Best Apps to Learn Chinese Tones (2026) — An Honest Comparison

Published July 2026 · 7 min read

If you're learning Mandarin, you know the struggle: tones are hard. mǎi (buy) and mài (sell) sound nearly identical to an untrained ear — but one mistake at the market and you're buying when you meant to sell. Most general-purpose apps (Duolingo, HelloChinese) treat tones as an afterthought. So which app actually helps you master them?

I've tested every major Chinese tone app on the market. Here's my honest comparison — what each app is genuinely good at, where it falls short, and which one is right for your level.

What Makes a Good Tone App?

A good tone-practice tool should do four things:

  1. Let you hear the tone clearly — native audio, not robotic TTS
  2. Let you produce the tone — ideally with feedback on your attempt
  3. Tell you if you were right — granular feedback per syllable, not binary pass/fail
  4. Adapt to your weaknesses — drill what you struggle with, not what you've mastered

Most apps do #1. Some do #2. Few do #3 well. Almost none do #4 without you manually building custom decks.

The Apps Compared

AppPriceFormatOfflineBest For
Ka Free + IAP Flashcard game Quick drills, ear warm-up
Pleco Free + add-ons Dictionary + flashcards Reference, vocabulary lookup
TonePerfect Freemium (sub) AI pronunciation coach Production feedback, accent reduction
FlowTone Free + $14.99 lifetime Tone memory game Daily ear training, tone pairs, SRS
Tone Master Free + $4.99 lifetime Color-coded flashcards HSK vocabulary, visual learners

Ka: Learn Chinese Tones

Rating: ⭐ 4.7 (1,370+ reviews) · iOS & Android
Best for: Quick, casual tone drills when you have 5 minutes.

Ka is a fast-paced flashcard game built by indie developer Kai Loh. You hear a syllable, pick the tone. Simple, effective, and fun. It's the most popular dedicated tone app for a reason.

Strengths: Clean UX, good audio, satisfying rapid-fire format, free to use.

Weaknesses: No color-coding as a core mechanic. No daily challenge mode. No tone pairs or minimal pairs. No SRS (spaced repetition) — you drill everything equally, not just what you're weak on. No structured HSK levels.

Verdict: Great for ear warm-ups. Not enough for systematic tone mastery.

Pleco (Flashcard Add-On)

Best for: Dictionary lookup + custom flashcard decks.

Pleco is the Swiss Army knife of Chinese learning — every serious learner has it. Its flashcard add-on is powerful, with native audio and SRS. But it's a reference tool, not a tone trainer. You can listen to tones, but you can't reproduce them, and there's no feedback on your attempts.

Strengths: Unbeatable dictionary, customizable flashcards, SRS support.

Weaknesses: No tone production or feedback. No gamification. Feels like homework.

Verdict: Essential for vocabulary. Not a tone practice tool.

TonePerfect: Chinese AI Coach

Best for: Learners who can read pinyin but want AI feedback on their pronunciation.

TonePerfect uses speech recognition to grade your tones, initials, and finals separately — you know exactly which dimension to fix. It has a free placement test and custom-text practice. Serious tool for serious learners.

Strengths: Granular AI feedback, interactive pinyin chart, built-in SRS, custom-text input.

Weaknesses: Requires internet. Subscription model (free tier = 10 assessments/day). Focused on production — not great for ear training or quick daily practice.

Verdict: Best-in-class for pronunciation feedback. Pair it with an ear-training app for complete coverage.

FlowTone — The Tone Memory Game

Best for: Daily ear training, building muscle memory for tones through gameplay.

FlowTone takes a completely different approach: it's a game, not flashcards. You listen to a sentence, watch each character light up in its tone color, then reproduce the tones by swiping on a gesture pad. Think Wordle meets Guitar Hero — for your ears.

What sets it apart:

Strengths: Unique gestural + haptic approach, daily ritual (Wordle mechanic), color is the mechanic not decoration, SRS built-in, lifetime pricing.

Weaknesses: iOS only currently. No pronunciation feedback (recognition only). Newer app — smaller community.

Verdict: The only app that makes tone practice feel like a game, not homework. Best for daily ear-training habit.

Tone Master — HSK Flashcards

Best for: Building HSK vocabulary with color-coded visual memory hooks.

Tone Master is FlowTone's companion app — a focused flashcard tool with the same color system. 5,000+ HSK words (11,000 on Android), native audio, 100% offline. If FlowTone is the game, Tone Master is the reference.

Strengths: Color-coded tones on every card, complete HSK 1-9 coverage, fully offline, one-time purchase ($4.99), no account needed.

Weaknesses: Flashcard-only format (no gameplay). Fewer features than FlowTone. Rating suffered from an early paywall bug (now fixed).

Verdict: Solid, no-nonsense HSK vocabulary companion. Pairs perfectly with FlowTone.

🏆 Which App Should You Choose?

Your LevelRecommended Stack
Absolute beginnerKa (free drills) + Tone Master (HSK 1 vocab)
Beginner (can read pinyin)FlowTone (daily ear training) + Tone Master (vocab)
Intermediate (HSK 3-4)FlowTone Pro (tone pairs, SRS) + TonePerfect (pronunciation feedback)
Advanced (HSK 5+)TonePerfect (accent reduction) + native content

The Bottom Line

There's no single "best" app — it depends on your level and what you need. But the most common mistake learners make is relying on apps that don't give honest feedback. Duolingo and HelloChinese will tell you your pronunciation is "great" when it's not. Ka will drill you on tones but won't adapt to your weak spots.

If you want a daily ritual that trains your ears and builds muscle memory — like Wordle for Chinese — try FlowTone. HSK 1 is free forever, and the Daily Tone is one new puzzle every day.

 Download FlowTone — Free on App Store

Also try Tone Master for HSK flashcards with the same color system. Questions? Contact me.

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