A long streak can feel good. It doesn’t always mean you’re getting closer to real conversation.
That gap is why this Busuu review matters. If you want a language app that feels more like a course than a game, Busuu is still one of the stronger options in 2026. Still, serious learners should look past the clean interface and ask a harder question, will it hold up after month two?
Busuu in 2026: plans, pricing, and course depth
The factual snapshot is fairly clear. Busuu still uses a free-plus-paid model, and its own Premium feature breakdown places grammar tools, offline mode, and ad-free study in Premium, while Premium Plus adds AI Conversations and pronunciation feedback. Public 2026 listings, including GetApp’s Busuu pricing summary, show the usual pattern: longer plans cost less per month, but prices shift by region, app store, and sale period.
Here’s the short version.
| Plan | Approx public 2026 price | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | Basic access, limited lessons, some community features |
| Premium | about $6/month on annual billing | Full course access, grammar review, offline mode, no ads |
| Premium Plus | about $7 to $8/month on annual billing | Premium features plus AI conversations, pronunciation help, extra progress features |
The free tier is fine for sampling. It isn’t enough for steady progress. Public sources still describe it as heavily limited, often to only a handful of lessons.
Busuu’s course catalog is smaller than some rivals, but it isn’t tiny. According to Busuu’s language list and support pages, it covers 14 languages. That’s the good news. The catch is course depth. English, French, German, and Spanish reach C1. Most others stop at B2, and Korean currently tops out at A2. For a serious learner, that matters more than the headline number.
No major 2026 overhaul shows up in public sources. The app still leans on CEFR paths, guided practice, and a cleaner study flow than most gamified apps. If you study from a non-English base language, it’s still smart to verify source language support in apps before you pay.
How effective is Busuu for speaking, writing, grammar, and retention?
Busuu works best when you want structure without full classroom rigidity. It gives you a roadmap, then nudges you to produce language earlier than many casual apps do.

Speaking and writing
This is where Busuu earns its place. Many apps train recognition. Busuu asks for more output.
Short speaking prompts and writing tasks create useful friction. You’re not only picking from word tiles. You’re forming answers. That helps adult learners move from “I know it” to “I can say it.” The community correction angle can also help, especially for writing. However, feedback quality depends on who responds, so it isn’t as steady as a tutor.
Premium Plus improves the picture with AI Conversations and pronunciation tools. Those features make practice less passive, but they still don’t replace live back-and-forth speech. Think of them as rehearsal, not performance.
Grammar, vocabulary, and CEFR progress
Busuu is stronger at grammar than Duolingo, because it usually tells you what pattern you’re learning and where it fits. Babbel still feels more direct in grammar teaching, but Busuu balances explanation and use better than most mainstream apps.
Vocabulary retention is decent, not amazing. The review system helps, and the course recycles core phrases often enough. Still, if memory is your weak point, you may want outside spaced repetition too. Busuu teaches and reviews. It doesn’t feel obsessed with retention in the way a dedicated flashcard system does.
CEFR-style progression is one of Busuu’s best features. Serious learners like knowing whether a lesson belongs to A2 or B1. That makes planning easier, and it gives the app more backbone than apps built around streaks. Yet CEFR labels can also flatter you. Finishing a B1 unit doesn’t mean you can hold a spontaneous B1 conversation.
Busuu is strong at guided output and structured progress. It is weaker as a full speaking environment.
Long-term consistency, and how Busuu compares with rivals
Busuu tends to hold adult learners better than flashy apps because it respects your time. Lessons are short, but they don’t feel trivial. You can finish one in a coffee break and still feel like you studied something real.

That said, long-term consistency depends on your goal. If you want a fun habit engine, Duolingo is still better. If you want clearer grammar instruction from day one, Babbel may fit better. If you want immersion with less translation, Rosetta Stone still has a distinct style. Busuu sits in the middle. It offers more structure and feedback than Duolingo, more output practice than Rosetta Stone, and a broader progress map than Babbel in some courses.
Compared with Duolingo, Busuu is less addictive but more useful for serious study. Compared with Babbel, Busuu feels more goal-led and a bit more modern in speaking support. Compared with Rosetta Stone, Busuu gives more direct guidance and less guesswork.
If you’re moving on from streak-first learning, this guide to the best Duolingo alternatives 2026 gives the wider field. And before you trust any app’s promises, it’s worth running a quick language apps reality check. The strongest app is still the one that makes you produce language consistently.
A good outside cross-check is PCMag’s Busuu review, which also sees Busuu as strong but limited by its smaller catalog.
Verdict for serious learners
For beginners, Busuu is easy to recommend if you want a guided path and don’t mind paying for the useful parts. The free version is too thin for more than a test run.
For intermediate learners, Busuu is often worth it, especially in stronger courses like Spanish, French, German, and English. The CEFR structure, output tasks, and review tools make it easier to stay focused.
For serious independent learners, Busuu is worth paying for if you treat it as a core app, not a complete system. Pair it with live speaking, real listening, and tougher review. That’s where Busuu looks best in 2026, not as magic, but as a solid training base.
