Not just another flashcard app for toddlers
Most speech therapy apps for kids feel like they were designed by engineers who've never met a three-year-old. Reach Speech: Speech therapy is different. It was built by a practicing speech therapist, Anna Russkikh, and you can feel that in every interaction. The app doesn't just show pictures and expect a child to repeat words. It walks them through the actual stages of speech development — from simple sounds to syllables, then words, then short phrases.
The core of the app is a series of short, structured exercises. Your kid watches a short video of a real person's mouth forming a sound, then tries it themselves. There's no pressure. No timer counting down. Just a gentle nudge to try again. The exercises are short — three to five minutes each — which is perfect for a child's attention span. You can also track which sounds your child has mastered and which need more work. That's a feature most generic "learning games" skip entirely.
What surprised me most was how much it relies on you, the parent. The app isn't a babysitter. It's more like a coach's playbook. You're supposed to sit with your child, guide them through the exercises, and offer real-world praise. The app gives you prompts on what to say and how to encourage. For example, after your child successfully makes a "buh" sound, the app might suggest you clap and say "Great job, let's try it with a ball!" That kind of scripting is gold for parents who aren't sure how to turn a sound into a word.
The design is clean and child-friendly, though not flashy. Some parents have complained that the graphics feel dated. They're not wrong — the animations are basic, and the interface isn't as polished as a Disney-branded app. But the trade-off is worth it. No ads. No in-app purchases. No random distractions. Just a focused, methodical approach to speech therapy that actually follows a clinical method.
Who's this for? If your child is between 2 and 8 and has a speech delay, or if you just want to give them a head start on clear pronunciation, this is worth a download. One tip: start with the free trial to see if your kid engages with the video-modeling format. Some children need more play-based interaction, and that's fine. But for parents who want a structured, therapist-approved tool without the $200/hour clinic price tag, Reach Speech delivers exactly what it promises.