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Inku vs Memrise

Inku vs Memrise for Japanese

Memrise teaches Japanese through user-recorded native speaker videos. Inku teaches Japanese through curated flashcards with bundled audio. Video vs card.

BBao HuaUpdated April 21, 202612 min read
Category: Video-based multi-language appPricing: Free tier, paid planSince: 2010

Intro

Memrise's signature feature is short clips of real Japanese speakers saying real phrases. It is a strong tool for learners who want to model native pronunciation. Inku takes a different angle: curated flashcards with FSRS-scheduled review. Choose by how you remember best.

When Inku is the better pick

  • You want a Japanese-only app, not a 22-language platform. Memrise covers many languages and its Japanese course is one of many. Inku is Japanese-only and stays that way.
  • You want a modern spaced-repetition scheduler. Inku uses FSRS. Memrise's review system is lighter and less retention-optimized.
  • You're tired of generic 'learning a language is fun' UI. Memrise is gamified with points, leaderboards, and dailies. Inku has none.

When Memrise is the better pick

  • You learn pronunciation best from native speaker videos. Memrise's short user-submitted clips of native speakers are genuinely useful for pronunciation exposure and have no real equivalent in Inku.
  • You want a free tier. Memrise has a more generous free tier than Inku's 7-day trial.
  • You're learning multiple languages. One Memrise subscription covers all 22+ languages. Inku is Japanese-only.

Feature-by-feature

Sources and pricing

Pricing last checked: April 28, 2026. Prices can vary by country, platform, checkout, tax, and promotion.

FeatureInkuMemriseBest fit
FormatFlashcards + audioVideos + spaced review
AudioBundled clean audioNative speaker video clips
SRS algorithmFSRSLighter custom system
GamificationNoneHeavy
LanguagesJapanese22+
Free tier7-day trialYes
PlatformiPhoneiOS, Android, web

Inku's favor · Memrise's favor · roughly even

The honest take

Memrise's video-with-real-speakers innovation is real and valuable for pronunciation. If you struggle with how Japanese should sound, it helps. If your bottleneck is vocabulary retention or kana, Inku's spaced review is a more efficient daily tool.

Verdict

Use Memrise if: you learn pronunciation from video and want a multi-language platform. Use Inku if: you want focused Japanese flashcard practice with modern SRS.

They can pair. Memrise for native speaker video exposure, Inku for daily vocabulary review.

Affiliation note

Inku is not affiliated with Memrise. This comparison uses public product pages, app listings, and help documents where available.

Common questions

Is Memrise still good for Japanese in 2026?+

Yes, for pronunciation and listening practice. Memrise's grammar coverage is thinner than dedicated Japanese apps and the free tier has been narrowing over time.

Why use Inku if Memrise has native speaker videos?+

Different jobs. Native videos help you hear Japanese; spaced flashcards help you remember it. Most learners need both, not one.

See more comparisons: all comparison pages. Or start with the full learning roadmap.

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