The response varies depending on your specific goals. Some goals can be reached with free apps. Others cannot, no matter how many hours you put in. This article breaks down what free apps can and cannot do, where paid apps actually deliver value, and how to decide without wasting money on a subscription you will not use.
What You Can Get for Free in 2026
The free tier of English speaking apps has genuinely improved over the last three years. A learner starting today has access to more free resources than anyone did five years ago.
- Duolingo (free) — gamified vocabulary and grammar exercises. Works for beginners learning the basics of English.
- ChatGPT (free tier) — conversation practice with AI, grammar explanations, vocabulary questions. Limited to the 4o-mini model on the free plan but still very capable.
- ELSA Speak (free tier) — limited pronunciation drills, a few exercises per day.
- Tandem / HelloTalk (free) — language exchange with real people. You talk to them in English, they talk to you in whatever language they want to practise.
- YouTube English learning channels — endless free content on grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. EngVarta’s own channel has 1,000+ free lessons.
- Free newsletters and blogs — our own free daily vocabulary email for example, or the BBC Learning English podcasts.
With these tools alone, a motivated learner can absolutely improve their English. The question is how far they can go.
What Free Apps Cannot Do — Even With Unlimited Time
There is a ceiling on what free apps can deliver, and most serious learners hit it within a few months. Here is what sits above that ceiling.
Reliable daily practice with a real human
Free language exchange apps (Tandem, HelloTalk) technically give you access to real people. But the experience is wildly unreliable. Your partner may not show up. They may want to practise their language for the whole call, leaving you five minutes to speak English. They may have low English skills themselves. They may be looking for dating, not practice. They may ghost you after two sessions.
The pattern is consistent: free language exchange works for the first week, feels inconsistent for the second and third week, and most learners quit by week four because the experience is frustrating. Finding a reliable speaking partner is the single biggest challenge in free practice.
Structured corrections that actually make you better
Free AI apps correct grammar, but only the obvious mistakes. Free language exchange partners typically do not correct you at all — they understand what you mean and move on, leaving your mistakes unchallenged. Free YouTube videos explain rules but cannot catch errors you specifically make while speaking.
To actually improve, you need someone trained to notice subtle errors, correct them without breaking the flow of conversation, and track your progress over time. This is the one thing free apps fundamentally cannot provide.
Speaking confidence under real social pressure
Every free option either removes social pressure (AI, self-practice) or makes it unreliable (language exchange). Speaking confidence is built through repeated exposure to real human interaction with real stakes — someone listening, waiting, judging. Without that, you can study English for years and still freeze in a real meeting. This is the most common learner story, and it is entirely a product of practising with the wrong tools.
Free vs Paid English Speaking Apps — The Actual Comparison
| What you need | Free tier can do it? | Paid option needed? |
|---|---|---|
| Learn basic vocabulary | ✅ Yes (Duolingo, YouTube) | Not really |
| Understand grammar rules | ✅ Yes (ChatGPT, YouTube) | Not really |
| Practise pronunciation of specific sounds | ⚠️ Limited (ELSA free) | Helpful (ELSA Pro) |
| Have one real conversation | ⚠️ Sometimes (Tandem) | Helpful |
| Have daily reliable practice with real humans | ❌ No | Yes |
| Get structured corrections that track progress | ❌ No | Yes |
| Build speaking confidence that transfers to real life | ❌ No | Yes |
| Prepare for a specific event (interview, meeting) | ❌ No | Yes |
If all your goals are in the first three rows, free tools can take you there. If any of your goals are in the bottom four rows, you will need to spend money at some point. The only question is how much.
Paid Options — What You Actually Get
These are the prices and features of the main paid English-speaking applications in 2026.
| Paid app | Monthly cost | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Duolingo Super | ₹1,799/year (~₹150/mo) | Ad-free vocabulary and grammar. No speaking with humans. |
| ChatGPT Plus | $20/mo (~₹1,700) | Unlimited AI voice chat, advanced models. Still no human practice. |
| ELSA Pro | $12/mo (~₹1,000) | Pronunciation drills only. No conversation. |
| Cambly | From $12/session | Live native speakers over video. Inconsistent tutor quality. |
| italki / Preply | $15-30/hour | Private tutors. Scheduled lessons. Expensive for daily use. |
| EngVarta | From ₹108 / $1.80 per session | Daily live human practice with certified experts. Audio-only. App-based. No scheduling. |
The important number to notice is the cost per real human conversation, not the monthly subscription. Duolingo Super at ₹150/month gives you zero human conversations. Cambly at ₹1,000+ per session gives you one. EngVarta at ₹108 per session gives you one — which means at ₹2,700/month (same as a single Cambly session), you get 25 EngVarta sessions with certified experts. If you are comparing with Duolingo Super, the honest framing is: they solve different problems. Duolingo teaches vocabulary cheaply; EngVarta provides real human practice at the lowest available price per session.
When Free Is Actually Enough
Free tools are enough for you if:
- You are an absolute beginner just learning the alphabet, basic vocabulary, and sentence structure. Duolingo and ChatGPT’s free tier can cover this.
- You only need English occasionally and are not under real-world pressure to speak fluently.
- You are comfortable with the social dimension of English already and just want to refine grammar or vocabulary.
- You have a native-speaker friend or colleague you can practise with for 15 minutes every day consistently — this is rare, but if you have it, it may be enough.
If any of these describe you, stick with free apps. Save your money.
When Paid Is Worth Every Rupee
Paid practice becomes genuinely worth it when:
- You already know English but freeze when speaking to real people. This is the single most common case and the clearest return on investment for paid practice.
- You have a specific upcoming event — a job interview, a meeting, a visa conversation — and need to build confidence quickly.
- Your career depends on English fluency. Promotions, client-facing roles, and international opportunities require speaking skills that free apps cannot build.
- You have tried free apps for several months and still cannot hold a confident conversation. This means the ceiling of free tools is the problem, not your effort.
- You are a new immigrant in the USA, Canada, UK, or Australia and need workplace-ready English quickly.
The Smart 2026 Combination (Best Value)
The most effective and cost-efficient setup we see among learners who actually achieve fluency looks like this:
- Free layer: Duolingo or Hello English for daily vocabulary (5 min/day) + ChatGPT free tier for grammar questions. Cost: ₹0.
- Paid layer: EngVarta at ₹2,700 for 25 sessions. 10-15 minutes of real human practice per day with a certified expert.
- Optional: ELSA Pro ($12/mo) if pronunciation is a specific concern.
Total monthly cost: roughly ₹2,700-3,700 ($45-60 international), delivering daily human practice plus free drilling. Compare this to Cambly at ₹12,000-24,000/month for equivalent human practice time.
A structured 30-day plan using this exact combination is available on our blog.
Why EngVarta Exists in the Paid Tier
EngVarta is built specifically to solve the “paid human practice is too expensive for daily use” problem. Live native-speaker platforms like Cambly charge $12 or more per 30-minute session, pricing out most learners from daily practice. Private tutors on italki and Preply charge even more per hour.
At EngVarta, a 10-minute live session with a certified English expert costs ₹108 in India or $1.80 internationally. This is cheap enough that serious learners can practise every single day without thinking about the cost. Sessions are audio-only (no video) and available daily 7 AM to midnight IST.
Over 2 million learners across 50+ countries have used EngVarta since 2017. Rated 4.5 stars on Google Play and the App Store with 10,000+ verified reviews. A trial session is available for ₹69 / $1 with a 100% refund guarantee.
What Our Learners Say
Rated 4.5★ from 9,100+ reviews on Google Play
Ready to Practice with Real Experts?
Try EngVarta today — ₹69 trial (India) / $1 trial (International) · 100% refundable
Follow EngVarta for Daily English Practice
Join our community and improve your English every day:
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/engvarta.app/
YouTube : http://www.youtube.com/@EngVarta
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/engvarta
LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/company/engvarta
Bottom Line
Free English speaking apps are enough if you are a beginner building basics or if you do not need English under real pressure. If you need real speaking fluency — for work, interviews, immigration, or career growth — free apps alone will not take you there.
The best value comes from combining free AI drills with affordable daily human practice. At ₹108 / $1.80 per session on EngVarta, daily live human practice is priced at a level where anyone serious about fluency can afford it. Start with a ₹69 / $1 trial — fully refundable if it is not for you.
Common Questions
Can I become fluent in English using only free apps?
Up to an intermediate level, yes. Beyond that, you will hit a ceiling. Every learner we speak to who relies only on free tools for more than three to six months reports the same thing: they understand more English, but still cannot speak confidently in real situations. The ceiling is not about effort — it is about the fundamental limits of free tools. To cross it, you need reliable daily practice with a human, which requires paid access.
Is Duolingo Super worth ~₹1,799/year?
Only if you were already using the free version regularly and found the ads annoying. Duolingo Super is an improvement over free Duolingo, but both have the same fundamental limitation — they do not teach you to speak with real people. If you want to actually improve your spoken English, that same ~₹1,800 is better spent on 16+ EngVarta sessions with real human experts.
Should I pay for Cambly or ChatGPT Plus?
ChatGPT Plus at $20/month is useful if you want unlimited AI conversation practice alongside your other tools. Cambly is good if you specifically want native-speaker conversation and budget is not a concern. Neither is necessary if you have limited budget — a cheaper human practice platform like EngVarta plus free ChatGPT covers 90% of the same need.
What is the minimum I should spend to actually improve my spoken English?
About ₹2,700 / $45 per month gets you daily live human practice on EngVarta combined with free AI drills. This is the minimum spend that reliably produces visible fluency improvement within 30-60 days. Spending less (free only) generally does not produce fluency. Spending more (Cambly, italki) does not produce meaningfully better results for most learners.
I am on a tight budget. What is the smartest free+paid combination?
Free: Duolingo (5 min daily vocabulary), ChatGPT free tier (for grammar questions). Paid: EngVarta’s smallest plan, used for one 10-minute live session per day. The smallest EngVarta plan starts well under ₹3,000 and delivers roughly 25 sessions. Pair with the free tools and you will see visible improvement within three weeks without significant cost.
Related reading:
- Best Apps to Practice English Speaking in India (2026)
- EngVarta vs Duolingo for Spoken English
- Best English Speaking App for Beginners
- Best Way to Learn Spoken English for Adults
- How to Practice English Speaking Daily at Home
Comments
Comments load on demand to keep this page fast.
Leave a comment