Money never enters the conversation with Khan Academy, which immediately sets it apart in an education-app market built on subscriptions. The organisation behind it is a registered nonprofit, funded by donations and philanthropic grants, and its Android app delivers the full library of video lessons, practice exercises, and quizzes without ads, in-app purchases, or locked content of any kind.
What that library contains is a structured path through school-level academics: arithmetic to calculus, physics, chemistry, biology, economics, computing, history, and test preparation including the SAT. Mathematics is the crown jewel, with mastery-based practice that adapts to what a learner keeps getting wrong. Other subjects lean more heavily on video and vary in depth. As a free supplement to school, or a way for adults to rebuild rusty foundations, the app is close to unbeatable; as a complete curriculum it has clear edges, which we map out below.
Homework rescue for students
A student stuck on quadratic equations can search the exact topic, watch a short worked explanation, then confirm understanding with practice problems that give instant feedback and hints. The mastery system resurfaces weak skills until they stick.
Adults relearning math
Grown-ups returning to study, preparing for career changes, or facing a statistics course after a decade away can start at whatever level honesty requires, privately and at no cost. Course challenges let you test out of material you still remember.
Structured learning where school falls short
In households and regions with weak schooling options, the app provides sequenced courses aligned to common standards, and a linked parent or teacher account can monitor progress. It supplements rather than replaces teaching, but the floor it sets is high.
Mastery-based practice
Exercises track proficiency per skill, from Familiar through Proficient to Mastered, and unit tests can raise or lower those levels. The design rewards durable understanding over one-time streaky guessing, and it is the app's strongest pedagogical asset.
Video lessons with transcripts
Thousands of short instructional videos, many still narrated in Sal Khan's whiteboard style, back every exercise. Playback speed controls and subtitles help, though the production style is plain and some older recordings show their age.
Course downloads for offline viewing
Individual videos can be saved to the device for offline watching, a real help on limited data plans. Interactive exercises, however, largely require a connection, which restricts how much of the learning loop survives without internet.
Progress tracking across devices
A free account syncs mastery levels, energy points, and course position between the app and the website, and lets parents or teachers view a learner's activity. Nothing about progress tracking costs money or is gated.