Whatever you want to learn, just watch it
Travel, music, stand-up, news, life tips… over 100,000 videos. Start with content that interests you, and learning English stops feeling like reading a textbook.
VoiceTube uses real video scenarios to help you learn English you'll actually use. Watch videos you love, look up words, and practice speaking with native speakers — just 5–10 minutes a day makes a difference.
Memorized words you can't use, materials too boring to stick with, freezing up when you speak — VoiceTube solves it all with real-life context.
Memorized a word but only know its translation, and freeze when you need to say it? On VoiceTube, tap any word in a video to look it up, and you'll get real example sentences from native speakers — not just the meaning, but how people actually say it.
"grab a bite" = to eat something casually.
Drawn from 10M+ real sentences, not textbook examples.
VoiceTube's shadowing feature uses "the Echo Method" championed by Professor Karen Chung of National Taiwan University: first listen to the native speaker's voice and let it linger in your mind, then speak along with the echo. After you record, AI analyzes your pronunciation and intonation and tells you which sounds to fix — so you practice with direction, not just blind repetition.
First listen to the native speaker's voice, noting pronunciation, stress, and intonation.
Pause for 1–2 seconds before speaking, letting the sound form an echo in your mind.
Mimic the echo out loud and record it — AI gives you feedback to fine-tune.
The hardest part of learning English is sticking with it, and boring content makes it easy to quit. VoiceTube updates authentic, fun Western videos daily — start with topics you love and spend 5–10 minutes on one during your commute, lunch break, or before bed. Vocabulary, listening, and speaking build up naturally.
I used to memorize tons of words but still froze when it was time to speak. With the shadowing feature, I listen to how things are said in videos and mimic them, and AI even tells me what to fix. Then one day the English just came out smoothly — I surprised myself!
Travel, music, stand-up, news, life tips… over 100,000 videos. Start with content that interests you, and learning English stops feeling like reading a textbook.
Real feedback from users on the App Store and Google Play.
A great selection of all kinds of videos, with links to look up unfamiliar words that you can add to your word list — a handy tool for building the habit of reading English aloud.
Watching on YT, it's easy to not fully grasp a video because of your level, or to get distracted. The nice thing about this app is that it labels every video with an English level, so you can pick videos that fit you. After watching, you can use points to unlock collocations, words, and speaking practice. I think it's great.
A great app for learning English, and a fantastic helper if you love shadowing!
I love it, thank you! It really helps me learn English, and I can finally find topics I enjoy to learn from.
Listen first, then mimic, and after recording AI tells me which sounds to fix — practicing feels really focused.
Tap the subtitles to look up words and see example sentences — you get a much better sense of how to use them than with a plain vocabulary app.
There's English news and translations from BBC and other sources. Plus, most of the Western music is recent — so glad to find Linkin Park's In The End!
VoiceTube uses real video scenarios so you're not just memorizing words or reading translations — you see directly how native speakers talk and use English in everyday life.
The beauty of learning through video is that you engage with sound, visuals, subtitles, and context all at once. Compared to textbook examples alone, video helps you understand a word's meaning, tone, pronunciation, stress, and real usage more naturally — making English easier to remember and easier to use in daily life.
We recommend learning with the following steps:
With this approach, you can start with videos that fit your level and gradually build up your vocabulary, listening, language sense, and speaking — truly learning English you can use.
Most of VoiceTube's features are free to use. Using the app consumes energy points, and when you run out, you can top up by watching ads and keep learning.
If you want more advanced features or a full upgraded learning experience, you can also choose a paid plan. For actual plan details and pricing, please refer to what's shown in the app.
VoiceTube's shadowing feature is designed around "the Echo Method" championed by Professor Karen Chung: first listen to the native speaker's voice, pause for a second or two to let it form an "echo" in your mind, then speak along and record yourself.
Through this kind of practice, you can more consciously mimic native speakers' pronunciation, intonation, stress, and rhythm. After you record, AI scores your pronunciation and intonation and offers feedback, helping you know what to adjust so your practice has direction.
It's great for anyone who wants to improve their pronunciation and intonation, or feel braver about speaking up in interviews, presentations, or while traveling abroad.
It's suitable for everyone — from those who want to build a solid English foundation to those looking to sharpen their listening and speaking.
Every VoiceTube video is labeled with a difficulty level, so you can quickly pick videos that fit your level and interests, without worrying that the content is too hard or too easy.
Spend just 5–10 minutes of spare time a day, and you'll gradually build up your vocabulary, listening, language sense, and speaking ability.
VoiceTube offers iOS and Android apps, so you can use it on phones and tablets running either system.