7 min read
7 min read

Duolingo just launched 148 new language courses, more than doubling what it offered before. That’s a massive leap in content and access, all rolled out in less than a year.
The big reason behind the rapid growth? Artificial intelligence. By using powerful tools to help create lessons, Duolingo made it easier than ever for people around the world to start learning new languages. This marks the company’s biggest expansion in history, and it’s only the beginning.

Have you ever wanted to learn Japanese using Spanish as your base language? Or maybe study Korean if you speak Portuguese? Now you can.
Duolingo’s most in-demand languages, like Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin, are now available across all 28 of the app’s supported interface languages. That means millions of new learners can now access combinations that didn’t exist before.

Duolingo used to take up to two years to create a single new language course. Each one had to be built from the ground up, slowly and carefully.
Thanks to AI and smarter internal tools, the company developed and launched 148 new courses in under 12 months. It’s a complete shift in how digital learning content is created. Now, learners don’t have to wait years to access the language they want.

Duolingo introduced a system called “shared content” to help build courses more efficiently. It lets the team create one high-quality base course and adapt it to different learner languages.
For example, once they build a Spanish course for English speakers, they can quickly modify it for French, Korean, or Hindi speakers. This way, they save time without sacrificing the quality of the lessons.

For many Asian users, Duolingo used to offer only English-focused content. Now, speakers of Japanese, Mandarin, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese, and other languages can learn six other major languages.
That includes top picks like Spanish, French, and German. It’s a major shift from a one-size-fits-all model to a system where regional users get real options tailored to them. The company wants to make language learning more global and more personal.

Most of the new courses are aimed at beginners, those just starting their journey. They follow the CEFR A1–A2 levels, which focus on basic words, sentences, and conversation starters.
This means you’ll learn the essentials you’d use, greetings, common questions, travel phrases, and everyday vocabulary. It’s perfect for someone looking to get comfortable with a new language quickly and confidently.

To keep things fun and practical, Duolingo added new tools like Stories and DuoRadio. These help users learn by reading mini-narratives and listening to real conversations.
Instead of just memorizing words, you’ll get a feel for how the language flows in real situations. This kind of immersion helps boost both confidence and memory retention, without feeling like you’re stuck in a boring classroom.

While AI helps create lessons fast, Duolingo still uses human experts to review and refine the content. It’s not just a machine running the whole show.
Language designers step in to make sure each course meets Duolingo’s standards and fits with international language benchmarks. So the tech moves things forward, but the people keep things accurate and effective.

The power of AI means lessons can now adjust to your progress. If you’re doing well, it pushes you forward. Struggling? It slows things down and gives extra practice.
This smart system keeps learning at the right pace, so you stay motivated. No more one-size-fits-all exercises, it’s about learning what you need, when you need it, in a way that keeps things interesting.

By offering more language options for more people, Duolingo is getting closer to its big mission: to make quality education available to everyone.
No matter your background or your first language, there’s now a better chance you’ll find a course that works for you. With over a billion potential new learners unlocked by this update, it’s a game-changing moment.

In Latin America, millions of users can now learn languages that weren’t available before. Spanish and Portuguese speakers, for example, can now explore Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin.
These new courses give Latin American users access to languages that open up career, travel, and cultural opportunities. It’s about more than just learning for fun, it’s about opening doors.

Europeans now have access to a wider range of language combinations. French, German, Italian, and Spanish speakers can now start learning popular Asian languages that were previously limited.
This move strengthens Duolingo’s presence in multilingual regions where people often know two or more languages and want to pick up another. More choice means more motivation to keep learning.

Duolingo isn’t just about learning vocabulary, it’s aiming to help people have real conversations. The app’s new courses include speech recognition and listening features that mimic everyday interactions.
Instead of drilling flashcards, you practice speaking and listening in full sentences. It’s a faster path to actually using the language in real life, not just memorizing it.

CEO Luis von Ahn says this update wouldn’t have happened without the company’s commitment to artificial intelligence. It’s now a core part of how Duolingo operates.
AI helps build lessons faster, but it also helps improve them over time. Duolingo is now reviewing performance, hiring, and team goals through an AI-first lens, which means tech is driving more than just content creation.

Duolingo’s staff says the AI tools help them focus on what matters. With machines handling the repetitive stuff, experts can work on harder problems, like perfecting course flow or fixing tricky grammar points.
It’s not just about speed, it’s about using human time wisely. The goal is to keep quality high while helping learners move forward faster and more smoothly.
Curious what else AI is changing? Take a look at how ChatGPT is getting lighter and faster.

If you haven’t used Duolingo in a while, it might look very different now. With more languages, smarter lessons, and tools that make practice feel like play, it’s worth another look.
You might find the course you’ve always wanted is finally available, and easier to follow than ever. For many, this is the start of a fresh new learning journey.
Want to see where language learning tech might go next? Check out what OpenAI’s cooking up with its open language model.
What’s your take on Duolingo’s big AI move? Drop a comment below and hit like if you’re excited to try the new courses.
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Dan Mitchell has been in the computer industry for more than 25 years, getting started with computers at age 7 on an Apple II.
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