Personally vetted instructors

French for Beginners tutors, lessons & classes

Bonjour The first French word every beginner learns, and the one French politeness is built on.

Personally vetted French tutors who specialize in absolute beginners. Patient, methodical, and calibrated to get you from zero to your first real French sentences without the textbook overwhelm.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
French tutor introducing basic vocabulary to an adult beginner student — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

Your instructors

French for Beginners tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has French tutors who specialize in working with absolute beginners — the moment when patience, pronunciation modeling, and steady vocabulary building matter more than anything else. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real backgrounds in adult beginner instruction.

Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial.

Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in teaching French to absolute beginners. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

Reset Filters.
  • Price Per Lesson

  • Offers Free Trial

  • Near Me

    • View on Map
  • Check Availability

  • In Person?

  • Student Age

Search Results: 0 Tutors

Premiers mots — first foundations

5 French foundations every beginner needs in the first month

These are the building blocks that separate a beginner making real progress from one who's spinning on Duolingo. Screenshot for the trial lesson.

  1. 01

    Le et la

    Every French noun is either masculine (le) or feminine (la), and the article is part of the noun, not a separate decision. There are loose patterns (most -tion and -ie nouns are feminine; most -age and -isme nouns are masculine), but many common words have to be memorized. Good tutors teach articles with vocabulary from day one, never in isolation.

    e.g. Le livre, la table, le pain, la voiture, le chat.

  2. 02

    Les lettres muettes

    Silent letters everywhere. Final consonants of most French words are not pronounced (petit, chat, vous). The final e is almost always silent. Entire syllables drop in casual speech. This is why French spelling and French pronunciation feel like two different systems, and why reading French does not teach you to hear French.

    e.g. Petit chat (you say "puh-TEE shah", not "puh-TEET shaht").

  3. 03

    La liaison

    French ties consecutive words together when one ends in a usually-silent consonant and the next begins with a vowel. Les amis becomes lesami. Nous avons becomes nousavons. Mon ami becomes monami. This changes the rhythm of spoken French at the word level and is one of the first things a tutor will help you hear.

    e.g. Les_amis arrivent_à six_heures.

  4. 04

    Tu ou vous

    Use tu with friends, family, children, and anyone you've been invited to switch with. Default to vous with strangers, in shops, with anyone older, and in any first professional contact. The shift to tu is a real social event, not a casual upgrade. As a beginner, default to vous in any first encounter; better slightly more polite than slightly rude.

    e.g. Bonjour Madame, vous avez l'heure ? (stranger, <em>vous</em>) — Salut maman, tu as l'heure ? (mother, <em>tu</em>)

  5. 05

    Bonjour, merci, au revoir

    The four words of French daily life: bonjour on entering, merci when you receive, au revoir on leaving (even from a shop where you bought nothing), pardon when you need to get past or interrupt. Not optional politeness. Skipping bonjour at the shop reads as actively rude to French speakers. These four words pay off in every interaction afterward.

    e.g. « Bonjour ! » « Bonjour Monsieur. » « Une baguette, s'il vous plaît. » « Voilà. » « Merci, au revoir ! »

About French for Beginners

From zero to your first real French sentence

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to French for Beginners

Pronunciation foundations from day one

The nasal vowels (vin, vent, vont, un), the front rounded vowels (tu versus tout), the famous French R at the back of the throat, the silent-letter rules, and the liaison patterns. Lessons include short listening-and-repeat drills with native audio so your ear builds alongside your speaking. Beginner French pronunciation is best learned correctly the first time, not corrected later, which is why we frontload it.

Gender and article work, handled the right way

We teach articles with vocabulary from day one: never livre, always le livre. Patterns where they exist (most -tion, -ie, -ette nouns are feminine; most -age, -isme, -ment nouns are masculine) get explained and drilled. The chunk of words that just have to be memorized gets folded into your active vocabulary through repetition, not flashcards in isolation. Most beginners reach reliable gender instinct by month four to six.

The 10 verbs that unlock everything

Être, avoir, aller, faire, pouvoir, vouloir, devoir, savoir, venir, prendre. The ten irregular powerhouses that show up in the majority of French sentences. Once these are automatic in the present tense, regular -er verbs slot in beside them with very little additional friction. Lessons frontload these aggressively in the first month and build the rest of the verb system on top.

Beginner-friendly between-lesson resources

Your tutor will recommend specific resources calibrated to your level: Duolingo or Babbel for warm-up reps, the Coffee Break French podcast for slow listening, News in Slow French at A2-B1, short French children's TV clips for kid-level immersion, the Lawless French website for free grammar reference. Twenty to thirty minutes of daily exposure outside lessons is the single biggest accelerator for beginners.

FAQ

About French for Beginners lessons & classes

How hard is French for English speakers really?

Medium. The Foreign Service Institute places French in Category I, the easiest tier alongside Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian, with an estimated 600 to 750 hours to professional working proficiency. For most adults learning part-time, that translates to two to four years of consistent study for comfortable conversational French. Pronunciation is harder than Spanish; grammar is easier than German. The cognate overlap with English gives you a real motivational head start; the silent-letter rules and the nasal vowels are the steepest early hurdles.

What's the difference between le and la, and when do I use which?

Every French noun is grammatically masculine (uses le) or feminine (uses la). Useful patterns: most nouns ending in -tion, -ie, -ette, -eur (for emotions/qualities) are feminine; most ending in -age, -isme, -ment, -eau are masculine. Beyond the patterns, many common words have to be memorized: le livre, la table, le pain, la voiture. Good tutors drill articles together with vocabulary from your first lesson onward, so the gender becomes part of how you store the word.

How long until I can hold a basic conversation in French?

From zero, weekly hour-long lessons plus 20 to 30 minutes of daily exposure (podcasts, apps, French media) typically produces functional A2 conversation within 6 to 9 months. That means introducing yourself, ordering food, talking about your day, basic small talk. Conversational comfort at B1 (the level where you can hold a real if halting conversation about most everyday topics) usually takes another 6 to 12 months at the same pace. Faster timelines are possible with more intensive schedules; slower timelines are normal for learners with less time.

Should I focus on French from France or also learn Quebec or African French?

For most beginners, the European French taught by default in lessons (Parisian or near-Parisian) is the right starting point because it is what French media, French education, and most teaching materials converge on. Quebec French and African French are mutually intelligible with European French but have distinct pronunciations and some vocabulary differences. If you have a specific reason to learn Quebec or African French (family, work, planned move), tell your tutor and we can match you with a tutor from that region. For broader exposure, our Quebec French specialty page covers the North American variant.

What does a typical beginner French lesson look like?

A first-month lesson runs about an hour and typically includes 10 minutes of warm-up greetings in French (even halting), 15 minutes of new vocabulary with pronunciation drill, 15 minutes of grammar in context (a single point introduced through example sentences, not lectured at a board), 10 minutes of listening practice with a short audio clip, and 10 minutes of structured role-play. Homework is light and primarily listening-focused for the first month, with vocabulary review building over time. No two lesson plans are identical; your tutor calibrates based on what's clicking and what isn't.

Is it better to start with apps like Duolingo first and then take lessons?

Apps are a useful warm-up but not a substitute for a real tutor. Duolingo, Babbel, and similar apps build passive recognition vocabulary well; they are weak at producing real conversational ability, accurate pronunciation, and the social calibration around tu versus vous. Most students who start with apps and then move to lessons find they can read more French than they can speak, and lessons quickly close that gap. The best pattern is to use the app for daily 10-minute reps in addition to (not instead of) weekly lessons.

Do I need to know any other Romance language before starting French?

No. English is more than enough background. Cognates between English and French run into the thousands and become useful from day one. Knowing Spanish or Italian gives you a head start on verb conjugation patterns and gender (both also have masculine and feminine nouns), but it can also create interference (Spanish or Italian vocabulary leaking into French sentences). We've taught French beginners with zero Romance language background and consistent success.

What's the trial lesson like for a complete beginner?

30 minutes, free, with the tutor you select. For absolute beginners, the trial is half assessment and half preview: the tutor will introduce themselves in French and English, gauge what you already know (even passive cognate recognition counts), explain the typical first-month roadmap, and answer your questions about lesson cadence and goals. You'll leave with a sense of whether this specific tutor's approach feels right for you. If not, swap is easy and we'll match you to a better fit.

Ready for French for Beginners lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.