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Best Apps to Learn Greek in 2026 (From Someone Currently Learning)

I've been learning Greek for over a year. I take weekly classes in Barcelona, I use the Ellinika A textbook, and I've tried a fair number of Greek learning apps along the way. Most app roundups are written by people who downloaded five things and spent a weekend with each. This one is written by someone still in the middle of it.

First, it depends on how you're learning

The question "what's the best app to learn Greek" doesn't have one answer, because how you're learning changes everything.

If you're going to class or following a textbook, you need something that works alongside that structure, not something that pulls you in a different direction with its own separate curriculum. If you're learning completely on your own, you need apps that provide that structure for you.

That distinction matters more than any feature comparison. So I'll break it down that way.

The apps I've tried myself

These are the three I've used personally. Below I share my honest thoughts about them:

Language Transfer

Language Transfer Community favourite Free

Language Transfer is a free audio course by Mihalis Eleftheriou. 120 lessons, no sign-up, no gamification. The "Thinking Method" teaches Greek by drawing logical connections between English and Greek rather than asking you to memorise rules.

Personally, I find it better suited to self-learners. If you're following a traditional class format, the audio-only approach can feel like it's pulling you in a different direction from what your teacher covers. For that reason, I'm currently not using it.

That said, it's good for understanding how the language is structured. The Greek learning community consistently recommends it as the starting point for anyone learning Greek independently.

Verdict: If you're learning solo, start here. If you're in class, it's worth trying as a supplement, especially for listening practice.

Grego

Grego Best for class learners Free

Grego is what I use alongside my weekly classes. It's a structured practice app built around the CEFR Greek curriculum, which is the same framework my teacher and the Ellinika A textbook follow. Grammar exercises, vocabulary flashcard sets, progress tracking across topics like greetings, numbers, verbs, and cases.

What makes it work for me is the alignment. Even if I don't study topics in exactly the same order in the app as in class, the curriculum is the same foundation. So whatever I practise in Grego connects to what I'm learning with my teacher rather than pulling me somewhere else.

It's designed for people who already have some structure around their learning, whether that's a teacher, a tutor, or a textbook, and who want to practise anywhere: on the commute, during lunch, while travelling. Might not be your cup of tea if you dislike the "traditional school way" of learning a language.

Verdict: The app I use week to week. If you're learning with any kind of structure, this is the gap-filler that actually connects to what you're studying.

Want to practise Greek on your commute without losing the thread of what you're studying? Try Grego free.

Try Grego free →

Duolingo

Duolingo Free / approx. €7/month

Duolingo is genuinely good for two things: getting started with Greek, and building a consistent daily habit. The gamification works. You open it every day without much resistance.

Beyond that, its strongest point is vocabulary. You end up remembering a lot of words, even if they appear in random contexts. If you're also going to class, that vocabulary exposure can give you a real advantage because you already recognise words when your teacher uses them.

What it doesn't do well is grammar. And it's known for teaching sentences that are grammatically correct but completely absurd in real life. "I cook my spider's breakfast" is a real example from the Greek course.

Verdict: Good for vocabulary and for building a daily habit. Solid if you're also learning grammar somewhere else. Not enough on its own.

Other apps the Greek learning community recommends

These are apps I haven't used myself but that come up repeatedly in the Greek learning community. I'm including them because they fill needs that the above three don't cover.

Pimsleur

Pimsleur approx. €15 to €21/month

Pimsleur Greek is an audio-based course built around speaking and listening. 30-minute sessions you can do while walking or commuting. The spaced repetition method is effective for pronunciation specifically, which matters in Greek because stress patterns are genuinely tricky and most apps don't address them.

The catch: only two course levels exist for Greek, so it runs out quickly. Check your local library before paying as many offer it for free.

Verdict: The go-to recommendation for pronunciation. Worth it if speaking and listening are your priority.

Clozemaster

Clozemaster Free / paid tier available

Clozemaster works through fill-in-the-gap exercises using real sentences. Instead of isolated vocabulary, you're learning words in context, which means the sentences tend to be ones you could actually use. In my opinion, it seems to be a good resource if you're preparing yourself for a specific situation: holidays in Greece, meeting Greek family, etc. You get vocabulary that's immediately useful rather than random.

Verdict: Good for contextual vocabulary building. Especially recommended when you have a concrete reason to need specific words soon.

Drops

Drops Free / approx. €10/month

Drops is a visual vocabulary app with 5-minute daily sessions. Images paired with Greek words, across more than 2,000 vocabulary items organised by topic. Like Clozemaster, it works well when you have a specific goal in mind: learning food vocabulary before a trip, or family words before meeting someone's relatives.

Verdict: Low effort, easy to stay consistent with. Best used as a daily 5-minute habit alongside something with more grammar structure.

My actual stack

Weekly class with a teacher, the Ellinika A textbook, and Grego to practise between sessions. That's it.

The class and the book give me the structure and the explanation. Grego lets me reinforce it anywhere, on my phone, without needing to open the textbook. Because both are based on the CEFR curriculum, they connect naturally even if the order isn't identical.

I tried Duolingo early on. I still open it occasionally. But it's not where I do serious practice.

Quick comparison

App Best for With a teacher? Solo? Price
Language Transfer Grammar foundation Supplement Yes, start here Free
Grego Reinforcing class content Best fit Partial Free
Duolingo Vocabulary + daily habit Limited Limited Free / €7/mo
Pimsleur Pronunciation + listening Supplement Yes €15 to €21/mo
Clozemaster Contextual vocabulary Yes Yes Free / paid
Drops Vocabulary for specific goals Yes Yes Free / €10/mo

At the end of the day, no app is going to do the work for you, but the right combination makes the work feel less like a slog. Start with whatever fits your situation, stay consistent, and adjust as you go.

Frequently asked questions

Is Duolingo good for learning Greek?

Duolingo is useful for getting started with Greek and building a daily habit. Its strongest point is vocabulary exposure. However, it has real limitations: the grammar instruction is minimal and its curriculum doesn't align with most courses or textbooks. It works best as a supplement alongside something more structured, not as a main learning tool.

What is the best free app to learn Greek?

Language Transfer is the best free option: 120 audio lessons, no sign-up needed, and consistently the top recommendation from the Greek learning community for building grammar foundations. Grego is also free and works well if you're learning alongside a class or textbook, with structured A1 exercises aligned to the CEFR curriculum.

What should I use to learn Greek after Duolingo?

After Duolingo, the most common next step recommended by the Greek learning community is Language Transfer for grammar foundations. If you're also taking classes or using a textbook, Grego is worth adding for structured practice. For speaking and listening, Pimsleur is the go-to recommendation.

Is Language Transfer enough to learn Greek?

Language Transfer is excellent for understanding how Greek grammar works, but it's audio-only and has no exercises or vocabulary practice. Most learners use it as a foundation and combine it with other tools: something for vocabulary like Drops or Clozemaster, and something for structured practice like Grego if they're following a class or textbook.

What is the best app to learn Greek grammar?

Language Transfer is the most recommended free option for Greek grammar, as it explains the logic behind the language rather than asking you to memorise rules. Grego is the best option for structured grammar exercises, particularly if you're following a CEFR-aligned course or textbook.

What is the best app to learn Greek vocabulary?

Drops and Clozemaster are both well regarded for Greek vocabulary. Drops uses visual associations in 5-minute daily sessions. Clozemaster builds vocabulary through fill-in-the-gap sentences, which gives you words in context rather than in isolation. Duolingo also builds vocabulary effectively, even if its grammar instruction is limited.

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