When is enough enough? When can you say you've learned as much as you can or need to learn in a language?
The truth is, what is considered fluent in a language depends entirely on your personal goals and circumstances.
Let me answer a question from a podcast listener to share my perspective on fluency and help you figure out when you've reached “enough” in your language learning journey.
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If you prefer watching videos to reading, hit play on the video version of this post at the top of this page. Otherwise, here's what you'll discover in this post.
Table of Contents
Isabelle's Question: When Are You Considered Fluent In A Language?
I received a thoughtful question from Isabelle in London who's learning German, Mandarin and Korean. She asked:
“At what point do you consider yourself to be fluent in your target language and kind of move from the learning stage to the maintaining stage? Is there even a point where you think ‘I'm now fluent'?
Obviously you can never know everything about your target language, but you don't need to know every single word… I'd be interested to hear about your definition of fluency.“
Isabelle's question really gets to the heart of something every language learner wrestles with. After learning seven languages myself, I've grappled with this exact dilemma of what is considered fluent in a language countless times.
My Personal Definition Of Fluency
When are you considered fluent in a language? For me, fluency is the point at which I can comfortably hold and enjoy a conversation with another person without either of us having to stop or slow down unnecessarily.
That's my personal definition of fluency, which I'm sure is different from the dictionary. But it's the point at which I consider myself to be fluent in a language for my own purposes.
Notice I didn't say “perfect communication” or “knowing every word.” Fluency, in my view, is about comfortable, natural conversation flow.
It's about being able to express yourself without significant struggle, even if you occasionally need to paraphrase or work around words you don't know.
This definition has served me well across French, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese and my other target languages. It's practical, measurable, and most importantly, it focuses on communication rather than perfection.
The Struggle vs. Strain Framework
Here's a concept I find incredibly useful when evaluating language progress: the difference between struggle and strain.
Strain is when you're really pushing yourself to understand or express something. You're working so hard that the conversation becomes uncomfortable or unnatural. This is a clear sign you're not yet at a fluent level for that particular context.
Struggle is a lighter degree of difficulty. You might pause occasionally to think of a word or need to ask for clarification, but the overall conversation flows naturally.
When I get to the point where I can do everything I need to do on a day-to-day basis without strain – and with minimal struggle – that's when I consider myself functionally fluent. This includes being able to:
Have enjoyable conversations without constant interruptions
Paraphrase when I can't find the exact word
Infer meaning from context when I don't understand something specific
Communicate my thoughts and feelings naturally
When To Switch From Learning To Maintaining Mode
One of the most practical questions about fluency is this: when do you stop actively studying and switch to maintenance mode?
In my experience with seven languages, I've never reached the point where I felt I had nothing left to learn. There's always more vocabulary, more nuanced expressions, more cultural context to absorb.
Even in my strongest languages – French, Spanish, Portuguese and Japanese – I could still improve.
But here's the key insight: at some point, the energy required for small improvements could be better invested elsewhere.
The 95% Rule And Diminishing Returns
Tim Ferriss talks about the concept of reaching 95% in a language and then moving on, leaving that final 5% for later. While I'm not quite that clinical about it, the principle makes sense.
When you reach a high level in a language, improvement becomes increasingly difficult. You enter the territory of diminishing returns, where the remaining gaps in your knowledge are rare, complex or highly specialised.
The energy you'd spend going from 95% to 96% in one language could potentially get you 10-20% proficiency in a completely new language.
Let me give you a real example. I once chatted with a Japanese friend about the differences between British people living in Japan and Japanese people living in Britain.
I spent about two minutes explaining my thoughts, feeling quite proud of my explanation. Then she turned around and summarised the exact same concept in one sentence that took five seconds.
Was my Japanese “wrong”? No. Was hers more eloquent and efficient? Absolutely. But should I spend months perfecting that level of native-like efficiency, or would my time be better spent on other goals? For me, the answer is clear.
The Importance Of Defining Your “Why”
Here's where many language learners get stuck: studying at home without a clear purpose or endpoint.
If you've been studying Spanish from home for two years and you have yet to go out and speak to someone, well, how can you possibly tell whether you're fluent or not?
This is where it gets interesting – and where circumstances really matter. Your fluency benchmark should align with your specific situation:
If you're a university student, then passing your exams would probably be your first priority. Notice that we're not talking about fluency anymore, because I think fluency is a bit of a wishy-washy standard. Your exams become your concrete benchmark.
If you're an interpreter, then you'd need to make sure that your specialist subject knowledge is up to scratch. If you're interpreting for steel factory owners in Bolivia, then you need to make sure you know how to say everything to do with their industry in Bolivian Spanish.
If you're studying at home with no particular aim – now this is where it becomes a bit tricky and possibly kind of dangerous. Without any end point, no function for the language that you're learning, well, when is enough enough? How can you track your progress? How can you make any of these decisions or judgments?
That's why I always point people towards thinking carefully about their why. Your reason for learning becomes your benchmark for everything else you do.
For me, my purpose is to get on with people, to enjoy conversations, to enrich my life. I'm not a professional interpreter, I don't need to pass academic exams. And I'm not planning to write novels in my target languages.
This makes my fluency benchmark relatively clear and achievable.
My Current Language Status: An Honest Assessment
Let me be transparent about where I stand with my own languages. In French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Japanese, it's very rare that there's something I can't say or something I don't understand in everyday conversation. I can function comfortably without struggle.
Am I perfect in these languages? Absolutely not. I'm not even the most articulate person in English, my native language!
But for my purposes – having enjoyable conversations with friends, travelling, and general communication – my current level works perfectly.
I don't sit up at night wondering how to improve my Spanish further because, honestly, I don't need to. This isn't laziness; it's strategic energy allocation based on my real-world needs.
Beyond Traditional Measures & Assessing Your Fluency
Traditional measures often focus on technical accuracy and comprehensive vocabulary.
But in real life, what is considered fluent in a language is often more about effective communication than perfect grammar or extensive vocabulary.
So how do you know when you've reached your personal fluency goals? Here are some practical indicators:
Conversation Flow: Can you maintain natural conversations without frequent pauses or confusion?
Emotional Expression: Can you express not just facts, but feelings, opinions, and nuances?
Problem Solving: When you don't know a word, can you work around it naturally?
Comfort Level: Do you feel relaxed and confident when using the language?
Goal Alignment: Can you achieve what you originally set out to do with the language?
The Bottom Line: Fluency Is Personal
What is considered fluent in a language? The answer depends entirely on you. Fluency isn't a universal standard – it's a personal milestone that should align with your goals, needs, and circumstances.
My advice? Define what fluency means for your specific situation. Focus on comfortable communication rather than perfection. Use the struggle vs. strain framework to gauge your progress. And remember that “enough” is enough when it serves your purpose.
The most important thing is to avoid getting trapped in endless perfectionism. Language learning should enrich your life, not consume it indefinitely. Sometimes, good enough really is good enough.
What does fluency mean to you? Take some time to define your personal benchmark and you'll find your language learning journey becomes much clearer and more satisfying.
What Is Considered Fluent In A Language FAQ
What language level is considered fluent?
Fluency is generally considered to begin at CEFR level B2 or C1, where you can speak naturally, understand complex ideas, and hold conversations with ease. C2 represents near-native fluency.
What are the 5 levels of language proficiency?
The five main CEFR levels are A1 (Beginner), A2 (Elementary), B1 (Intermediate), B2 (Upper-Intermediate), C1 (Advanced) and C2 (Proficient). These levels help assess reading, writing, listening and speaking skills.
What defines being fluent in a language?
Fluency means speaking smoothly and naturally without frequent pauses. It includes understanding native speech, expressing ideas clearly and holding conversations on a wide range of topics.
When can I call myself fluent in a language?
You can call yourself fluent when you can speak, understand and think in the language with ease, especially in everyday and professional contexts. Typically, this is around B2 or higher on the CEFR scale.
Olly Richards
Creator of the StoryLearning® Method
Olly Richards is a renowned polyglot and language learning expert with over 15 years of experience teaching millions through his innovative StoryLearning® method. He is the creator of StoryLearning, one of the world's largest language learning blogs with 500,000+ monthly readers.
Olly has authored 30+ language learning books and courses, including the bestselling "Short Stories" series published by Teach Yourself.
When not developing new teaching methods, Richards practices what he preaches—he speaks 8 languages fluently and continues learning new ones through his own methodology.
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