Tracking Your Greek Learning Progress: A Practical Guide
Greek (Ελληνικά) is a rewarding language and a slow road. FSI Category III — significant differences. Roughly 1.7× the time of Spanish or French. The hours total can feel demoralising up front; tracking is what turns it into something you can plan and pace.
This guide covers what to track, realistic milestones, and the tracking pitfalls specific to Greek.
How long Greek actually takes
FSI estimates put professional working proficiency in Greek at roughly ~1100 hours of focused study. For B1 conversational, halve that. For C1 advanced, multiply by 1.4×. These ranges assume quality study; passive exposure compounds slower.
What to track
Time is the foundation. For Greek specifically, also tag your sessions by activity type — the skills don't grow at the same pace, especially in the early months when a sample like "Γειά σου" can feel impenetrable.
Workable buckets:
- Input: reading, listening, comprehensible input video
- Output: speaking, writing, journaling
- Study: grammar, flashcards, drills
- Immersion: messaging, native shows, in-target-language consumption
Three or four buckets is enough. The point is to spot when one is starving the others.
Daily targets
For most working adults, 30–45 minutes daily is the sweet spot for Greek. Less than 20 and progress stalls; more than 90 and burnout sets in within a few months. The consistency-vs-intensity tradeoff applies here especially for III-difficulty languages.
Realistic milestones
0–100 hours: orientation
Pronunciation, the script (where applicable), survival phrases, and core vocabulary. Most quitting happens here.
100–300 hours: A1 to A2
Self-introduction, simple narration, basic comprehension. The first signs that Greek is "clicking" usually appear in this range.
300–700 hours: B1
Real conversations, news skimming, comfortable reading at slow pace. Tracking really earns its keep here — the curve is gradual but visible across months.
700+ hours: B2 and beyond
Extended speech, native content, professional-level writing. For Cat IV languages this is multi-year territory; track patiently.
The Greek-specific traps
Each language has its own tracking traps:
- Logging passive minutes as study. Native shows with English subtitles aren't worth the same as focused practice. Tag separately.
- Optimising for the streak. If you reach for the easiest activity to keep the streak alive, the data lies. Honest beats long.
- Skipping output. Reading and listening feel productive; speaking is uncomfortable. The tracker reveals output starvation within a month.
Tools for Greek
LangTrack handles Greek natively — multi-script support, per-language streaks, activity-by-language breakdowns. Works in any browser; two-tap logging.
Monthly review questions
- How many total hours did I put into Greek this month?
- Which activity got the most time? Was that intentional?
- What was missing? (Often speaking or listening.)
- One small change for next month?
The honest takeaway
Greek is reachable for almost any committed learner. The hours estimate is a roadmap, not a verdict. Track honestly, log even five-minute sessions, and review monthly. Six months in, the data will show you progress your daily-feeling can't.
For more on what to measure, see how many hours to reach b1 and interleaved practice language.
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