking time with a real person is exactly what builds conversational confidence in children, and parents report measurable gains — improved school grades, passed junior exams, comfort speaking. This is the clear advantage of tutoring over app-only learning for kids.
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.