Romanian is usually the easier first language for English speakers. Hungarian is harder, more unusual, and more rewarding when your goals are tied to Hungary or Central Europe.
Try Romanian or Hungarian Lessons FreeIf you want the smoother learning path, choose Romanian. It is a Romance language, so English speakers get more familiar vocabulary, clearer links to French, Italian, Spanish, and Latin-root English words, and a grammar system that feels less distant than Hungarian.
Choose Hungarian if your reason is specific: Hungary, Budapest, Hungarian family, Central European work, cultural interest, or the desire to learn a language with a very different structure. Hungarian is harder at the beginning, but its rules are systematic once suffixes and vowel harmony start to make sense.
Learn Romanian first if you want faster early progress, Romance vocabulary, travel in Romania or Moldova, or a practical bridge into Eastern Europe.
Learn Hungarian first if your real-world use case is Hungary, Hungarian-speaking family, Budapest travel, regional work, or a serious grammar challenge.
| Feature | Hungarian | Romanian |
|---|---|---|
| Difficulty (for English speakers) | Hard (Category IV) | Moderate (Category I) |
| Native Speakers | ~13 million | ~24 million |
| Language Family | Finno-Ugric | Romance (Latin) |
| Grammar Complexity | Very Complex (18 cases, agglutination) | Moderate (5 cases) |
| Alphabet | Latin | Latin |
| Career Opportunities | Central Europe, EU | Eastern Europe, EU, tech |
| Question | Better fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Which is easier for English speakers? | Romanian | Romanian has Romance vocabulary and a more familiar learning path. Hungarian has fewer recognizable words and a more unfamiliar grammar system. |
| Which is better for a language challenge? | Hungarian | Hungarian teaches a different way to build meaning through suffixes, vowel harmony, and flexible word order. |
| Which is better for Eastern Europe travel? | Depends on destination | Choose Hungarian for Hungary and Budapest. Choose Romanian for Romania, Moldova, and Romanian-speaking communities. |
| Which should I start today? | Romanian for speed, Hungarian for motivation | Start Romanian if you want faster early confidence. Start Hungarian if you have a strong real-life reason to use it. |
Hungarian grammar is significantly challenging for English speakers. Features 18 grammatical cases, vowel harmony, and agglutination (words formed by adding multiple suffixes). However, rules are consistent and logical.
Romanian grammar is moderate in complexity. Preserves 5 noun cases from Latin and features grammatical gender (masculine, feminine, neuter). Word order is more flexible than English.
Very few cognates with English. Hungarian vocabulary is unique and requires memorization. However, consistent pronunciation and spelling rules help learning.
Many cognates with English through Latin roots and French influence. Recognizable vocabulary accelerates learning for English speakers.
Opportunities in Central Europe, especially Hungary and Hungarian diaspora communities. Growing tech industry in Budapest. Less globally widespread than Romance languages.
Growing opportunities in Romania's booming tech sector, EU business, and translation. Romanian diaspora communities worldwide. Bridge language between Romance and Slavic regions.
Do not choose only by difficulty. Choose by the language you will actually use. Romanian is the better default if you want easier progress. Hungarian is the better choice when motivation is strong and specific.
Romanian is usually easier for English speakers. It is a Romance language with more recognizable vocabulary and a more familiar beginner path. Hungarian is harder because its vocabulary, suffixes, vowel harmony, and case system are much less familiar.
Learn Romanian first if you want faster progress or plan to use the language in Romania or Moldova. Learn Hungarian first if your goals are connected to Hungary, Hungarian-speaking family, Budapest travel, or a strong interest in unusual grammar.
Yes, if you have a real reason to use it. Hungarian is more difficult, but it is systematic and useful for Hungary-focused travel, family, culture, and regional work. Strong motivation matters more than the difficulty rating.
Yes. You can try short personalized lessons in both languages. Start with Hungarian lessons if you want the challenge, or Romanian lessons if you want the more approachable route.
Create a free account, choose Hungarian or Romanian, and turn your own text, story, or image into a lesson you can practice.
Choose Hungarian if your goal is Hungary, family, Central Europe, or a challenging language with systematic grammar.
Learn Hungarian →Choose Romanian if you want the easier first step, Romance vocabulary, and practical use in Romania or Moldova.
Learn Romanian →