
Find Your Ideal French Teacher for Lessons Online
Discover experienced, passionate French teachers to help you reach your next level.

Marie Goetzinger

Evelyne K.

Sandra Simmons

Sarah Carlson
Dr. Simmons took the time to get to know me and my background in French, and what my goals were. She gave suggestions and we created a plan together. Her instructions are kind and encouraging. I'm excited to continue learning from her!
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What is Lessonface?
How do online French lessons work?
What is the best method for learning French ?
We're biased, of course, but at Lessonface we believe the best way to learn French is through one-on-one lessons. Personalized instruction means your teacher can tailor every lesson to your goals, learning style, and skill level. Online group classes can also be a great way to make learning fun and social. Learning French online makes it easy to stay consistent, which is essential to steady progress.
There are plenty of apps and YouTube videos out there to help with learning French, but most teachers agree that those resources work best as supplements to, not replacements for, one-on-one instruction. A skilled French teacher can identify bad habits before they become ingrained, help you focus on what matters most, and solve problems as soon as they arise, often saving you months of frustration and wasted practice time. The bottom line? A real teacher accelerates your progress and keeps you on the right path from day one.
How do I find the best teacher for me for French lessons?
With over 100 qualified French teachers who have together earned an average of 5 out of 5 stars over 72 lesson reviews by verified students, you can be sure to find a great instructor at Lessonface.
Lessonface offers free tools to help you find the ideal tutor for you or your family:
- Use the open filtering system
- Use our matching service to describe your background, scheduling preferences, and any particular goals, and qualified French teachers will respond.
You can view teachers' bios, accolades, rates, send them a message and book lessons from their profiles.
Many teachers offer a free trial, and you can book lessons one at a time until you decide you prefer to book a bundle or subscribe, so don't hesitate to try. Teachers may also offer group classes, self-paced courses, and downloadable content, so there are more ways to get started while you're still getting acquainted with the community.
How much do French lessons cost?
How does payment work for French lessons?
How long does it take for an English speaker to learn French?
French is one of the more accessible languages for English speakers, and there are good reasons for that. English and French share an enormous amount of vocabulary — estimates suggest that up to a third of English words have French origins, which means you already have a significant head start before you even begin.
Among the major world languages, French is considered one of the more approachable for English speakers. The grammar is more structured than English in some ways, but the shared vocabulary and the fact that French uses the Latin alphabet means you're not starting from zero. Most learners find that basic conversations become possible within a few months, travel situations feel comfortable around the six-month mark, and genuine, satisfying conversation is within reach after a year or so of consistent study.
The factors that matter most are consistency, the quality of your instruction, and how much French you expose yourself to outside of lessons. Students who supplement their lessons with French films, music, podcasts, and conversation practice consistently progress faster than those who limit their French to lesson time alone.
It's also worth knowing that progress in a language rarely feels linear. There will be plateaus and breakthroughs, and both are normal. A good teacher will help you stay motivated through the slower stretches and make the most of the moments when everything starts clicking.
The best way to find out how fast you personally will progress is simply to start.
Is French pronunciation really as difficult as people say?
French pronunciation has a reputation that's a little worse than it deserves. Yes, there are genuine challenges — but most of them are very learnable with good instruction and consistent practice.
The aspects that trip up English speakers most often are the nasal vowels, the famously "silent" letters at the ends of words, and the liaison — the way certain final consonants are pronounced when the next word begins with a vowel. French also has a few sounds that don't exist in English, like the French "r" (produced at the back of the throat rather than the front of the mouth) and the "u" vowel sound, which requires a mouth position most English speakers have never used.
The silent letters are probably the biggest initial surprise. A word like "beaucoup" is pronounced nothing like it looks to an English eye, and this can make French feel more opaque than it really is. The good news is that French spelling, once you understand the rules, is actually quite consistent — it's just different from what English speakers expect.
It's also worth knowing that French speakers are generally appreciative of anyone making a genuine effort to speak their language. A heavy accent won't prevent you from being understood or from having meaningful conversations.
With a good teacher who prioritizes pronunciation from the start, most students find that French sounds become natural much faster than they expected. Getting the sounds right early makes everything else — listening comprehension, fluency, confidence — much easier down the line.
How can I improve my French conversation skills?
Improving conversation skills is one of the most common goals for French learners at every level, and it's an area where the right approach makes an enormous difference.
The most important thing is to actually speak — which sounds obvious, but many learners spend most of their study time reading, writing, and doing grammar exercises while avoiding conversation because it feels uncomfortable. Discomfort is a normal part of the process, and the only way through it is to practice speaking regularly, make mistakes, and keep going.
Working with a teacher who prioritizes conversation is crucial. A good conversational French teacher creates a supportive environment where errors are corrected constructively without disrupting the flow of the conversation. They'll ask open-ended questions, introduce vocabulary in context, and help you move away from translating word by word in your head — a habit that slows fluency significantly.
One area many learners overlook is listening. Understanding native French speakers at natural speed is genuinely challenging, and it improves most reliably through lots of exposure. French films, TV shows, podcasts, and radio are all valuable — the goal is to train your ear to process French in real time rather than word by word.
Between lessons, look for opportunities to use French actively. Language exchange apps, online conversation groups, and even talking to yourself in French are all useful. Fluency builds through accumulated hours of real engagement with the language, not through passive study alone.
How often should I take French lessons to make progress?
The honest answer is that lesson frequency matters less than what you do between lessons. A student who takes one lesson a week and practices consistently every day will outpace a student who takes three lessons a week and does nothing in between.
That said, lesson frequency does play a role, especially in the early stages. For most adult beginners, one lesson per week is a solid and sustainable starting point. It gives you enough new material to work with between sessions without overwhelming you, and it maintains enough momentum to keep the language feeling alive and present in your life.
Two lessons per week is a great option for learners who want to accelerate their progress, are preparing for a specific goal like a trip or a job, or simply have the time and motivation to move faster. At this frequency, new vocabulary and structures get reinforced more quickly and the learning compounds faster.
The length of each lesson matters too. A 60-minute lesson once a week gives you more to work with than two 30-minute sessions, but shorter, more frequent sessions can be easier to sustain for busy adult learners.
Whatever frequency you choose, the most important variable is consistency. Showing up regularly — even when life gets busy — is what separates learners who make steady progress from those who feel like they're starting over every few months. A good teacher will help you set a realistic schedule and make the most of the time you have.
What's the best way to start learning French as an adult?
The best starting point is live instruction with a qualified teacher — not an app, not a YouTube channel, and not a grammar textbook on its own. These resources have their place as supplements, but none of them can give you the real-time feedback, personalized guidance, and conversational practice that a good teacher provides from lesson one. Starting with a teacher means you build correct habits from the beginning, which saves you a lot of time and frustration later.
From there, the most important thing is to engage with French as a living language rather than an academic subject. That means speaking from the very beginning, even when it feels premature. It means listening to French — films, podcasts, music, radio — not just studying it. And it means finding personal connections to the language, whether that's a love of French culture and cuisine, a trip you're planning, a family connection, or simply the pleasure of the language itself. Motivation is the single most reliable predictor of success in language learning, and the more personally meaningful French feels, the more likely you are to stick with it through the inevitable plateaus.
It also helps to set a concrete goal early on. "I want to have a basic conversation with my French colleagues by the end of the year" is more motivating than "I want to learn French." Specific goals give your teacher something to work toward and give you a clear sense of progress.
The best time to start is now, and a trial lesson is a genuinely low-pressure way to take that first step.

