“What’s the best app to learn Arabic?” is probably the question I get asked more than any other — including from people who’ve already been learning with me for months.
After twenty years of teaching Arabic to students from 30+ countries, watching hundreds of learners try every app on the market, and seeing which ones actually move the needle — here is my honest, complete, no-agenda answer.
Some of these apps are genuinely excellent. Some are overhyped. And one truth runs through all of them that most app review sites will never tell you.
Let me be transparent about something before we start. I run an online Arabic school. I teach Arabic. Apps are, in some sense, competition. You might expect me to dismiss them all. I’m not going to do that — because it wouldn’t be honest, and because honest is the only thing that’s useful to you.
The truth is more nuanced: apps are real tools with real value, specific strengths, and equally specific limitations. Understanding which tool does what — and what no tool can do — is the difference between a learner who makes consistent progress and one who downloads app after app without going anywhere.
This guide covers every significant Arabic learning app available in 2026, with an honest verdict on each. At the end, I’ll tell you exactly how to combine the best of them for maximum results — alongside or before teacher-led instruction.
The Honest Truth About Arabic Learning Apps — Before We Review Anything
Every Arabic learning app review I’ve ever read has the same blind spot: it reviews apps as if apps are the thing. They’re not. Apps are tools. And like any tool, what matters is whether the tool fits the job.
Here is what apps do well, consistently, across the board:
- Building daily habits — streak systems, notifications, and gamification genuinely help people show up every day
- Vocabulary repetition — spaced repetition algorithms (used by Anki and others) are scientifically proven to be the most efficient vocabulary retention method available
- Passive immersion — listening to Arabic audio while commuting, exercising, or doing chores builds ear familiarity with Arabic sounds
- Alphabet introduction — for complete beginners, several apps make the Arabic script less intimidating in the early days
- Accessibility — apps are available 24 hours a day, cost little or nothing, and require no scheduling
Here is what no app — regardless of price, AI, or marketing — can do:
- Hear that your ع (Ayn) is wrong and correct it in real time — pronunciation feedback for Arabic’s unique consonants requires a human ear
- Adapt to your specific confusion — a teacher who notices you always make the same grammatical error redesigns the lesson around fixing it; an app can’t notice
- Answer “why” questions meaningfully — “Why does this verse use this grammatical form?” deserves a contextual, nuanced answer that no algorithm provides
- Take you to genuine conversational fluency or deep Quranic comprehension — no learner has achieved this through apps alone; every person who has done it had a teacher
With that framing clear, let’s look at what’s actually available — and what each app is genuinely good for.
Anki — The Best Vocabulary Tool Money Can’t Buy Top Pick
Anki is not a language-learning app in the traditional sense — it’s a spaced-repetition flashcard system. You load it with flashcard decks (either ones you build yourself or pre-made decks from the community), and its algorithm shows you each card at precisely the moment you’re about to forget it, forcing just-in-time recall that cements words in long-term memory with astonishing efficiency.
For Arabic, Anki is genuinely irreplaceable. The Quran has approximately 77,000 words, but only around 300 unique word-forms account for 70–80% of the entire text. A pre-built Quranic vocabulary Anki deck — available free in the Anki shared deck database — combined with 15 minutes of daily review is the single highest-return study habit any Arabic learner can build. Within six months, you’ll recognise the majority of words you encounter in the Quran.
✓ Strengths
- Most efficient vocabulary retention system available — proven by research
- Enormous library of free pre-built Arabic decks (Quranic, MSA, Egyptian, Gulf)
- Completely customisable — your teacher can give you new words to add after every lesson
- Desktop version completely free
- Works offline — no internet needed after deck download
✗ Limitations
- Interface is functional but not beautiful — steeper learning curve than consumer apps
- iOS version costs $24.99 (one-time) — worth it, but notable
- Does not teach grammar, pronunciation, or conversational skills
- Requires discipline to build and maintain daily — no built-in gamification
Quran.com — The Most Underused Arabic Resource on the Internet Top Pick
Quran.com is not a traditional language app — it’s a Quranic study platform. But for any Muslim learning Arabic to understand the Quran, it is one of the most powerful free resources on the internet, and it is dramatically underused by most learners.
What makes it exceptional: tap or click on any word in any verse, and you see the word’s translation, its Arabic root, its grammatical function, and every other verse in the Quran where it appears. This is exactly what a learner does in a lesson with a qualified teacher — go through a verse word by word, understand what each word means, see how it connects to the whole. Quran.com lets you do a version of this on your own, at any time, for any verse.
Combined with recitation audio from multiple reciters, translation in dozens of languages, and a tafsir library, Quran.com is the closest thing to a comprehensive Quranic study companion available for free.
✓ Strengths
- Word-by-word translation and root analysis for every Quranic word
- Recitation audio from multiple famous reciters
- Translation in 50+ languages
- Tafsir library (classical and contemporary)
- Completely free — no subscription, no paywall
- Mobile app and website — works on everything
✗ Limitations
- Does not teach grammar in any structured way
- Cannot correct your pronunciation
- Word-by-word analysis gives meaning but not grammatical reasoning — the “why” still needs a teacher
- Overwhelming for total beginners with no Arabic background yet
Quran Companion — Best for Structured Quranic Vocabulary
Quran Companion does what Anki does for Quranic vocabulary — but with significantly better visual design, built-in motivation systems, and a ready-to-go curriculum focused specifically on the Quran’s most frequent words. Where Anki requires some initial setup to get the right deck, Quran Companion works immediately out of the box.
The app builds vocabulary by frequency — you start with the words that appear most often in the Quran and work downward. Progress tracking shows exactly how much of the Quran you currently understand by word recognition. When you’ve learned the top 100 words, the app tells you: “You now recognise approximately X% of the words in the Quran.” That feedback is motivating in a genuinely meaningful way.
✓ Strengths
- Beautiful, clean design — enjoyable to use daily
- Frequency-ranked Quranic vocabulary — highest-return words first
- Shows Quran comprehension percentage as you progress
- Spaced repetition built in — no setup required
- Available on iOS and Android
✗ Limitations
- Premium features behind paywall (free version is limited)
- Vocabulary only — no grammar, no pronunciation instruction
- Less customisable than Anki for adding teacher-assigned vocabulary
Duolingo Arabic — The Honest Verdict
Let me give Duolingo its due before I tell you where it fails. Duolingo is excellent at one very specific thing: getting a complete beginner to show up every day. Its streak system, gamification, and the sheer fun of earning virtual points genuinely motivates people who otherwise wouldn’t open a language resource at all. If Duolingo has gotten someone started on Arabic who would otherwise not have started, that is a real and valuable contribution.
It also does a reasonable job of introducing the Arabic alphabet in a low-pressure way and exposing beginners to around 100–200 Arabic words in the first few weeks. For a true zero who has never seen Arabic before, those early Duolingo sessions serve a genuine purpose.
But here is where it falls short — and for Arabic specifically, the gap is significant. Duolingo’s Arabic pronunciation instruction is inadequate for the unique consonants that don’t exist in English. Letters like ع (Ayn), ح (Ha), ق (Qaf), and the emphatic consonants ص، ض، ط، ظ require a human ear to teach correctly. Duolingo’s speech recognition for Arabic is notably less accurate than for European languages, which means it cannot reliably tell you whether you’re pronouncing these sounds correctly. The result: learners build pronunciation habits in weeks one through four that need to be unlearned under a teacher later — which is harder than learning correctly from the start.
Additionally, Duolingo teaches a version of Modern Standard Arabic in a style that doesn’t reflect how MSA is actually used — its sentences are artificial constructions designed for the gamified format rather than the kind of Arabic you’d encounter in the Quran, in news, or in formal communication.
✓ Strengths
- Best-in-class habit formation — streaks and gamification genuinely work
- Good first introduction to the Arabic alphabet shape
- Free, accessible, works on any device
- Low-pressure, enjoyable for absolute beginners
✗ Limitations
- Pronunciation feedback for Arabic’s unique sounds is unreliable
- Hits a hard ceiling at beginner level — intermediate and advanced learners gain nothing
- Teaches artificial MSA sentences rather than real Quranic or conversational Arabic
- Gamification can prioritise streak-keeping over actual learning
- No grammar explanation — learners don’t understand why sentences work
Alif Baa Companion — The Best App for the Arabic Alphabet
The Alif Baa textbook (Georgetown University Press) is widely considered the best structured introduction to the Arabic alphabet and basic reading in print — used in university Arabic programs worldwide. The Companion app provides the audio, video, and interactive exercises that accompany the textbook.
If you’re going to invest in one resource specifically for learning the Arabic script properly — with correct letter shapes, clear native-speaker audio for each letter, and reading exercises using real Arabic words — this combination is the right choice. It’s not glamorous, but it’s thorough and correct.
✓ Strengths
- Academically rigorous — used in university programs
- Native-speaker audio for every letter and word
- Reading practice with real Arabic (not simplified cartoon words)
- Solid foundation that holds up as you progress
✗ Limitations
- Requires purchasing the textbook (around $50) for full use
- Less engaging than consumer apps — designed for academic learners
- Does not cover grammar or vocabulary beyond the alphabet stage
Pimsleur Arabic — Is It Worth the Price?
Pimsleur uses a spaced-repetition audio method — you listen to a 30-minute lesson, are prompted to produce Arabic phrases out loud, and encounter the same phrases at scientifically timed intervals in subsequent sessions. It works for what it claims to do: building spoken phrase confidence and listening comprehension in a structured way.
Pimsleur Arabic offers both Modern Standard Arabic and Eastern Arabic (Levantine dialect) tracks. The MSA track is most relevant for formal Arabic and Quranic study context; the Eastern Arabic track for conversational Levantine. Neither teaches the Arabic script — Pimsleur is entirely audio-based by design.
The price is the main obstacle. At $14.95/month (or much more for outright purchase), Pimsleur costs significantly more than most alternatives. For that money, two monthly lessons with a qualified Arabic teacher would produce more personalised, correctable, adaptable results. That said, if you commute or exercise and want high-quality structured Arabic audio for that time, Pimsleur is among the better choices for listening-based learning.
✓ Strengths
- High-quality native speaker audio
- Effective for listening comprehension and spoken phrase building
- Great for commute/exercise time — no screen needed
- Structured, self-contained curriculum
✗ Limitations
- Expensive — significantly more than competitors
- Does not teach the Arabic script at all
- Cannot correct your specific pronunciation errors
- Same money buys actual teacher time with better results
Madinah Arabic Online — The Hidden Gem Top Pick
Madinah Arabic is the online version of the famous three-book “Madinah Arabic” series developed at the Islamic University of Madinah — the Arabic grammar curriculum used to teach thousands of international students Islamic Arabic. The website provides the full curriculum with exercises, audio, and vocabulary lists, completely free.
For learners who want a structured, systematic approach to Arabic grammar specifically designed for access to Islamic texts and the Quran, this is one of the best free resources available. Book 1 alone provides an excellent grammar foundation that rivals paid courses.
The interface is basic by modern app standards — this is a website, not a slick mobile app, and it shows. But the content quality is genuine. Used alongside a qualified teacher who can explain the grammar and answer questions, Madinah Arabic is a powerful free resource.
✓ Strengths
- Completely free — entire curriculum available at no cost
- Academically rigorous grammar instruction
- Specifically designed for Quranic and Islamic Arabic
- Used by thousands of serious Arabic learners worldwide
- Exercises and vocabulary lists built in
✗ Limitations
- Interface is dated and not beginner-friendly without guidance
- Heavy reading of grammar rules can be overwhelming alone
- No audio for all content — some sections text-only
- Works much better alongside a teacher than as pure self-study
Tarteel — AI-Powered Quran Recitation Feedback
Tarteel is genuinely innovative: it listens to your Quranic recitation in real time, follows along in the text, and flags mistakes in pronunciation or wording. For learners working on memorisation (hifz) or on recitation accuracy, it provides a level of feedback that was previously only available with a human Quran teacher sitting beside you.
It won’t replace a qualified Tajweed teacher — the nuances of Arabic pronunciation that matter for Tajweed (the rules of Quranic recitation) require human ear and human instruction, particularly for the sounds that have no English equivalent. But as a between-lesson recitation check, Tarteel is a meaningful tool for Muslim learners who want to practice their recitation outside of lesson time.
✓ Strengths
- Real-time recitation following and error detection
- Useful for hifz (Quran memorisation) practice
- Tracks progress through Quran memorisation goals
- Genuinely innovative use of AI for an Islamic learning purpose
✗ Limitations
- AI cannot replace a human Tajweed teacher for subtle pronunciation nuances
- Premium features locked behind subscription
- Does not teach the meaning of what you’re reciting — language instruction separate
Side-by-Side Comparison: Which App for Which Goal
| App | Cost | Alphabet | Vocabulary | Grammar | Pronunciation | Quranic | Kids |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anki | Free | ✗ | ★★★★★ | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | △ |
| Quran.com | Free | ✗ | ★★★★☆ | △ | ✓ audio | ★★★★★ | ✗ |
| Quran Companion | Freemium | ✗ | ★★★★☆ | ✗ | ✗ | ★★★★☆ | ✗ |
| Duolingo | Free | ★★★☆☆ | ★★★☆☆ | ✗ | △ weak | ✗ | △ |
| Alif Baa Companion | Paid | ★★★★★ | △ | ✗ | ★★★★☆ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Pimsleur | Paid $$$ | ✗ | ★★★☆☆ | ✗ | ★★★☆☆ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Madinah Arabic | Free | ✗ | ★★★☆☆ | ★★★★☆ | △ | ★★★★☆ | ✗ |
| Tarteel | Freemium | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ★★★★☆ | ★★★★☆ | ✗ |
| Qualified Teacher | $$ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ |
The Optimal App Stack by Learner Type
Based on twenty years of watching what works, here are the specific combinations I recommend — matched to your goal and situation.
🕌 For Muslims Learning Quranic Arabic
Primary: One-on-one lessons with a qualified Quranic Arabic teacher (2x/week) · Vocabulary: Anki with Quranic vocabulary deck (15 min/day) · Between-lesson study: Quran.com word-by-word for verses covered in class · Recitation: Tarteel for daily practice · Grammar reference: Madinah Arabic Book 1
Total app time: ~25 minutes daily. Total weekly investment: ~3.5 hours. See the complete Quranic Arabic roadmap →
👤 For Adult Beginners Starting from Zero
Week 1–2: Duolingo (get comfortable with Arabic existing) + Alif Baa Companion (learn the alphabet properly) · From Week 3: Replace Duolingo with Anki. Start teacher lessons. Quran.com for context · Ongoing: Anki daily + Madinah Arabic for grammar reference
See the complete adult learning roadmap →
👨👩👧 For Parents With Children Learning Arabic
Ages 4–7: Arabic cartoons on YouTube (Spacetoon, Almosafer), Alif Bee app, + a qualified children’s Arabic teacher · Ages 8–12: Anki adapted for their vocabulary level + Quran.com for family study + teacher (2x/week) · Key principle: Apps for exposure and vocabulary; teacher for actual progress
See the complete kids Arabic guide → and how to support Arabic at home →
🌍 For Expats or Travellers Learning Conversational Arabic
Dialect choice first: Egyptian Arabic for broadest reach, Gulf Arabic for Gulf countries, Levantine for Syria/Lebanon/Jordan · Stack: Pimsleur (for audio in transit) + Anki with dialect vocabulary deck + teacher lessons focused on conversation · Immersion: Arabic podcasts and films in your target dialect
Choose your dialect → and see Egyptian Arabic for expats →
🕌 For New Muslims Needing Arabic for Salah
Month 1: No apps — focus entirely on memorising Salah phrases with a teacher, then understanding their meaning · Month 2: Alif Baa Companion for the alphabet · From Month 3: Anki + Quran.com + Tarteel for recitation practice
Complete guide for new Muslims →
📚 The Complete eArabicLearning Resource Library — Everything Connected
The Arabic Alphabet: Complete Guide
All 28 letters, sounds, and 2-week learning plan
Why Understanding the Quran Changes Everything
The complete Quranic Arabic learning guide
MSA vs Egyptian vs Gulf Arabic
Which Arabic should you actually learn?
Learn Arabic as an Adult: The Honest Roadmap
For people who think it’s too late
Online Arabic Classes for Kids
The ultimate parent’s guide to choosing a program
Arabic for New Muslims
Step-by-step from Salah Arabic to Quran comprehension
Egyptian Arabic for Expats in Cairo
The honest survival guide from 20 years of teaching
Teach Your Child Arabic When You Don’t Speak It
A parent’s honest guide
How to Learn Arabic Online: Complete Guide
For adults and kids — everything you need to know
How Long Does It Take to Learn Arabic?
Realistic timelines, honest expectations
“I spent eight months on Duolingo thinking I was learning Arabic. I was keeping a streak alive. When I started lessons with a teacher, I realised I couldn’t hold a single real conversation — and my pronunciation of Ayn and Ha was completely wrong. Six months with a teacher undid eight months of bad habits and took me genuinely further than the apps ever did. I wish someone had told me this at the beginning.”
— James T., student at eArabicLearning, United States
Ready for the One Thing No App Can Give You?
A qualified Arabic teacher who hears you, adapts to you, corrects you in real time, and builds a curriculum around your specific goals and life — not a gamified approximation of one.
At eArabicLearning, your first lesson is completely free. No commitment, no payment. One session to meet your teacher, assess your level, and get a clear, personalised roadmap.
Use the apps. They’re genuinely useful. But let a teacher be the engine.
All levels · All goals · Quranic · MSA · Egyptian Arabic · 30+ countries served
Frequently Asked Questions: Arabic Learning Apps
The Bottom Line
Apps are not the enemy of Arabic learning — and they’re not the solution to it either. They’re tools. Like any tool, their value depends entirely on matching the tool to the task and using it in combination with what the tool can’t do.
The learners who make the fastest, deepest, and most lasting progress with Arabic use apps every day — and have a teacher. The apps handle vocabulary retention, passive listening, and daily habit reinforcement. The teacher handles everything that matters most: pronunciation, grammar, comprehension, cultural depth, and the kind of adaptive, responsive instruction that no algorithm can replicate.
If you’ve been relying solely on an app and wondering why your Arabic feels stuck, you already know what’s missing. If you’ve been putting off starting because you weren’t sure which app to use first — now you know exactly which ones to use, in what order, and for what purpose.
And when you’re ready for the teacher — the first lesson is free.
