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~1100 hours to learn Hebrew

At a glance

FSI estimate
~1100 hrs
Weeks (full-time)
44
FSI category
Category III
Writing system
Hebrew

According to the Foreign Service Institute, it takes approximately 1100 hours or 44 weeks of full-time study for a native English speaker to reach Professional Working Proficiency in Hebrew. This FSI estimate measures the time needed to achieve Speaking-3 and Reading-3 level competency, which enables professionals to communicate effectively in most professional and social situations with good accuracy.

Hebrew presents a moderate learning curve for English speakers due to its considerable distance from the Germanic and Romance language families. The primary challenge is its fundamentally different structure and grammar system as a Semitic language. Additionally, the Hebrew alphabet and writing system require dedicated study. These timeframes represent intensive, full-time classroom instruction; learning at a casual pace through self-study typically extends the timeline considerably beyond these estimates.

What makes Hebrew easier or harder

FSI difficulty tracks how far a language sits from English. Hebrew is in the Category III tier, written in the Hebrew script, from the Afroasiatic (Semitic) family. A closer family and a familiar script generally mean fewer hours; a different script or grammar adds time.

Common questions

How many hours does it take to learn Hebrew?
About 1100 class hours of full-time study to reach professional working proficiency, per the FSI (Category III). Casual self-study takes longer.
Why is Hebrew rated this way?
FSI rates by the average time a native English speaker needs — driven by how close the language's grammar, vocabulary and writing system are to English.
Category III at a glance
MeasureValue
FSI categoryCategory III
Canonical hours (tier)~1100 class hours
Canonical weeks (tier)~44 weeks full-time
Languages in this tier53

Who speaks Hebrew

Native speakers (L1)9.0M (approximate — from a per-language infobox)
Language familyAfroasiatic (Semitic)
Primary regionsIsrael
Writing systemHebrew

Speaker counts, language-family and region data from Wikipedia (Ethnologue figures), licensed CC BY-SA 4.0.

Why Hebrew is rated this way → · How to approach learning Hebrew → · See its difficulty tier →

Hours and weeks are the canonical FSI figures for Category III, from the US State Dept FSI list (public domain), verified June 2026. How we compile this — confirm against state.gov on an operator pass before relying on it.

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