CourseVerdict

Preply Korean (1-on-1 Online Tutors) 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.

Preply · Languages

Preply Korean (1-on-1 Online Tutors)

3.7/ 5 · 31 opinions
18 positive6 neutral7 negative/ 31 total

Duolingo · Languages

Duolingo Japanese Course

3.2/ 5 · 30 opinions
11 positive9 neutral10 negative/ 30 total

Per-criterion

Content quality3.2 / 5

The most-repeated structural criticism is that Preply has no standardised Korean curriculum — lesson structure is entirely up to your individual tutor, so there is no guaranteed step-by-step path from Hangul through TOPIK. Korean lessons are practical and interactive (pronunciation drills, guided conversation, role-plays, honorifics support) and Preply bundles some free extras, but the core content is only as coherent as the tutor you happen to book. Independent reviewers are blunt that learners "who expect a fixed curriculum may find the marketplace model less predictable" — it gives access without a built-in syllabus.

Instructor / method4.3 / 5

This is Preply's strongest dimension for Korean and the most-praised theme in our sample. The platform lists 2,300+ Korean tutors — the large majority native speakers — and the aggregate sits at 4.98/5 across roughly 25,000 verified student reviews. Learners repeatedly single out patience, encouragement and clear explanations of Hangul, pronunciation, SOV grammar, honorifics and speech levels. The honest caveat every critical source raises is variance: because anyone can sign up to teach, "a huge marketplace naturally includes outstanding tutors, decent tutors, and a few weak matches," so the strong average hides a real tutor-to-tutor spread you have to navigate with trial lessons.

Value for money3.5 / 5

Headline pricing looks affordable — Korean lessons start around $5 and average roughly $24 per session, with tutors setting their own rates and a discounted trial to sample. But cumulative cost is where opinions split: native and certified Korean tutors commonly sit in the $20-28 mid-range up to $40+ premium band, and weekly lessons run roughly $60-140 a month with materials, apps and certificates not separately bundled. Whether it is "good value" depends heavily on whether you book a budget or premium tutor and how many trial lessons you burn finding a fit.

Support2.9 / 5

The weakest dimension and the one negative reviews cluster on hardest. Lesson-level support (free trial replacement, tutor-switching, reschedule/pause) is generally praised, but platform-level support around the subscription and credit system draws repeated complaints: a chat-first support flow described as slow and scripted, rigid refund conditions, unused balances converting to expiring Preply Credits, and unexpected auto-renewals. Experiences are genuinely mixed — some reviewers call the first-lesson refund guarantee fair — but the volume of billing and refund complaints pulls this score down.

Real-world fluency4.3 / 5

For a tutoring marketplace this is live speaking practice — and it is the single best reason to use Preply for Korean. Reviewers consistently say the one-on-one format forces you to actually produce the language, ask the moment a grammar point or honorific won't stick, and get instant correction in the interactive Preply Classroom. Sessions stay practical through role-plays and real-life scenarios for travel, K-content, business Korean and TOPIK/exam prep, and Preply's own efficiency study reports learners taking 24+ lessons over 12 weeks progress roughly 3x faster, with 97% reporting greater speaking confidence — the thing apps cannot replicate. The honest limit on real-world outcomes is that there is no certificate or guaranteed level progression, so results depend on tutor fit and your consistency.

Content quality3.0 / 5

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.

Instructor / method2.9 / 5

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.

Value for money3.7 / 5

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.

Retention & motivation3.6 / 5

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.

Real-world fluency2.6 / 5

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.