Language Learning Time Required
Find out how many weeks, months, or years it will take to reach proficiency in your target language, based on official FSI difficulty categories and your own weekly study time.
Study Details
Choose a language difficulty category and your weekly study commitment
Based on FSI estimates for reaching Professional Working Proficiency.
Enter how many hours you realistically plan to study each week.
Calculation Results
Your estimated timeline to reach proficiency
Choose a difficulty category and your weekly study time, then click Calculate Time Required to see your estimated timeline.
FSI Language Categories & Example Languages
The Foreign Service Institute groups languages into four broad categories based on how long they typically take native English speakers to learn.
| Category | Est. Hours | Difficulty | Example Languages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category I | 600 – 750 | Easiest | Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Swedish |
| Category II | ~900 | Moderate | German, Indonesian, Malay, Swahili |
| Category III | ~1100 | Hard | Russian, Hindi, Thai, Vietnamese, Greek, Turkish, Hebrew, Polish |
| Category IV | ~2200 | Super-Hard | Mandarin, Cantonese, Arabic, Japanese, Korean |
Language Learning Time FAQ
Everything you need to know about FSI difficulty categories and estimating your own language learning timeline.
The FSI (Foreign Service Institute) scale is a widely referenced classification of language difficulty for native English speakers, developed by the US State Department to train diplomats. It groups languages into four categories based on the estimated classroom hours required to reach Professional Working Proficiency.
According to FSI estimates, Category I languages like Spanish or French take around 600 to 750 hours. Category II languages like German take around 900 hours. Category III ‘hard’ languages like Russian or Hindi take around 1100 hours. Category IV ‘super-hard’ languages like Mandarin, Arabic, or Japanese take around 2200 hours.
Languages that share more vocabulary, grammar structures, and writing systems with English generally take less time to learn. Languages with unfamiliar scripts, tonal systems, or grammar that differs significantly from English, such as Mandarin, Japanese, Korean, and Arabic, require considerably more study time.
No. The FSI estimates are based on structured classroom instruction. Immersion, living in a country where the language is spoken, or regular exposure through media and conversation can meaningfully reduce the effective time needed, though results vary significantly by individual and method.
The FSI hour estimates target ‘Professional Working Proficiency’, roughly equivalent to being able to work comfortably in the language on familiar and some unfamiliar topics. Basic conversational ability is typically reached well before this point, often in a fraction of the total hours.
