11 Speech-Practice Apps for Kids I Actually Put to the Test (Some Surprised Me)
The mistake I see parents make constantly: downloading a speech app and expecting it to work like a therapist. It won’t. What these apps can do is give kids more repetitions, more confidence, and more motivated practice between real sessions. That distinction matters a lot when you’re picking one.
Here’s what I found after testing all eleven.
The Ranked List
1. Little Words
Best for: pre-readers and neurodivergent kids who freeze up at structured drills.
Little Words pairs a child with an AI companion named Buddy who holds real back-and-forth conversations. No menus to read. No typing. The child just talks. Buddy remembers the kid’s name, their favorite topics, and where they left off, which means sessions feel less like homework and more like catching up with someone who actually listens.
Before each session, Buddy runs a quick mood check and adjusts his energy accordingly. Calm mode, gentle mode, high-energy mode: parents pick, or Buddy adapts. Sessions run 5 to 20 minutes, so a kid with a short attention window doesn’t hit a wall. There are speech games like “Voice Maze” and “What’s That Sound,” plus adventure worlds covering space, ocean, dinosaurs, and forest themes to keep things moving.
The parent dashboard is genuinely useful. SLP-style PDF reports, target-sound settings for specific phonemes (s, r, l, sh, th), weekly progress cards, and session history all live there. Buddy never flags an answer as wrong. He models the correct sound and moves on. For kids who dysregulate under pressure, that single design choice matters enormously.
COPPA compliant, no ads, no data sold. A free trial gets you started, after which you choose a monthly or yearly plan billed through your device’s app store.
*Not a medical device and not a substitute for a licensed SLP. Use it as motivated practice, not a diagnosis tool.*
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2. Speech Blubs
Voice-controlled, with over 1,500 activities organized by theme and skill. Designed for kids with apraxia, autism, ADHD, and general delay. The face-filter feature, where the app maps animations onto the child’s face, gets even reluctant talkers making sounds. At roughly $14.49 per month or $59.99 per year, it’s mid-range pricing. Heavy on structured activities rather than open conversation.
3. Articulation Station (Little Bee Speech)
Built by licensed speech-language pathologists and focused tightly on articulation and phonological patterns. Over 1,200 target words, organized by sound position (initial, medial, final). The Pro version costs about $59.99 one time. Feels clinical, which is exactly what some families want. Less play, more deliberate drill. Works best alongside active SLP guidance.
4. Otsimo
AI-driven feedback, over 200 exercises, and a design built specifically for autism, apraxia, Down syndrome, and non-verbal learners. Pricing is accessible: roughly $6.99 per month, $4.49 per month on an annual plan, or $115.99 lifetime. The exercise library is narrower than some competitors, but the focus on non-verbal and minimally verbal kids fills a real gap.
5. Tactus Therapy Apps
A suite of individual clinical apps priced from about $9.99 to $99.99 each. Designed with evidence-based methods and often recommended directly by SLPs for home practice. You’re buying individual tools rather than a subscription platform, so costs add up if you need multiple skills addressed. Excellent quality per app.
6. Constant Therapy
Broader age range than most entries here, with exercises that span children through adults. Evidence-based design, progress tracking, and a structure that holds up over long therapy courses. Works well when a child is also in formal speech therapy and needs consistent home reinforcement.
7. Hallo (AI Language Practice)
Primarily a language-learning AI conversation tool. Older kids who are past the early delay stage but need fluency and confidence practice can get real value here. Not designed for young children or clinical speech delay. Worth knowing about for the 8-and-up crowd.
8. Expressable (Teletherapy)
Not an app in the traditional sense. Expressable puts families in direct contact with licensed SLPs through video sessions. Real therapists, real sessions, real diagnoses. More expensive than any app on this list, but it’s also the only option here that actually treats. Everything else is practice.
9. ASHA Free Resources
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association publishes free guidance, activity ideas, and milestone checklists at no cost. Not interactive, not an app, but a grounding resource every parent should read before buying anything.
10. Public Library Speech Apps
Many public library systems provide free access to early-literacy and language apps through platforms like Libby or their own portals. Zero cost. Quality varies. Worth checking before spending money.
11. In-Person SLP Evaluation
I’m putting this on the list because it belongs here. A licensed, in-person speech-language pathologist conducting a formal evaluation is the baseline, not the bonus. Every app above works better when a child already has a therapy plan. If your child hasn’t been evaluated yet, start here.
Quick Comparison
| App / Option | Best Age | Pricing (approx.) | Play-Based | SLP-Designed | Reports for Parents |
| Little Words | 2-8 | Free trial + subscription | Yes | Informed by SLP methods | Yes (PDF) |
| Speech Blubs | 2-8 | $14.49/mo or $59.99/yr | Partly | Yes | Limited |
| Articulation Station | 3-10 | $59.99 one-time (Pro) | No | Yes | No |
| Otsimo | 2-10 | From $4.49/mo | Partly | Yes | Limited |
| Tactus Therapy | 4+ | $9.99-$99.99/app | No | Yes | Some apps |
| Constant Therapy | 4-adult | Subscription | No | Yes | Yes |
| Hallo | 8+ | Subscription | Partly | No | No |
| Expressable | All ages | Session-based | N/A | Yes (live SLPs) | Yes |
| ASHA Resources | All ages | Free | No | Yes | No |
| Library Apps | 2-6 | Free | Varies | Varies | No |
| In-Person SLP | All ages | Insurance/private pay | N/A | Yes | Yes |
FAQ
Q: Can any of these apps replace speech therapy?
No. A licensed speech-language pathologist evaluates, diagnoses, and designs treatment. Apps provide practice repetitions. They are useful tools between sessions, not substitutes for clinical care.
Q: What age is appropriate for speech-practice apps?
Most of the play-based options here work from age 2 onward. Drill-focused apps like Articulation Station tend to land better at 3 or 4 and up, when a child can follow structured instructions. Little Words is specifically designed for 2-8, including pre-readers.
Q: Are these apps safe for neurodivergent kids?
Several are. Little Words has sensory presets and a mood check built in. Otsimo is designed explicitly for autism and Down syndrome. Speech Blubs also targets autism and ADHD. Always start with short sessions and watch for signs of frustration or overload.
Q: How do I know if an app is actually helping?
Look for increased willingness to attempt sounds or words at home, not just in the app. Parent dashboards and SLP-style reports (like Little Words provides) give you something concrete to bring to your child’s therapist for comparison.
Q: Should I get an evaluation before downloading any of these?
Yes, if you haven’t already. Knowing your child’s specific delay type, whether it’s apraxia, phonological disorder, expressive delay, or something else, helps you choose the right tool instead of guessing.
Sources
- American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), asha.org: speech delay milestones and app guidance
- Speech Blubs official site: feature list and pricing (verified 2025)
- Little Bee Speech / Articulation Station official site: Pro pricing and word count
- Otsimo official site: exercise count and subscription tiers
- Tactus Therapy official site: app catalog and price range
- Expressable official site: teletherapy service description