Best daily deals

Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more.

10 best translation apps for Android

Translation apps help you talk to people you otherwise might not be able to talk to. Let's take a look at the best ones.
By
March 22, 2024
Microsoft Translate best translation apps for Android
Joe Hindy / Android Authority

Translation apps are fairly important. They help people communicate without a human translator or spend months learning a language. Most cases involve translating something you see on social media, although most sites have built-in translations now. Generally speaking, infrequent travelers use most translation apps, students looking to study a new language, and translating a menu or something in a restaurant. We have a whole list of outstanding translation apps below.

We want to give an honorable mention to Dictionary Linguee (Google Play). It’s a very good translation app. However, it hasn’t been in active development since 2017, so it’ll likely have issues on modern Android devices.

The best translation apps for Android

BK Translate apps

Price: Free

BK Translate screenshot 2020

BK Translate is a developer on Google Play with a variety of translation apps. They have dozens of languages, including popular ones like Spanish, Arabic, German, Indonesian, French, and many others. Each app works the same way. It translates between whatever language it supports and English. It works with typing, voice, and handwriting.

Additionally, it works with both words and full sentences. The UI is simple and easy to use. That’s about all these apps do. They are simple translator apps. They are also all free with advertising. Unfortunately, you can’t pay to remove the ads.

DeepL Translate

Price: Free

DeepL Translate screenshot 2 2022

DeepL Translate launched in 2022, and it’s already one of the best translation apps on mobile. The app works in 29 languages, including Chinese (Simplified), French, Spanish, German, Japanese, and many others. In terms of UI, the app looks good and is highly functional. You can input text or use the microphone to hear someone talk. The app translates what it sees or hears. There’s even a camera function to read menus or street signs if you need it. It competes well with Microsoft Translate and Google Translate. The only drawback is the sheer number of languages those other apps can handle.

Dict Box

Price: Free / $6.49

Dict Box is a multilingual dictionary. It supports dozens of languages, including English, Spanish, French, Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Hindi, Romanian, and others. Some of the features include complete offline support, word corrections, audio pronunciations, pictures, flashcards for memorization practice, and cross-device syncing. It also includes camera features. The design is decent and easy to use. There isn’t a lot not to like about this one. Some features are locked in the free version but are unlocked in the premium version.

Dict.cc

Price: Free / $2.49

Dictcc screenshot 2020

Dict.cc is a multilingual dictionary app and translator. It works with dozens of languages, including French, Italian, Latin, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, and others. This one only seems to work with single words. However, it’s a good way to translate between two languages. The app features offline support, auto suggestions, audio pronunciations, and more. It should work perfectly fine for the languages it supports. The free version includes about a dozen languages. The premium version comes with the entire collection of supported languages and it removes ads.

Google Translate

Price: Free

google translate best translation apps for android

Google Translate is probably the very best translation app on mobile. It supports over 100 languages online and over 50 languages offline (via typing). It also translates stuff with your camera like menus or street signs. The app also supports handwriting, voice input, and typing input (obviously). Finally, it can even translate a full conversation in real time. This is the gold standard on mobile. Aside from the occasional goof or bug, there isn’t much wrong with it. It’s also free with no in-app purchases or ads.

Innovative Apps translation apps

Price: Free

English Filipino Dictionary screenshot 2020
Joe Hindy / Android Authority

Innovative Apps is a developer on Google Play. They have a variety of bilingual dictionary apps. They also work well as translation apps. The apps all have the same features. That includes full offline support, auto suggestions, pronunciations, voice search, synonyms, antonyms, and word games for memorization practice. There are dozens of languages. You simply find the one with the language you want and it translates between that language and English. All of the apps are free with advertising. We wish we could pay to remove the ads, but it’s a relatively minor complaint.

Klays-Development translation apps

Price: Free/ $1.99

All Language Translator Klays Development is one of the best translation apps for android

Klays-Development is a developer on Google Play much like BK Translate. They have a bunch of bilingual translation apps. There is also a single app with all of the languages included with dozens upon dozens of languages. The apps all feature a simple UI. You also get typing and voice inputs for translation. All of the individual translator apps have advertising with no premium version. The one app with all of the languages costs $1.99 and contains no other ads or in-app purchases. Frankly, we recommend the one with all of the languages. It’s the best deal

Microsoft Translator

Price: Free

Microsoft Translator - best translation apps for android

Google Translate gets a lot of love. However, Microsoft Translate is also pretty good. It supports over 60 languages. That’s less than Google Translate but still more than most. However, all of them are available offline. The app also supports two-way conversations (with up to 100 people at once), phrasebooks, pronunciation guides, Android Wear support, and alternate translations. It’s surprisingly good. Plus, it’s entirely free with no in-app purchases or ads as far as we can tell. Even the UI is pretty decent. If Google Translate is giving you trouble, Microsoft Translate might be the answer.

Naver Papago

Price: Free

Naver Papago is a translation app by Naver, a very popular search engine in South Korea. It’s not all that different from Google Search and Google Translate. Anyway, Naver Papago supports translation between 13 languages. You can translate text, images, and voice with real-time translations. Additionally, it 100% works offline and it can even recognize things like handwriting and websites. It’s not quite as broad as Google Translate or Microsoft Translate. However, we like the UI, and the features all work. Some seem to have trouble with the website translation feature so be aware of that.

Reverso Dictionary

Price: Free / Up to $12.00

Reverso Translate screenshot 2020 2
Joe Hindy / Android Authority

Reverso Dictionary is another popular multilingual dictionary. It’s not quite as good as Dict.cc or Dictionary Linguee. However, it’s viable if those don’t work for you. It supports dozens of languages. Additionally, the app features example sentences, audio pronunciations, word games for memorization, offline support, and more. The app has the occasional connection bug. There isn’t much else wrong with it, though. It’s not half bad, although we would recommend other apps on this list before recommending this one.