10 Best And Worst Online Romanian Courses For 2024

  • Johann Brennan
    Written byJohann Brennan
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10 Best And Worst Online Romanian Courses For 2024

Looking for the best online Romanian course to learn the language?

Romanian is rising in popularity, as more and more course options are being released.

In addition to tourism and foreign language careers, the benefits of speaking Romanian cannot be overstated.

Today I’ll give you my rundown of the best (and worst) online Romanian courses.

Below you’ll find pros and cons for each Romanian course, pricing and a summary. Where applicable, I’ll link to a review of the course.

IMPORTANT: Some of the items listed below are probably only loosely defined as “courses” for Romanian. The reason I’ve included them is that they’re popular enough Romanian tools and therefore should be included.

DISCLAIMER: The comments below are personal opinions and some affiliate links are used.

The best Romanian courses online (most popular Romanian resources)

1. RomanianPod101

RomanianPod101

Cost: Starts as low as $4 a month.

Summary: RomanianPod101 is a brilliant online resource for learning Romanian (especially listening comprehension). If you’re into podcast learning especially, this might be the course for you.

RomanianPod101 uses audio lessons similar to podcasts. Lessons are suitable for beginners through more advanced levels. The instruction not only includes listening skills but also incorporates essential vocabulary and grammar with loads of other useful features.

What I like:

  • Large and always expanding variety of Romanian lesson material
  • Clean lesson interface and downloadable content

What I don’t like:

  • Content choices are sparse beyond the beginner level
  • Too much English banter
  • While the lesson interface is nice, the rest of the site is overwhelming and confusing to navigate

UNIQUE OFFER: Use the code MEZZOGUILD to save 25% on any of their Romanian course options.


2. italki

italki

Cost: Prices vary widely

Summary: italki connects learners with tutors, teachers and conversation partners. As with similar services, it doesn’t a curriculum or content to instructors - just facilitates.

The good thing about italki is their vetted onboarding process for teachers which ensures quality. italki has earned its amazing reputation.

Teachers succeed on italki through client feedback, meaning subpar teachers simply will not cut it on the platform.

What I like:

  • Facilitates great connections with expert teachers.

What I don’t like:

  • No set curriculum means you could be paired with an inexperienced new teacher not yet weeded out by italki’s review system.

3. Memrise

Memrise Romanian

Cost: Free

Summary: Memrise moved its free “community” courses to a site called Memrise a while back, while it continues to run a premium subscription on the original Memrise site.

From what I see, Memrise is identical to what Memrise use to offer.

Memrise are 100% free community-added courses (Romanian and others) in the form of a gamified flashcard deck. You select a language or dialect, then go through a flashcard game of “watering plants”. It’s highly addictive and actually quite effective.

Some courses are excellent but not all courses are good. Look for ones that include audio and ones that teach phrases rather than single words.

See my video on downloading Memrise to Anki.

What I like:

  • It’s an effective memorization tool for phrases and words.
  • The addictive nature of the game gets you coming back often to continue learning.
  • It’s all free.
  • There are loads of community-driven courses to choose from.

What I don’t like:

  • As it’s community-driven, you can’t always guarantee quality.

4. Duolingo Romanian

Duolingo Romanian

Cost: Free.

Summary: Duolingo has become a staple for many language learners – a completely free household name to rival established companies like Babbel and Rosetta Stone.

I’ve personally have never liked Duolingo and I think it’s an overrated, infantile game that offers little value other than being an addictive distraction and procrastination from real learning. People go through entire courses on the Duolingo platform and come away with little more than a cartoon trophy.

Their Romanian course might serve you well to get you acquainted but there are better ways to spend your study time in my opinion.

Check out my comparison of Duolingo and Babbel.

What I like:

  • Free to use.
  • Fun downtime activity in between real study periods.
  • Appealing to young people and those experimenting with Romanian before committing to a paid resource.

What I don’t like:

  • Tedious, repetitive point and click on easily predictable answers.
  • Addictive gamification that feels productive but is, in fact, time-wasting.

5. Transparent Language

Transparent Language Romanian

Cost: Pricing varies

Summary: Transparent is one of the most surprising online Romanian courses I’ve tried.

The system and interface are antiquated and slow which is a real drawback, but if you can look past it, Transparent Language provides a real depth of Romanian course content.

The voice recognition comparison is non-existent in Transparent Language. It relies on recording on your voice and showing you your sound wave to compare with the native speaker’s sound wave.

No inbuilt system to automatically compare sounds.

The Transparent Language course has a “Produce it. Say it.” section that literally asks you “Were you right?”.

In other words, no way to automatically detect whether you were correct or not – it relies on your own determination. This is incredibly outdated.

Overall, if you can look past the outdated design and deficient voice recording aspect, Transparent Language Romanian is an outstanding course option.

What I like:

  • Romanian dialogue is 100% natural speed
  • Extensive coverage and depth of content

What I don’t like:

  • Outdated and slow interface that’s a pain to navigate
  • Pronunciation section has no inbuilt voice recognition to compare to native dialogue

6. uTalk

uTalk Romanian

Cost: $4.99 monthly per language, $9.99 for all 140 languages, $99.99 for a lifetime subscription

Summary: uTalk is essentially a fancy flashcard app, an alternative to Memrise and a great way to learn words and phrases in hundreds of different languages.

There are thousands of potential language pair combinations and tons of native speaker audio recordings with picture associations.

What I like:

  • Authentic native speaker audio
  • Hundreds of available languages
  • Thousands of potential language combinations
  • Easily affordable

What I don’t like:

  • Sloppy UI
  • Games are mediocre
  • Broad approach that isn’t tailored for specific languages

7. Mango Languages

Mango Romanian

Cost: $7.99 a month

Summary: Mango Languages has implemented what I believe to be one of the best ‘chunking’ approaches in its course style I’ve ever seen (very close to my own successful method). It does this by avoiding grammar Romanian explanations and instead highlighting lexical chunks in colors to help you learn language patterns.

One of the best features I’ve seen in a language product. Period.

The only problem with Mango is that it’s quite lightweight on its course depth. If they developed an advanced course for Romanian, I’d be a raging fan.

What I like:

  • Beautifully designed Romanian course
  • Focuses on lexical chunks (color coded) rather than rules which is how I prefer to learn

What I don’t like:

  • Minimal grammar focus
  • Lack of content depth for higher-level learners

8. Assimil (Le roumain)

Assimil Romanian

Cost: Prices vary widely

Summary: The Assimil method is old and outdated, and its ‘two wave’ approach has little value in light of current Second Language Acquisition trends (although its focus on patterns rather than grammar drills is ahead of its time). The Assimil dialogues are extremely useful, however.

What I like:

  • High quality dialogues
  • Perfectly arranged audio library
  • Very comprehensive

What I don’t like:

  • French only
  • Translation-based
  • Doesn’t appear to be backed by research or case studies
  • Unusual and bizarre situational topics

9. Mondly Romanian

Mondly Romanian

Cost: Starts at $9.99/month.

Summary: Mondly offers courses for loads of different languages including Romanian and is similar in style to Duolingo and Babbel. There are even hints of Rosetta Stone in its delivery.

It’s a beautifully-designed web app and a pleasure to navigate the Romanian course content.

Some of the language courses aren’t that great (e.g. Arabic) but Romanian and others are done fairly well.

What I like:

  • Beautifully designed app and web interface makes it a pleasure to use
  • Clear and easy progression through the Romanian lessons
  • Inexpensive

What I don’t like:

  • Linear learning path
  • Fairly repetitive and monotonous

See this Mondly review to learn more.


10. Pimsleur Romanian

Pimsleur Romanian

Cost: $14.95 a month subscription (or $119.95 per level)

Summary: Pimsleur’s a household name for learning Romanian using spaced repetition recall. The lessons focus on practical vocabulary and expressions one might need in various scenarios. This includes greetings, common phrases, and vocabulary you might need when talking to native speakers.

In terms of just how much you get out of it, I’d say Pimsleur is a good entry point for Romanian but it will only familiarize you with the basics. Treat its Romanian course as a foundational course and then move on to something more comprehensive.

Pimsleur does not offer any video or written content. It’s audio only.

Read this Pimsleur review.

What I like:

  • Pimsleur was based on solid research in second language acquisition.
  • Extremely effective method despite its age.
  • Heavy repetition of Romanian language samples.

What I don’t like:

  • Outdated scenario examples.
  • Too much English.

Summary: Best online Romanian courses

This pretty much sums up every online Romanian course option currently available (if I missed a high quality Romanian course, please let me know!).

In addition to a Romanian course, make sure you’re getting regular Romanian practice with native speakers.

For that, italki is the easiest way to find really inexpensive practice partners and tutors.

Just remember that even if you have all the courses on this list, you’ll still fail at Romanian without the right motivation, and even a poor Romanian course can be effective in the hands of someone with the right amount of determination to succeed.

For tips on how to learn Romanian and overcoming various language learning struggles, subscribe below by ‘Joining the Guild’ (select Romanian as your target language).


Know of a Romanian course that I didn’t mention?

Share it below in the comment section.

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Donovan Nagel
Donovan Nagel - B. Th, MA AppLing
I'm an Applied Linguistics graduate, teacher and translator with a passion for language learning (especially Arabic).
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2 COMMENTS

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Donovan

Donovan

I tried out the memrise app, and they don’t have Romanian on their list of languages anymore. Just a heads up for anyone wanting to download the app

SaintFu

SaintFu

Hey Donovan,

I couldn’t agree more about DuoLingo. There is another app called DuoCards which I resisted downloaded because I assumed it was affliated with DuoLingo. DuoCards allows you to add your own desired vocab. It’s free with limitations; $3.99 a month for the full version. I do like that the flashcard portion will show me the picture/drawing without the word or the word in English, and I can then say it in Romanian to flip the card. It also allows you to swipe right or left to signify your own sense of mastery of the item. From your blurb, we have similar backgrounds professionally and in education, so we may share many of our peculiarities about what we want out of language learning software.

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