Pinyora vs Pleco — Reading App vs Dictionary, Explained
Pleco is the gold-standard Chinese dictionary. Pinyora is a reading app. Here's how they fit together — and which to pick if you only want one.
Asking "Pinyora vs Pleco?" is a bit like asking "is a kitchen knife better than a recipe book?" — they're solving different problems. Most serious learners use both. But if you're choosing one, here's how to think about it.
Quick verdict
| If you want… | Pick |
|---|---|
| The deepest Chinese-English dictionary on the planet | Pleco |
| OCR for printed Chinese, paid add-on dictionaries, classical Chinese support | Pleco |
| A reading-first app with built-in graded stories | Pinyora |
| A clean web app you can use on any device without an install | Pinyora |
| Dictionary lookup to be a side feature of an actual reading flow | Pinyora |
| Power-user customization with hundreds of settings | Pleco |
If you're serious about Chinese, install Pleco. It's that good as a dictionary. But you'll still want a reading app on top of it — that's where Pinyora fits.
What Pleco does that nothing else can match
- The dictionary itself. Pleco's free dictionary is more thorough than 95% of paid alternatives. The optional add-on dictionaries (PLC, Tuttle, Outlier) push it into territory that competes with academic resources.
- OCR. Point your phone at printed text and Pleco identifies characters character-by-character with definitions overlaid. Mature feature, decade of polish.
- Stroke order. Tap a character, see the stroke order animation. Important for handwriting practice.
- Audio. Native pronunciation for every entry in the dictionary.
- Power features. Custom flashcard decks, configurable handwriting recognition, multiple parsing engines, classical Chinese support, etymology trees with the right add-ons.
Pleco is the most comprehensive single Chinese-language tool ever built. It's an iOS/Android app though — no web version, no syncing across devices unless you pay for the cloud add-on.
Where Pleco gets in the way
Pleco is a dictionary that grew sideways. It's powerful, but the workflow for "read this article and look up the words I don't know" is clunky:
- You have to manually type or paste each word into the search bar (or use the OCR view, which is great but interrupts the reading flow).
- There's no continuous reading view that lets you tap-to-translate in-place.
- The included Reader (paid add-on) works, but the UX feels like 2014 — slow on long texts, awkward navigation.
- No browser support — phone-only.
If your daily habit is "read 15 minutes a day on my laptop," Pleco isn't the right shape for that.
Where Pinyora fits
Pinyora was built for the reading flow specifically:
- Tap-to-translate inline — read a paragraph, tap any word, get pinyin + definition without leaving the page.
- Saved vocabulary list — every word you tap is saved automatically. Reviews come from words you've actually seen, not a generic HSK list.
- Graded library — built-in stories sorted by difficulty for when you don't have a specific text.
- Bring-your-own-text (limited free, unlimited with Pro) — paste an article, scan an image, paste a URL. Same reading flow on your text.
- Web-based — open it on phone, laptop, or tablet. Vocab syncs via your Google account.
The dictionary inside Pinyora is fine for reading purposes — it covers the words you'll meet in graded stories and most modern texts. It's not Pleco-deep. But it's good enough that you won't need to leave Pinyora during a reading session.
Pricing comparison
| Pleco | Pinyora | |
|---|---|---|
| Free tier | Full free dictionary, basic reader | All stories + unlimited saved vocabulary |
| Paid | $30 one-time for "Basic Bundle"; add-ons $10–$60 each | $9.99/month |
| Web | No | Yes |
| OCR | Yes (paid add-on, ~$15) | Yes (Pro, included) |
| Continuous reader | Paid add-on | Yes |
| Vocabulary review | Yes | Yes |
Pleco's pricing is mostly one-time purchases — pay once, use forever. Pinyora is subscription-based. Different philosophy, neither obviously wrong.
Who should pick which
Pick Pleco if: you're a Chinese-language professional, a student, or anyone who needs the depth — etymology, classical Chinese, multiple dictionaries side-by-side. Or if you specifically need OCR-on-printed-books.
Pick Pinyora if: your goal is daily reading practice and you want one app that handles graded stories, your own texts, and vocabulary review in a single flow.
Use both: open Pinyora when you sit down to read, open Pleco when you hit a word that needs deeper context. They don't conflict — they complement.
Try Pinyora free — read every story and save vocabulary without paying. Pro removes limits on paste, URL reader, scan, and translation tools.