6 min read

February 13, 2026

A1 to A2 Is Easy. A2 to B1 Is Where Most People Quit. Here’s Why.

A1 to A2 feels easy because you memorize the basics. A2 to B1 feels hard because

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Stuck in the plateau? Here is how to survive A2 to B1 language learning.
Stuck in the plateau? Here is how to survive A2 to B1 language learning.

A1 to A2 feels easy because you memorize the basics. A2 to B1 feels hard because you must start using language independently. Most learners quit because understanding content does not automatically turn into speaking ability. I see this pattern constantly with adult learners: they understand podcasts and shows, but freeze when asked a follow-up question.

Why Do Learners Feel Stuck After A2?

With A2, you can follow basic conversations, videos and read articles. But talking still seems slow, agonizing or out of the question. 

This stage is a source of anguish for many adult learners because nothing happens that you can see. Apps are too easy, real conversations are too hard, and the motivation is lost. I’ve experienced this plateau myself as a language learner, especially while learning Chinese, and it’s one of the most discouraging stages. If you have also experienced this sudden drop in enthusiasm, you might be interested in our guide Why Motivation Drops After 3 Months of Language Learning, which explains why motivation often fades once the novelty of learning disappears.

Many learners respond by watching more Netflix or YouTube, assuming exposure will eventually unlock speaking — but passive watching builds understanding, not fluency.

This is normal. The transition from A2 to B1 is the first true fluency barrier.

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Why Is A2 to B1 So Hard?

1. You Hit the Input–Output Gap

You understand much more than you can say. This gap appears when learners consume lots of content but rarely speak. We explain this in detail in Why You Understand a Language but Can’t Speak It.

Understanding ≠ speaking. Speaking requires retrieval, grammar, and speed—all at once.

2. Learning Stops Being Linear

At A1–A2, progress feels fast. You learn greetings, numbers, and common verbs. At B1, growth becomes complex and layered. You refine grammar, add nuance, and improve fluency.

The brain works harder, but the results feel slower.

3. Mistakes Become More Visible

Beginner mistakes feel cute. Intermediate mistakes feel embarrassing. Many adults stop speaking to avoid sounding wrong.

This fear of sounding wrong is also why many learners freeze mid-sentence, a reaction we break down in Why You Freeze When You Try to Speak a Foreign Language.

Avoiding speaking slows progress more than any grammar problem.

4. You Must Create Language, Not Repeat It

A2 learners repeat patterns. B1 learners build sentences in real time. This cognitive shift is demanding and tiring, especially after work or studies.

A2 vs B1: What Actually Changes

Skill AreaA2 LevelB1 LevelWhy It Feels Hard
VocabularyCommon daily wordsTopic-based and abstract termsRequires deeper recall
GrammarSimple present/pastComplex structures and clausesMore cognitive load
SpeakingShort prepared answersSpontaneous conversationNo scripts available
ListeningClear speechNatural fast speechLess predictable input
IndependenceGuided tasksSelf-directed communicationMore mental effort

Real Learner Example: What A2 vs B1 Feels Like

Jennifer, 31, has been using Duolingo to learn English as well as watching television shows and YouTube. She was able to comprehend basic, everyday content but was nervous speaking.

At A2 Level (Understanding Without Fluency)

Jennifer is able to describe her everyday life, but she uses short, simple sentences. For example: “Yesterday I go to the store and I buy vegetables. The man is nice. I love more the store because is cheap.”

She gets TV shows and podcasts, but she pauses frequently. When the conversation speeds up, she lingers back and listens and doesn’t feel comfortable speaking.

At B1 Level (Independent Speaking)

A few months into intensive speaking practice, her speech flows more naturally: “Yesterday I went to the grocery store because I needed vegetables for dinner. The cashier was super nice, and I like that store because it’s cheaper than the other ones.” 

She still messes up, except now she talks in longer sentences, stresses reasons and manages to keep a conversation alive.

What Actually Changed

These results weren’t simply about Jennifer learning more words. She knew how to use language in real time.

She rehearsed repeating scenes from her favorite series out loud, and recording herself to check her progress, using new phrases in brief conversations with acquaintances. This helped her transition from comprehending English to thinking and speaking in English.

How to Move From A2 to B1 Without Quitting

Practice Output Daily

  • Retell short stories aloud
  • Summarize what you watched or read
  • Answer prompts with your own opinions
  • Record yourself speaking

What matters most at this stage isn’t perfection but consistency. In How Often Should You Practice Speaking to Improve?, we break down what actually works at intermediate level.

Reduce Cognitive Load

  • Use sentence starters (“I think that…”, “In my opinion…”)
  • Practice common connectors (because, although, however)
  • Focus on clarity, not perfection

Track Real Progress

  • Measure speaking time, not vocabulary size
  • Record weekly speaking samples
  • Count minutes of active speaking practice

Avoid Frustrations 

  • Don’t expect quick results: Intermediate learning is slow and nonlinear
  • Don’t overconsume input: 20 to 45 minutes a day is enough
  • Don’t be afraid of sounding like a newbie: perfectionism blocks practice

This jump from simple sentences to connected speech is why A2 to B1 feels so hard. You stop memorizing phrases and start creating language yourself. That’s the point of no return for many learners, even though progress is taking place. 

According to the Output Hypothesis, which was suggested by Merrill Swain, output should not be overlooked because it has a very important role in Second Language Acquisition: it pushes learners to notice the gap in their linguistic knowledge and correct their usage of language. It is not enough to have understandable input; learners also need the opportunities for output and correction.

What Should You Study at B1?

Focus on:

  • Phrase chunks and collocations
  • Connectors (however, although, therefore)
  • Topic-based vocabulary
  • Storytelling frameworks

Grammar matters, but usage matters more.

How to Practice at B1: Structured Activity Table

Skill TypeLearning ActivityWhy It Works at B1Example
Input (Comprehension)Graded news articlesBuilds vocabulary and complex sentence recognitionRead simplified news and highlight unknown phrases
Input (Comprehension)Short podcasts with transcriptsConnects spoken and written languageListen once, then read transcript and re-listen
Input (Comprehension)YouTube explanations in target languageExposes you to structured discourseWatch a tutorial and summarize key points
Output (Speaking)Daily spoken summariesForces sentence production and fluencySummarize what you read or watched in 2 minutes
Output (Speaking)Shadowing short clipsImproves pronunciation and rhythmRepeat a sentence immediately after hearing it
Output (Writing)Micro-journalingBuilds grammar accuracy and personal languageWrite 5 sentences about your day
Output (Writing)Reformulation exercisesImproves syntactic flexibilityRewrite a sentence in a different way
Interaction (Feedback)Language exchange conversationsReveals real communication gaps10–15 minutes of guided conversation
Interaction (Feedback)AI or tutor correctionPrevents fossilization of mistakesGet corrections and rewrite the same text
Metacognitive PracticeError loggingTurns mistakes into learning dataKeep a list of recurring grammar errors

Jolii.ai uses structured speaking exercises, controlled prompts, and precise language output. This closes the input–output gap and transforms comprehension into actionable speech. If you are stuck from A2 to B1, output training is the quickest way out of there.

FAQs 

Why is A2 to B1 a higher difficulty level than A1 to A2?

Because B1 requires independent speaking and complex sentence formation.

How long does it take to go from A2 to B1?

Most students should take 6 to 18 months with regular practice.

What should I focus on to reach B1?

Speaking practice, phrase chunks, connectors, and topic vocabulary.

Are apps enough to reach B1?

Apps help, but speaking practice is essential.

Why do many learners quit at A2?

Their progress seems to slow and speaking requires conscious effort.

We know A1 to A2 is like climbing stairs, and A2 to B1 seems like Mount Everest.

Learners usually give up because they anticipate that the level of difficulty will be the same. But, it’s at this stage that actual language learning starts. An organized output practice is the difference between plateau and breakthrough. Don’t give up!

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