Experts find that some languages come more natural to English speakers than others.
Picking up a new language can feel anything from a casual hobby to a full-time commitment.
For English speakers, the difference can be enormous. While some languages can be learned in a matter of months, others may demand years of dedicated study before reaching professional-level fluency.
New rankings based on language-learning research from Visual Capitals highlight just how wide that gap really is.
Europe Dominates the Easy List
Many of the languages considered most accessible to English speakers come from Europe.
Spanish, French, Italian, Dutch and Swedish consistently rank among the easiest options thanks to familiar vocabulary, comparable grammar structures and writing systems that do not require learners to start from scratch.
Shared linguistic roots also play a major role.
English has borrowed extensively from both Germanic and Romance languages over centuries, giving learners a surprising head start when tackling many European tongues.
As a result, reaching proficiency in Spanish or French may take roughly 24 to 30 weeks of intensive study.
Why Some Languages Feel Like a Different Planet
Move further away from English linguistically, and the challenge rises quickly.
Languages such as Russian, Greek, Turkish, Hindi and Vietnamese introduce unfamiliar grammatical rules, different writing systems or pronunciation patterns that can take significantly longer to master.
Learning stops being a process of recognizing similarities and becomes a process of building entirely new habits.
Different alphabets, word order and sentence construction all add extra layers of complexity.
The Elite Difficulty Club
A handful of languages sit in a category all their own.
Arabic, Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese and Korean are widely regarded as the most demanding languages for native English speakers.
Those languages often combine multiple obstacles at once.
Mandarin and Cantonese require mastery of tones, where the meaning of a word can change depending on how it is pronounced.
Japanese challenges learners with several writing systems operating side by side.
Korean introduces a unique alphabet and grammar structure that differs sharply from English.
Arabic presents learners with an entirely different script alongside linguistic patterns unfamiliar to most Western speakers.
Reaching professional proficiency in those languages can require around 88 weeks of study—nearly four times longer than some of the easiest alternatives.
More Than Just Words
Difficulty is not necessarily a measure of intelligence or talent.
Experts point out that language learning becomes easier when vocabulary, sounds and sentence structures resemble what learners already know.
Greater linguistic distance usually means more time is needed to build those connections.
That reality also helps explain why language-learning platforms are often dominated by European languages. Familiarity lowers the barrier to entry and keeps learners motivated.
Patience May Be the Most Important Skill
Anyone hoping to tackle Japanese, Korean, Mandarin or Arabic should probably pack something more important than a dictionary: patience.
Results suggest that language learning is less about finding shortcuts and more about understanding how far a language sits from English. Some journeys require a comfortable pair of walking shoes. Others resemble a cross-continental expedition.
Both destinations are reachable. Some simply come with a much longer itinerary.