HelloChinese consistently ranks among the top Chinese learning apps worldwide. But as a Singapore parent, I had one question: does it actually help with school? Here's my honest assessment after testing it with my own children.
SECTION 1: HONEST REVIEWThe Good: What HelloChinese Does Right
Better Than Duolingo for Chinese
Let's give credit where it's due. HelloChinese genuinely excels in several areas:
- Speech recognition that works — The pronunciation feedback is surprisingly accurate. My kids actually improved their tones using this feature. It catches subtle errors that I, as a non-native speaker, would miss.
- Engaging gamification — Points, streaks, and rewards keep children coming back. Unlike Duolingo's sometimes clunky Chinese course, HelloChinese was built specifically for Mandarin learners.
- Structured learning path — The curriculum flows logically from basic tones to full sentences. Reading, writing, speaking, and listening are all covered.
- Polished experience — Beautiful animations, clear audio from native speakers, and an intuitive interface. It feels premium.
- HSK alignment — If you're targeting the international Chinese proficiency test, this app maps well to HSK levels.
The Bad: Where HelloChinese Falls Short
The Singapore Parent's Problem
- Loose MOE alignment: HelloChinese teaches generic Mandarin Chinese. The vocabulary doesn't match what Singapore schools actually test. Your child learns "飞机场" (airport) while school is testing "操场" (playground).
- Generic Mandarin, not Singapore Chinese: No local context. No HDB, no hawker centers, no "Xiao Ming and Siti" from the Huanle Huoban textbooks. The app was built for the global market, not MOE students.
- Gamification becomes distraction: I noticed my kids chasing points rather than actually retaining words. The streaks felt good but didn't translate to 听写 scores.
- Subscription model: At $70-144/year, you're renting access. Cancel and your child loses everything. Six years of primary school = $420-864 with nothing to show if you stop.
- HSK vs PSLE mismatch: HelloChinese prepares students for the HSK international test, not Singapore's PSLE Chinese examination. Different vocabulary, different format, different goals.
Why HelloChinese Isn't Enough for PSLE
Here's what I learned after three months of daily HelloChinese use:
My daughter diligently completed her lessons every day. She earned points, maintained her streak, and felt proud of her progress. Then 听写 day came—and she still struggled. The app had taught her different words than what her teacher was testing.
The core problem: HelloChinese's vocabulary and MOE's syllabus have surprisingly little overlap. Your child is essentially studying for a different exam.
For Singapore parents, this matters because:
- Weekly Ting Xie tests specific MOE words — HelloChinese won't prepare your child for these weekly spelling tests because it uses different vocabulary entirely.
- PSLE Oral uses Singapore contexts — The exam expects familiarity with local scenarios, not generic situations from an international app.
- Composition requires MOE vocabulary — High marks come from using the specific "好词好句" taught in the curriculum, not general Mandarin phrases.
- Time is limited — Every minute spent on HelloChinese is a minute not spent on the actual words your child will be tested on.
HelloChinese is a good app for general Chinese exposure. But if your priority is school performance, it's the wrong tool for the job.
SECTION 3: COMPARISON TABLEHelloChinese vs MOE-Aligned Learning: Quick Comparison
Want to try MOE-aligned vocabulary?
Try a free P1 sample — 30 vocabulary cards aligned to MOE syllabus. See if spaced repetition works for your child.
Get Free P1 Sample →The Real Cost Over 6 Years
Total Investment: P1 to P6
The Bottom Line
HelloChinese is a good app—just not for PSLE preparation. Use it if your child is learning Chinese for general exposure, preparing for HSK, or if you want a fun supplement that doesn't need to align with school.
But if your priority is school results—听写 scores, PSLE Chinese, and mastering the actual MOE vocabulary—you need a tool that teaches exactly what Singapore schools test.
That's why I switched to an MOE-aligned Anki deck: 9,948+ cards covering every word from P1-P6, with stroke order animations, native audio, and spaced repetition that actually helps my kids retain what they learn for 听写. See how the deck works, or view pricing details.
Try the MOE-aligned alternative
The Primary 1 deck is free. If it helps your child's 听写 scores, get the complete P1-P6 set for less than 18 months of HelloChinese.
Free sample includes 30 cards. Full P1 deck $99.