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Duolingo Plus: Streaks, Offline Lessons, and Family Math

Language apps reward daily use—budget them like a gym membership.

Header photo: Duolingo — Learning
Photo by Aerps.com on Unsplash

Households rarely subscribe to just one service. When Duolingo sits next to Quizlet on the same card statement, the combined monthly total becomes the number that actually matters for your budget.

Getting concrete numbers

For Duolingo, verify whether the charge is monthly or an annual split—annual plans look smaller per month but hit cash flow differently.

Next step

Use a calculator that lets you enter your real monthly amounts side by side with reference estimates. SubSaved is built for that workflow across dozens of common subscriptions.

One practical approach is to group tools by outcome: entertainment, learning, work productivity, and fitness. Place Duolingo in the right bucket, then ask whether a cheaper tier, annual billing, or a household plan changes the monthly average.

Practical tips

  • Re-run your numbers after any price increase email; platforms often grandfather older rates briefly.
  • Decide one change to test for 30 days: cancel, downgrade, or switch billing cadence.
  • Compare what you pay to reference estimates to see if you are an outlier—then verify current public offers.
  • Block 15 minutes, export transactions, and highlight Duolingo before you optimize anything else.

Treat every estimate as a starting point. Confirm current offers in your region, then adjust your plan intentionally rather than letting renewals decide for you.

Try your numbers in the calculator

The SubSaved calculator is free: choose the services you pay for (including Duolingo), enter your monthly amounts, and see your total compared to reference pricing—helpful for renewals, downgrades, and spotting overlap with Duolingo and the rest of your stack.

Open the calculator on SubSaved →