Hej!
I just finished the danish course until level 30, 3 sections. Now I want to go on to the next course. In the web it says, that there are 69 levels.
Has anyone the same problem and could solve it?
Tusind tak!
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Hej!
I just finished the danish course until level 30, 3 sections. Now I want to go on to the next course. In the web it says, that there are 69 levels.
Has anyone the same problem and could solve it?
Tusind tak!

Sadly you've reached the end of the danish course, and that's the end of te line for you.
The information you find on the web migt be outdated, or in A/B testing.
If you want more scandinavian practice, you can try the norwegian course, as it's longer. But not as good as it used to be.
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Die Biggi wrote: Tue Sep 23, 2025 9:42 amHej!
I just finished the danish course until level 30, 3 sections. Now I want to go on to the next course. In the web it says, that there are 69 levels.Has anyone the same problem and could solve it?
Tusind tak!
The Daily Refresh is a "section" rather than "a level". I'm on the portugues daily refresh section having completed sections 1-4 (or their equivalent) some time ago
I don't think any course has more than 5 or 6 "sections" but they may have more lessons in each section.
A search found this:-
English to Spanish has the most Units with 327. Followed by Spanish to English with 317 and English to French with 311 units.
The most levels are English to Spanish with 2190 levels.
And searching for number of sections I found this:-
The Duolingo English to Spanish course consists of 8 sections. These sections cover a range of language skills and topics, from basic greetings and food in the earlier sections to past and future tenses and more advanced concepts in the later sections.
So I was wrong about the six section max.
John661162
John Little wrote: Wed Sep 24, 2025 3:14 pmA search found this:-
English to Spanish has the most Units with 327. Followed by Spanish to English with 317 and English to French with 311 units.
The most levels are English to Spanish with 2190 levels.
And searching for number of sections I found this:-
The Duolingo English to Spanish course consists of 8 sections. These sections cover a range of language skills and topics, from basic greetings and food in the earlier sections to past and future tenses and more advanced concepts in the later sections.
So I was wrong about the six section max.
That seems to be kind of new. I am doing the EN->ES course and was quite sure that it consists of 6 sections, too. But I looked it up right now again, and yes, it has now 8 sections. Leading to level B2 with sections 7 and 8, with 36 units each. But for me, it consists of 286 units in total at the moment. (Not counted the 6 units of the wheel of eternity.)
Until the next change...
Paket Haken Satellit Dilettant Rhythmus Epidemie Hämorrhoiden Pubertät Gestalt Repertoire Reparatur separat Interesse Original Standard Stegreif - mehr?
Please correct me if I write something wrong. I will never take it as an offense. I want to learn.

@John Little
My EN->FR course displays 306 skills in the Duome profile page but 34 are so called "grammar skills".
I can't take a closer look and need to rely on the one course ranking table website but I think it's safe to say that there are 272 units.
Only the English from other foreign language courses seem to have to up 309 units; the two EN from ES and FR courses are 278/293 units (slightly below 300).
The EN from PT (CEFR aligned) course seems to have 278 units and supporting 8 sections (content labeled up to B2) but with the lack of Tampermonkey userscripts and being able to override the challengeType variable (like a filter) or Chrome browser extensions on the web portal the usability of a reverse course/path is limited.
I want Portuguese TTS audio too!
I kinda liked the DE<-PT reverse volunteer tree and it definitely was challenging enough (with full typing in Portuguese on the web portal) and I had multiple full stops as a native German speaker.
Native |
Upper-B2 (BritishCouncil) |
L25 (Duo) / A2 (6+y, McGraw-Hill) - Learning (Busuu): (A1 McGraw-Hill) |
(interm.)

@Die Biggi
Danish is available on Mondly (word bank tapping like Duolingo, very limited free typing)
Have you taken a look at Memrise user-created community courses?
I'm not sure if there were official 1-7 Memrise courses for Danish (like French, Portuguese) available before which you could then find on their "new AI immersion" website (they always spam me notifications for a paid Memrise Pro subscription).
Even when available it is to be expected with Memrise that you now can't access ALL levels freely, others have reported.
www.50languages.com phrasebooks has many languages available, free MP3 audio downloads, offers a text script
More resources:
https://www.101languages.net/danish/
Native |
Upper-B2 (BritishCouncil) |
L25 (Duo) / A2 (6+y, McGraw-Hill) - Learning (Busuu): (A1 McGraw-Hill) |
(interm.)