Kanjidex Alternatives: Comparing the Top Kanji Apps
Learning kanji is one of the biggest challenges for students of Japanese. Kanjidex is a solid tool for lookup and review, but you may want alternatives with different teaching approaches, study features, or device support. Below is a concise comparison of top kanji apps to help you choose the best fit.
What to consider when choosing a kanji app
- Content focus: full-kanji dictionary vs. SRS flashcards vs. reading practice
- Study method: spaced repetition (SRS), stroke order animation, mnemonics, or contextual reading
- Coverage: JLPT levels, school-grade kanji, compound vocabulary (jukugo)
- Platform & sync: iOS, Android, web, cross-device progress sync
- Cost: free, freemium, one-time purchase, subscription
Comparison table — top Kanjidex alternatives
| App | Best for | Key features | Platforms | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WaniKani | Fast kanji & vocab acquisition | SRS + mnemonics, radicals, level-based progression, large community | Web, iOS (third-party), Android (third-party) | Subscription (free trial) |
| Anki (Japanese decks) | Custom study & advanced users | Fully customizable SRS, huge deck ecosystem (e.g., Heisig, Core10k) | Desktop, iOS, Android, Web | Free (desktop/web/Android), paid iOS |
| Kanji Study | Comprehensive study & stroke practice | Stroke order, quizzes, customizable SRS, readings, compounds | Android, limited web | One-time purchase (Android) |
| Takoboto | Dictionary + study | Quick lookup, example sentences, quiz mode, JLPT filters | Android, Web | Freemium |
| BunPro (grammar-focused, but with vocab) | Grammar with integrated vocab/kanji context | SRS for grammar/vocab, example sentences, native source links | Web, iOS, Android | Subscription (free tier) |
| Jisho.org | Quick lookup & reference | Radical search, handwriting input, example words | Web, unofficial mobile apps | Free |
| ReadLang / Satori Reader | Reading-based vocabulary/kanji learning | Instant lookups while reading, context-focused, spaced review | Web, iOS, Android | Freemium / Subscription |
Quick recommendations
- Want fast, structured kanji progression: try WaniKani.
- Want full control and community-made decks: use Anki.
- Want stroke practice and an Android-first app: use Kanji Study.
- Need a quick online reference: use Jisho.org.
- Prefer learning through reading/context: use ReadLang or Satori Reader.
How to pick the right one for you
- Choose your primary goal (rapid memorization, reading comprehension, stroke writing, or reference).
- Try free tiers or trials: WaniKani, Anki, Jisho, ReadLang/Satori Reader often have free access.
- Combine tools: e.g., use Kanjidex/Jisho for lookup, Anki for custom SRS, and ReadLang for reading practice.
- Stick with a schedule: consistent short daily sessions beat sporadic long study blocks.
If you tell me your study goals (JLPT target, daily time, preference for mnemonic vs. context), I can recommend a tailored study stack and schedule.
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