Kahoot
Game-based quizzes and learning activities for classrooms.
Alternatives · 2026
Flashcards, practice tests, and study modes for students.
1 hand-curated alternative from MintedSaaS's directory. See the Quizlet listing →
Quizlet is a web and mobile platform where students create and share digital flashcards, then study them using built-in spaced-repetition modes and practice tests. It's the largest free flashcard service globally, used by middle-school students grinding vocabulary, medical students prepping board exams, and language learners. The site lets users upload images and diagrams into cards, collaborate on decks with classmates, and access millions of public study sets. Teachers often use Quizlet's class tools to assign study materials and track engagement, though the platform is primarily student-directed rather than classroom-managed.
Students typically use Quizlet to prepare for high-stakes exams, reinforce vocabulary, or drill procedural knowledge across any subject. The workflow is simple: create a deck of question-and-answer pairs, pick a study mode (flashcards, matching, multiple-choice, or Quizlet Live for group competitions), and track your progress through repeated sessions. The platform's strength lies in its free tier, massive public library, and mobile-first design. Teachers and tutors adopt it for self-paced practice assignments, though they often look at alternatives when they need more control over student data, faster teacher dashboards, or custom branding for their programs.
Game-based quizzes and learning activities for classrooms.
Kahoot is the main competitor for interactive study and practice testing, especially in classroom settings where teachers want real-time engagement and competitive play. Other options include Anki (for serious spaced-repetition study), Memrise (for language learning), and smaller platforms like Studyblue or Cramly, but none match Quizlet's free tier scale or public deck library.
Yes. Kahoot has a free tier for both students and teachers. Anki is completely free and open-source. Memrise offers a free version with ads and limited features. Most alternatives charge for premium features or teacher dashboards, but entry-level free access exists across the category.
Spaced repetition (showing harder cards more often and easier cards less often) has the strongest research backing for long-term memory. Quizlet's Flashcards and Learn modes use this principle. Mixing in active recall practice (practice tests, matching) alongside spaced repetition typically beats single-mode study.
Yes, through Quizlet's class feature. Teachers can create a classroom, assign public or private decks, and see completion and performance data. However, the teacher dashboard is basic compared to full learning management systems, and Kahoot offers more detailed real-time class analytics.
Most support web browsers and iOS/Android apps. Kahoot is primarily browser-based but works on tablets. Anki is desktop-first but has mobile companions. Memrise offers strong mobile apps. Check the specific product's documentation for offline mode, since some alternatives (like Anki) work better offline than others.
Not always. Quizlet and Kahoot work as standalone platforms. However, if you want single sign-on, embedding study tools in your LMS, or centralized grade reporting, you'll need a tool that offers LMS integrations (API, LTI, or SCORM support). Most free alternatives don't provide this.
Quizlet's free tier allows unlimited deck creation and public sharing. Kahoot's free tier limits the number of active quizzes. Anki is unlimited. Check the specific competitor's pricing page for deck limits, concurrent user caps, or storage quotas if you're planning at scale.
White-labeling is rare in this category. Quizlet does not offer white-labeling. Kahoot offers custom branding for enterprise customers, but most free or standard tiers don't. If this is a requirement, check the product's education or enterprise documentation directly.