~600-750 hours to learn Romanian
At a glance
- FSI estimate
- ~600-750 hrs
- Weeks (full-time)
- 24-30
- FSI category
- Category I
- Writing system
- Latin
The Foreign Service Institute estimates that native English speakers need 600-750 hours of study over 24-30 weeks to reach Professional Working Proficiency in Romanian (ILR Speaking-3 / Reading-3). These figures represent full-time classroom instruction with qualified instructors and assume consistent daily study.
Romanian belongs to the Romance language family, which shares significant structural and vocabulary overlap with English through Latin and French influences, making it somewhat more accessible than languages in other families. The language uses the Latin alphabet with diacritical marks, presenting no major writing system barriers for English speakers. Learning pace varies considerably for self-study compared to classroom settings, typically requiring substantially more time when pursued casually outside formal instruction.
What makes Romanian easier or harder
FSI difficulty tracks how far a language sits from English. Romanian is in the Category I tier, written in the Latin script, from the Indo-European (Romance) 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 Romanian?
Why is Romanian rated this way?
| Measure | Value |
|---|---|
| FSI category | Category I |
| Canonical hours (tier) | ~600-750 class hours |
| Canonical weeks (tier) | ~24-30 weeks full-time |
| Languages in this tier | 12 |
Who speaks Romanian
| Native speakers (L1) | 24.0M (approximate — from a per-language infobox) |
|---|---|
| Language family | Indo-European (Romance) |
| Primary regions | Romania, Moldova |
| Writing system | Latin |
Speaker counts, language-family and region data from Wikipedia (Ethnologue figures), licensed CC BY-SA 4.0.
Why Romanian is rated this way → · How to approach learning Romanian → · See its difficulty tier →
Hours and weeks are the canonical FSI figures for Category I, 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.