Did you know that there are Spanish learning websites out there that will take you all the way from a beginner to a fluent speaker?
The best thing about using websites to learn Spanish is that you can do it all from home, according to your own schedule.
Read on to learn about 33 excellent websites that will help you become fluent in Spanish this year.
We’ve included websites for all levels of learners, so there’s truly a website for everyone.
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1. Best Overall: Duolingo
Pros: Free option, great design, fun
Cons: Some users don’t like the gamified element
Price: Free; Super Duolingo $12.99/month
Duolingo is a popular free option for learning Spanish. Duolingo uses a “skill tree” to introduce vocabulary and grammar rules through a series of entertaining quizzes, building to more advanced skills as you go.
Duolingo has a gamified approach to language learning and offers a rather straightforward and fun way to learn Spanish.
You may already be familiar with the app, though its website platform and its online language forums are also helpful.
See our full Duolingo review here.
2. Best for Interactive Lessons: Mango Languages
Pros: Interactive lessons, intuitive interface
Cons: Lack of visual and video components
Price: Monthly subscription at $7.99/month or $79.99/year for one language; $17.99/month or $179.99/year for all languages; free through many public libraries
Mango Languages is a self-paced course that uses algorithms to individually tailor learning material for each learner.
Lessons are a blend of listening and reading activities that focus on conversational mastery by demonstrating how things are actually applied. Memory-building exercises, grammar notes and critical-thinking activities all help learners build strong language skills.
Cultural notes enhance the experience and provide idioms and insights that make the language come alive.
Read our full Mango Languages review here.
3. Best for Beginners: Babbel
Pros: Teaches applicable and useful conversational language, great tips throughout, lots of content
Cons: Limited content for advanced learners, activity formats don’t vary enough
Price: $9.95/month; $59.40/year
Babbel is a great app for anyone just starting a new language, with content that can provide a solid foundation for later learning. However, the app is limited in its scope, not offering much for intermediate and advanced learners, despite its promises to teach “language for life.”
Read our full Babbel review here.
4. Best for Native Speaker Feedback: Busuu
Pros: Personalized language goals, ability to record answers and get native speaker feedback
Cons: Content lacking in entertainment value
Price: Free; Premium for $13.95/month
Busuu is a language learning program that encourages you to develop all your language skills—speaking, listening, reading and writing—at once.
For example, it has a speech recognition tool that helps you improve your speaking skills just using your phone.
There’s a desktop version with an easy-to-use interface. Of course, you can download the app for your iOS and Android devices.
Busuu also provides offline lessons so you can download them to study without an internet connection.
Read our full Busuu review here.
5. Best for Offline Learning: Rosetta Stone
Pros: Emphasizes common words and phrases, good pronunciation features
Cons: Lacks grammar instruction, can feel repetitive
Price: $7.99/month; $179 for lifetime access
Rosetta Stone has been a language learning giant since the 1990s. Today, it continues its legacy with an updated interface and streamlined instruction, but sometimes falls short of providing a comprehensive language learning experience.
Read our full review of Rosetta Stone here.
Pros: Easy to use, shareable
Cons: No learning plan or structure
Price: $19.99/month; $199.99 for lifetime access
The Brainscape flashcard app really checks all the boxes on learning foreign language vocabulary quickly and easily.
The app is formatted clearly and is so user-friendly that using it is an absolute pleasure.
You can use the app’s flashcards or create your own. The material already gathered and available on the app comes from publishers, educators and other learners.
The flashcard decks are shareable and users can work together to develop highly customized content. So if you’re part of a group planning a culinary tour across the globe, you could collectively compile flashcards that feature food-related vocabulary!
7. Best for Pronunciation Improvement: Rocket Spanish
Pros: Large cultural component, voice recognition feature
Cons: Price is high, not great for true beginners
Price: $47/month; $259.90/year
On the main web page, Rocket Languages claims to be unique by taking you “to the heart of the language” and giving you “everything you need to understand the language and the culture.”
The program consists of:
- Pronunciation practice
- Speaking practice
- Listening practice
- Cultural understanding
Rocket Languages promises to teach you to talk “just like locals do.” We can assume that this means we’ll learn through authentic conversations in Spanish, and that there will be targeted pronunciation exercises throughout each course.
The program also claims you will “learn how the language actually works.” This means that the program also includes explicit grammar instruction.
Read our full review of Rocket Languages here.
Pros: Free, reliably accurate, many different types of activities
Cons: Site is no longer updated
Price: Free
The British Broadcasting Company, renowned for its international news coverage, is also pretty great at providing language learning content.
All the content on BBC Spanish is free to use and it includes a lot of Spanish language culture, fun video aspects and plenty of reading material.
9. Best for Self-guided Study: MosaLingua
Pros: Vocabulary is regularly updated, affordable
Cons: No grammar or culture instruction
Price: $9.99/month; $59.90/year
MosaLingua is a simple but effective Spanish learning website with over 3,500 flashcards featuring the language’s most used words.
Because the site only teaches vocabulary, it should be thought of as an add-on to another language learning website that covers grammar and culture more explicitly.
10. Best for True Beginners: Memrise
Pros: Great native speaker audio and video clips, intuitive design
Cons: Limited free content, no explicit grammar lesssons
Price: $8.49/month; $29.99/year; $119.99/lifetime access
If you’re interested in language learning, you’ve probably heard of Memrise.
Launched in 2012 and growing in popularity in recent years, the Memrise app and website has been making waves in the language learning world.
You may have heard of Memrise from an article or review, or maybe a polyglot YouTuber mentioned it was a central part of their language learning routine.
I’ve found Memrise to be a flexible, engaging and effective way to learn vocabulary and phrases. What it lacks in in-depth language learning, it makes up for with varied language exposure and scientifically proven memorization methods.
Read our full Memrise review here.
11. Best for Do-it-yourself Learners: 123TeachMe
Pros: Lots of materials
Cons: Lack of visuals and much audio and video content
Price: Free
123TeachMe offers a selection of free Spanish learning materials. It’s a great resource for consistent Spanish practice that you can use every day, either for focused study or just to get in a few minutes of practice in your downtime.
You’ll find self-study courses covering everything from basic survival Spanish to dental Spanish. There’s also a massive selection of verb conjugation charts, tests, quizzes, a word of the day, a phrase of the day and a verb of the day.
12. Best for Culture Hawks: ProfeDeELE
Pros: Lots of activity types, podcasts, cultural components
Cons: Limited content
Price: Free
ProfeDeELE is full of diverse content for all learning levels!
Materials include songs, podcasts, lectures and videos and are separated to conform with those levels as laid out in the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR).
Cultural activities are part of the program, as well, and there are quizzes to help learners keep track of how their language learning is progressing.
ProfeDeELA is a comprehensive option for learners, especially those who appreciate a clear-cut method for starting from beginner and moving onward.
13. Best for Podcast Aficionados: SpanishPod101
Pros: Diverse and plentiful content
Cons: Too much English in lessons
Price: Basic: $8/month; Premium: $25/month, Premium Plus: $47/month
SpanishPod101 is beneficial for all levels of learners, even absolute beginners.
The program is designed to get learners speaking right from the very first lesson and there are new audio and video lessons added every week.
The courses are taught by native speakers, so you will have access to extremely valuable material.
With an online community, e-books available for download, word-of-the-day feature and podcasts, there are lots of features that enrich this Spanish learning website.
Read our full review of SpanishPod101 here.
14. Best for Video Lovers: Alison
Pros: Video-based lessons
Cons: Limited content
Price: Free
The goal of Alison is to certify you on basic Spanish in just a few hours with video modules that are accompanied by an assessment.
Alison offers four basic courses on beginner topics so this is a great place for new learners to get a little taste of Spanish. Lessons cover basic material to get you started on your learning journey.
While this site isn’t intended for intermediate or advanced learners, it does a great job of laying a foundation for beginning learners to build upon.
15. Best for Travel Spanish: Polly Lingual
Pros: Content-based lessons
Cons: Limited content
Price: Free
Polly Lingual offers beginner through advanced Spanish courses in addition to specific courses on grammar, travel, business and medicine.
Lessons are grouped thematically, so it’s easy to pick and choose the topics that are most relevant to you. Polly Lingual also offers different exercises to practice lesson content such as crossword puzzles, conjugation trainers, and reviews.
Plus, Polly Lingual also offers affordable tutoring with native Spanish speakers.
Pros: Short lessons, educator organized
Cons: Price
Price: $145 per course
What’s really enticing about this website is the invitation to sit down with a coffee as you learn Spanish. The website’s easy-to-follow sessions also add to its appeal and are well worth checking out.
Some of the resources on the website are free, including the two-minute challenges and the podcast.
If you’re looking to properly immerse yourself in Spanish with this site you’ll at least need the low-cost subscription. This will include audio and video lessons with notes to help develop your Spanish in an organized and fun way.
Read our full Coffee Break Spanish review here.
Pros: Free content, well designed
Cons: Limited content
Price: Free
Starting at the beginner level and progressing through to advanced and superior, the University of Texas’ Spanish Proficiency Exercises page has activities organized by task.
Each task includes videos, grammar, vocabulary, phrases and a podcast.
The tasks all have some kind of language focus.
Some are about describing things or situations, and others are grammar-based, like using conditionals to talk about hypothetical situations.
There are also functional language tasks, such as booking a reservation or making a complaint.
The website layout is somewhat dense and decidedly plain, but the material is high-quality and very structured.
Pros: American and Latin American variety Spanish
Cons: Have to purchase ebooks
Price: Free
Practical Spanish offers beginner through advanced Spanish lessons that focus on Latin American Spanish.
You’ll learn vocabulary and grammar rules ranging from beginning topics like possessive pronouns to intermediate topics like the subjunctive. The lessons provide written tutorials as well as audio to help you absorb native-speaker pronunciation.
Practical Spanish also offers e-books for purchase that come with recordings. There are options for beginner, intermediate and advanced learners.
Pros: Even grammar lessons feature cultural context
Cons: Some activities are repetitive
Price: Free
This website’s study topics are based on current cultural figures and issues in Latin America and Spain.
Each topic focuses on helping you improve a specific grammar point.
For example, you can study the imperfect and preterite tenses as you read about two friends in Ecuador or work on your subjunctive skills by listening to a song and reading about the Dominican Republic.
After you choose your activity by topic or by grammar structure, you can then do activities based on the reading or songs, like filling in gaps, rewriting short paragraphs or responding to audio questions.
20. Best for Latin American Spanish: Speaking Latino
Pros: Lots of resources to choose from
Cons: No Castilian Spanish
Price: Free
Speaking Latino is a teacher and student resource site aimed at real-life and authentic Spanish learning.
Grouped by country, this site has a ton of resources to learn slang and general vocabulary, and it includes articles, books, videos, websites, podcasts and more.
By noting the differences in Spanish between countries, you will have a better idea of how different types of Spanish speakers communicate.
21. Best for Learners on a Budget: StudySpanish
Pros: Intuitive design, content for all levels
Cons: Lessons sometimes lack depth
Price: Free limited access; $9.99/month; $119.00/year
StudySpanish offers plenty of mini-lessons and quizzes going over Spanish pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary.
These are great for when you want to tackle certain “problem spots” or need a quick review of specific, troublesome concepts.
The free membership lets you access many of the lessons and some of the tests and quizzes. The monthly and premium memberships give you full access to all lessons, tests (with recorded grades) and audio podcasts.
22. Best for Looking Up Vocabulary Words: SpanishDict
Pros: Translator included
Cons: Limited grammar and vocabulary quizzes
Price: Free
Besides functioning as a Spanish dictionary and translator, SpanishDict also has plenty of useful learning resources. There are mini grammar lessons and curated vocabulary lists with quizzes.
The grammar lessons include teaching videos and review exercises that are primarily in fill-in-the-blank format.
Conveniently, the questions also include audio snippets spoken by native speakers. The vocabulary quizzes ask you to translate words (with included visual guides) into their Spanish counterparts.
23. Best for Casual Conversations: italki
Pros: Experienced and pleasant tutors
Cons: Can get expensive
Price: From $5/hour
italki is an online tutoring platform and its Spanish division currently has over 2,500 tutors.
The search feature lets you pinpoint the right teacher for you based on their pay rate, expertise, accent and schedule.
There are two major categories of instructors: “community tutors” and “professional teachers.”
The latter has accreditation and professional experience, so they can provide structured lesson plans and resources. Community tutors are native speakers who are happy to help you out with specific questions or conversation practice.
Read our full italki review here.
24. Best for Learners Who Prefer a Private Tutor: Preply
Pros: Experienced tutors
Cons: Can get expensive
Price: From $10/hour
Like italki, Preply gives you a lot of freedom in searching and choosing the right Spanish tutor for you. You can look through every tutor’s profile to get an idea of what they’re like.
Once you find someone you’re interested in learning from, you can send them a message or book a trial lesson.
Keep in mind that once you choose a tutor, you can continue your learning by purchasing a “lesson package.” Currently, Preply offers 6, 12 or 20-hour lesson packages.
25. Best for Scheduled Regular Lessons: Spanish55
Pros: Focuses on Spanish language
Cons: Set lesson lengths, expensive
Price: From $31/55 minute lesson; from $140/month
Spanish55 is wholly dedicated to offering high-quality Spanish tutoring. All lessons are about 55 minutes in length (hence the name of the service) and are held over Skype.
You will receive a free consultation with a tutor, in which you share your goals and get an overall taste of the teaching you’d expect.
Once you’re satisfied, you then pick a monthly subscription package and start scheduling regular lessons based on your and your tutor’s schedules.
26. Best for Outgoing Learners: Verbalplanet
Pros: Lots of tutors and times available
Cons: Some tutors aren’t teachers, can be expensive
Price: Average $22/40-minute session
Verbalplanet provides lessons with a native-speaking tutor that can last up to 45 minutes.
One of Verbalplanet’s best features is the fluency analysis offered after every class.
Your tutor will evaluate your different Spanish skills and give you feedback on your strengths and weaknesses. This is a great way for you to track your Spanish progress and assess your goals.
Many instructors also offer loyalty discounts if you stick with them for a number of lessons.
27. Best for Young Learners: Rockalingua
Pros: Colorful and visual, music-based
Cons: Limited content
Price: $20/month; $99/year
Don’t be fooled by its kid-like appearance!
While Rockalingua is catered to children, its colorful, musical games can make vocabulary and grammar studies fun and invigorating.
There are also songs, short stories and picture dictionaries that can help you review Spanish phrases, terminology and verbs.
28. Best for Verb Conjugation Practice: Conjuguemos
Pros: Intuitive design, good quizzes, games
Cons: Limited content
Price: Free limited access; Premium $45/year
Conjuguemos has a ton of fun interactive activities for conjugation, vocabulary and grammar practice.
The platform was actually designed to be a classroom aid, with graded quizzes, flashcards and games aligning with popular Spanish learner textbooks.
The free account gives you access to plenty of comprehensive exercises that will keep you occupied for a long time. Conjuguemos also allows you to download helpful charts and notes for your convenience.
29. Best for Quizzes: Fluencia
Pros: Translating activities
Cons: Some people don’t like to start with a quiz
Price: Free for limited access; $14.95/month
Fluencia guides you seamlessly through an expansive amount of learning, beginning with a quiz to start you off at the right level.
From there, it’ll have you focusing on specific areas that you’re interested in or need help with. Most of the process is based on translating exercises, but they are well thought out.
There’s a monthly subscription fee once you reach a certain level, but the site’s simplicity, quality and encouraging messages seem to make it worthwhile.
30. Best for Latin American Level Testing: Amauta
Pros: Good to see where your level is
Cons: Tests are only grammar
Price: Web exercises are free
Amauta is a Latin American Spanish school. Its website is one of the few offering level testing in Latin American Spanish, although its exams only cover beginning through intermediate levels.
The level tests are purely grammatical.
However, the website does have online learning exercises for all levels—including advanced—with games, vocabulary, idioms and more, as well as information on a range of Latin American recipes, music and literature.
31. Best for Castilian Spanish Lessons: Lengalia
Pros: European Spanish focus
Cons: Expensive
Price: $29.99/month; $59.99/year
This is an online European Spanish course website, but its tests are great because they include both reading and listening comprehension as well as grammar, with two advanced levels.
In theory, most advanced learners who have studied Latin American Spanish should be able to pass European tests as well, despite a few differences in dialect and culture.
32. Best for Online Grammar Testing: Cervantes
Pros: Accurate, well-designed testing
Cons: Heavy on grammar
Price: Test is free
Cervantes is another Spain-based school with rigorous online testing.
The testing format is easy to navigate and modern, though heavy on grammar, and you have to start at the first out of five levels and see how far you get.
The Cervantes system has a strong reputation for quality teaching and its tests match that.
33. Best for Assessing Your Spanish Level: Cambridge
Pros: Good to see where you stand in terms of level
Cons: Quiz can feel tedious
Price: Test is free
The Cambridge Institute has developed tests for several languages using international standards. The tests are available to future students of the institute and anyone else who’s interested.
The levels are based on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR).
There are 60 hefty questions to get through, and they start at an intermediate level, so this type of test is more appropriate for those who already have some experience with Spanish.
These websites are all great resources to learn Spanish. I’d recommend using a few of them to create a well-rounded curriculum that will get you to a higher level of Spanish speaking in a fun and creative way!
And One More Thing…
If you’ve made it this far that means you probably enjoy learning Spanish with engaging material and will then love FluentU.
Other sites use scripted content. FluentU uses a natural approach that helps you ease into the Spanish language and culture over time. You’ll learn Spanish as it’s actually spoken by real people.
FluentU has a wide variety of videos, as you can see here:
FluentU brings native videos within reach with interactive transcripts. You can tap on any word to look it up instantly. Every definition has examples that have been written to help you understand how the word is used. If you see an interesting word you don’t know, you can add it to a vocab list.
Review a complete interactive transcript under the Dialogue tab, and find words and phrases listed under Vocab.
Learn all the vocabulary in any video with FluentU’s robust learning engine. Swipe left or right to see more examples of the word you’re on.
The best part is that FluentU keeps track of the vocabulary that you’re learning, and gives you extra practice with difficult words. It’ll even remind you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. Every learner has a truly personalized experience, even if they’re learning with the same video.
Start using the FluentU website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)