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How long does it really take to learn Estonian to B1 level

A person is holding an Estonian language textbook and trying to understand how much more time it will take to speak confidently.
“Tell me honestly… how long does it take to learn Estonian to B1?”
— this is a question VIKOOL teachers hear at almost every trial lesson.

And it’s understandable. Some people have an exam coming up, others need the language for work, and some for extending documents. The main thing people want to know is: how long will this journey actually take?

The answer is not always the same. But there are clear guidelines that help you understand it. Let’s look at it calmly and without myths.

📚 How many hours are needed for B1 level

In the European language level system (CEFR), there are approximate recommendations for the number of study hours.

To reach B1 level, you usually need:


In total, this is around 400–500 study hours.

But it’s important to understand: this doesn’t mean you need to sit with textbooks for years. These hours are spread over time — during lessons, practice, speaking, and small tasks between classes.

A language is not learned only in class. It starts to live in your daily life.

📊 How long it takes in practice

Based on VIKOOL teachers’ experience, most students reach B1 in about 10–18 months.

But the range can vary. Some students pass the exam in 8–9 months, while others need around two years. Why does this happen? It’s not only about ability. There are several factors that strongly affect your progress speed.

⏳ Why some people progress faster

Every student comes with their own background:

  • Some have already heard Estonian at work
  • Some live in a fully Russian-speaking environment
  • Some are afraid to speak, while others start trying right away

Here are four factors that most often speed up learning.

1. Consistency

The most important factor is how often you interact with the language.

Students who study regularly, even just 15–20 minutes a day, progress faster than those who learn in “bursts.”

💡 Tip: the 15-minute rule.
Do a small task in Estonian every day:

  1. Read a short news article
  2. Repeat a few phrases
  3. Listen to a short dialogue

The brain remembers a language better through frequent repetition, not through rare intensive study sessions.

2. Speaking practice

You can know the rules and still not speak. That’s why practice is important:

  • Dialogues in class
  • Speaking exercises
  • Small real-life situations

When a person starts speaking, the language постепенно перестаёт быть “теорией” → gradually stops being “theory.” It becomes a tool for communication.

3. Attitude to mistakes

Many adult students are afraid to speak because of mistakes. But teachers often notice one simple thing: those who are not afraid to make mistakes start speaking faster.

💡 One useful technique is to intentionally use new words in conversation, even if you’re not sure. Mistakes become part of the learning process. And over time, there are fewer of them.

4. Small steps every day

A language is remembered best when it becomes part of everyday life.

VIKOOL teachers often recommend simple things:

  1. Switch your phone to Estonian
  2. Read short messages or news
  3. Say your shopping list or daily plans in Estonian

These small steps make the language feel natural.

📈 VIKOOL students’ experience

Based on the school’s experience, many students start courses with one thought: “It feels like this will take years.” But after a few months, the first turning point happens.

Students begin to notice:

  • they understand conversations in a store
  • they can ask questions
  • they read short messages without translation

And then the key feeling appears: “I can actually speak.”

Conclusion

Learning Estonian to B1 level is not a race. It’s a process built from small steps: first phrases, first dialogues, first real situations where people understand you.

Yes, for adults it can feel like progress is slow. But language works differently — at some point, everything you’ve learned starts to connect. And that’s when speaking becomes natural.