Founded in 2005, Rocket Languages is a learning app that currently offers courses in 13 languages, including French. Rocket French is incredibly thorough, covering French vocabulary, listening, speaking, grammar, and culture.

But is Rocket French the best app to learn French? I’ve spent several days trying out Rocket French’s different learning levels. Here’s what I discovered.

What is Rocket French?

Rocket Languages’ French offering, Rocket French can be used as a web app (meaning you can access it on your computer as well as on a mobile device, like Copycat Cafe) and as a mobile app (meaning you can use it on a mobile device). It covers beginner to advanced levels of French - roughly from the CEFR A1 to B2 levels.

Rocket French has three learning levels, and users who’ve purchased all three can move between them easily - a real advantage for someone who wants to go back and review or skip ahead to find a lesson about a particular subject. Each lesson has a nice, short summary that explains what’s covered. Modules are divided into two types of lessons: audio and grammar/culture, which are in English with French vocabulary and examples.

While its look is fairly simple, Rocket French stands out from other language apps by being what is probably the most thorough offering currently out there. You’ll practice and learn vocabulary, grammar, listening, and speaking skills. Sure, many other language learning apps offer all of these to some degree, but add to this extensive culture lessons, including helpful footnotes in other lessons, like grammar.

What’s good about Rocket French?

The fact that Rocket French covers so much ground means that it could be a great solution for learners with lots of different goals. You can use it if you want to learn French for an upcoming trip but also to help you with your French at school or if you want to really become fluent in the language.

No language learning app can make you fluent on its own, but Rocket French has a lot of helpful explanations and lessons that would definitely help boost the other materials and resources you’re studying with.

I also really like that Rocket French didn’t just compartmentalize its culture lessons. As you read through its very long and thorough grammar lessons, for instance, you’ll come across little information windows that warn you about a false cognate or explain that a certain word or term might have another meaning, including an obscene one. Instead of just teaching le chat and la chatte, for instance, Rocket French adds a note about the other meaning of la chatte, which is crucial to be aware of if you’re studying contemporary French.

Rocket French’s lessons have a really friendly tone, despite all the material that’s covered in such a rigorous way. The audio lessons are especially great. They take on a podcast-like format and easily integrate and explain different concepts as they go along.

Voice recognition and pronunciation practice

Rocket French’s voice recognition system uses the Google Web Speech API for accurate pronunciation feedback. The Rocket Record tool lets you record your voice and compare it against native audio, scoring your pronunciation in real time. This works on both mobile and desktop, giving you instant feedback to build confidence in speaking French.

What’s both good and bad about Rocket French

Generally clocking in at around 25-30 minutes each, Rocket French’s lessons are very long compared to most other apps’. In some ways, this is great, but in others it can be hard to pay attention for the entire time, especially when there’s a lot of repetition or repetitive exercises. And of course, even if they might want to, not everyone may have that much time every day to practice French, or to focus only on one app in addition to the other ways they’re studying French. At least the app lets you stop the lessons and come back to them easily, so it’s not impossible to set your own pace.

What’s not good about Rocket French?

Rocket French has been around for a while and has a lot to offer. But I was surprised and disappointed that its web app version couldn’t recognize the microphone either on my laptop or on my phone. Apparently, this isn’t just a one-time bug, since the app’s FAQ is full of instructions about what to do if your mic isn’t being picked up. Unfortunately, even when I followed these instructions, that didn’t fix the problem. Since a good deal of Rocket French’s exercises involve speaking, it meant I had to skip those. (Fortunately, the mobile app did recognize my phone’s microphone and I was able to try them out that way.)

Note: Rocket French has updated their voice recognition system since this testing. The current version uses the Google Web Speech API and reportedly works more reliably. Your experience may vary depending on your browser and device.

Missing out on some of Rocket French’s exercises is an even bigger issue than it might be with some other apps because while the app’s lessons are long and heavy on explanations and examples, I found it surprisingly light on exercises. This is my biggest complaint about Rocket French. I would have liked to see a lot more ways to practice. Instead of 50 flashcards that I can passively look at, give me 50 fill-in exercises or a longer quiz or something.

I think the kind of motivated, dedicated students that Rocket French might please the most will also have to look elsewhere to get more practice. On this note, I also think that the barrage of info you often get in a single lesson could have been broken down into separate, shorter lessons, with exercises of their own.

It also felt weird to me that there are no final quizzes or checkpoints when you reach the end of a learning level. For an app that teaches so much, it would have been incredibly helpful to really be able to check that a learner has gotten down the essentials.

The best and worst things about Rocket French

To sum it up…

Here’s what I liked most about Rocket French:

  • It’s probably the most thorough French learning app out there, covering vocabulary, grammar, listening, speaking, and culture. Grammar explanations are especially extensive.

  • It offers great listening practice, with audio lessons in a friendly, podcast-like format that integrates ideas and new concepts nicely as it goes.

  • I love that as you read grammar lessons, Rocket French’s creators take the time to mention things like false cognates or words with obscene meanings/connotations.

  • The summary that appears when you click on a lesson is very helpful.

  • Lifetime access means you pay once and keep the course forever, including future updates.

Here’s what I didn’t like about Rocket French:

  • There are not enough exercises, especially compared to all of the things you’ll learn.

  • Microphone recognition can be finicky on the web app (mobile app works more reliably).

  • The “Know it” exercises expect you to know entire phrases you might have only read or heard once before in the midst of a long lesson.

  • There’s no final quiz or checkpoint to see what you’ve learned after each level, and the quizzes at the end of each lesson are disappointingly short compared to everything you’re supposed to have learned.

Can Rocket French make me fluent in French?

If you’ve read some of our other app reviews, you may know the answer to this question already: No language app can make you fluent in a language on its own. No, not even Copycat Cafe.

For one thing, like most, if not all, language learning apps, Rocket French relies on set vocabulary rather than exposing you to variations. You’ll have to expose yourself to French in other ways to learn these.

A specific issue with Rocket French is that while it offers extensive lessons in grammar, vocabulary, and culture, as well as listening and speaking, there are comparatively few exercises and quizzes that will allow you to practice and review what you’ve learned.

Ideally, if you choose to use Rocket French, it’s a good idea to look up exercises covering different things you’re learning along the way, to be sure you know them well. One way to do this could be to use Duolingo as well. Its phrases and vocabulary aren’t always as accurate as Rocket French’s, but overall it could be a good way to review. If you’re prioritizing correct French and grammar, online exercises are also a good idea. Just do an internet search for “free French [whatever you want to practice] exercises”.

In addition, as with any app, it’s a good idea to supplement what you’re learning by reading, watching, and listening to things in French. This will help you learn even more about French culture, as well as practice your French skills in different ways.

Finding a French conversation partner is also a great idea, since it will let you practice what you’ve learned with a real native French-speaker.

Since Rocket French’s scope is so large, you may also want to supplement it with another app that focuses on an aspect of French learning that’s particularly important to you. For instance, if you want even more practice with contemporary conversational French, the Copycat Cafe app could be a great choice.

How much does Rocket French cost?

Rocket French uses a one-time payment model with lifetime access - you pay once and keep the course forever, including all future updates. Here are the current prices (check the Rocket French pricing page for the most up-to-date rates):

Package Regular Price Content
Level 1 $149.95 138 hours, 3,636 voice recognition phrases
Levels 1 & 2 $299.90 262 hours, 7,381 voice recognition phrases
Levels 1, 2 & 3 $449.85 385 hours, 10,355 voice recognition phrases

Discounts: Rocket French frequently runs sales offering significant discounts. A 6-month payment plan is also available for the complete 3-level bundle.

Free trial: Rocket French offers a 6-day free trial of Level 1 with access to 7 lessons.

Money-back guarantee: All purchases come with a 60-day money-back guarantee for any reason. (iOS app purchases follow Apple’s 14-day refund policy.)

The verdict

With lessons that cover vocabulary, grammar, speaking, listening, and culture, Rocket French is an extremely thorough French learning app. The lifetime access model is attractive if you don’t want ongoing subscription costs.

I just wish there were more exercises and quizzes to help you practice and review the many, many concepts the app can teach you. If you choose Rocket French, plan to supplement it with additional practice resources - whether that’s Copycat Cafe for conversation practice, Duolingo for gamified review, or exercises you find online.

AS

About Alysa Salzberg

Alysa Salzberg is an American writer and cookie enthusiast who has lived in Paris, France for over a decade. She's the author of Hearts at Dawn, a Historical Novel Society Editors' Choice book that retells Beauty and the Beast during the 1870 Siege of Paris. She brings a unique perspective to French language and culture from her years living in France.

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