The Question Every CBSE Parent Is Asking Right Now
With CBSE rolling out the three-language formula under NEP 2020, one question keeps surfacing in parent WhatsApp groups, PTA meetings, and school WhatsApp forwards: which third language should my child pick?
It sounds simple. It isn't. The choice shapes your child's next several years of study, affects board exam scores, and — if chosen well — can become a genuine life skill rather than just another subject to cram for.
This guide walks through the real trade-offs so you can make a confident, informed decision together with your child.
First, Understand What "R3" Actually Means
Under the new CBSE framework, every student picks three languages. R1 and R2 must both be Indian languages, and at least one has to be the student's mother tongue or a regional language of India. R3 — the third language — is where the real flexibility lives.
R3 can be another Indian language, a classical Indian language like Sanskrit, or a foreign language like French, German, Japanese, Spanish, or Mandarin.
That flexibility is a gift, but it's also what makes the choice hard. There's no universally "best" option — only the option that's best for your specific child.

The Seven Factors That Actually Matter
When parents ask us for advice, we steer them through seven practical questions. Work through these honestly before making the call.
1. What languages does the school actually offer?
This sounds obvious but it's the hardest constraint. Many CBSE schools only offer Sanskrit, Hindi, and maybe French or German as R3. Exotic choices like Japanese or Mandarin are rare outside metro cities and IB-style private schools. Start by calling your school and asking for the confirmed R3 menu for the coming academic year.
2. What does your child actually like?
A bored child will under-perform no matter how strategic the choice. If your daughter loves anime, Japanese has a built-in motivation engine that Sanskrit simply can't match. If your son is fascinated by his grandfather's Tamil poetry, forcing him into German will feel like punishment.
Ask your child directly: "If you had to listen to a language for an hour every day for five years, which one wouldn't bore you?"
3. How much scoring pressure is on R3?
Be honest about the math. R3 marks count toward board exam percentages. Sanskrit is widely known as a "scoring subject" — students regularly hit 95+ with consistent effort, largely because it has predictable grammar, finite vocabulary, and recycled exam patterns. Foreign languages like French and German can also be high-scoring, but only if the child is genuinely engaged and the school has a strong teacher.
4. Is there continuity from primary school?
If your child already studied Sanskrit or French informally in earlier grades, that head start matters. Don't throw away two years of exposure for a fresh start in a language they have no foundation in, unless the new choice is dramatically more aligned with their interests or future plans.
5. What does the long-term plan look like?
Is your child likely to study abroad? German and French dramatically lower the cost barrier — Germany has tuition-free public universities for students with B2-level German. Planning to work in the Indian tech industry or the US? English is already R1 or R2, so R3 should serve a different purpose: cultural connection, cognitive diversity, or a career edge in a specific region.
6. How strong are the teachers at your school?
A phenomenal Sanskrit teacher beats a mediocre French teacher every single time. Talk to parents of older students. Ask specifically: does the R3 teacher actually get kids to speak and read fluently, or just memorize answers? If your school's Japanese teacher is brilliant but the French department is a revolving door, let that steer you.
7. Does the child want to connect with family heritage?
For NRI families and diaspora households, R3 is often the only structured chance a child gets to learn their grandparents' language. If your child is losing touch with Tamil, Marathi, Kannada, or Bengali because life at home runs in English, R3 is the most powerful policy tool you have to fix that.
The Realistic Comparison
Here's how the most common R3 options stack up across the factors that matter most:
Sanskrit — The Safe Scorer
Sanskrit is the default choice for a reason. It's widely available, has consistent grammar, low textbook difficulty, and a reputation as a high-scoring subject. Students who put in 30 minutes a day can comfortably hit 90+ in boards. The trade-off: limited practical use outside academic and religious contexts, and many children find the rote-heavy curriculum dry.
Best for: Students who want to protect their percentage, enjoy patterns and grammar, or have religious or cultural interest in Sanskrit texts.
Another Indian Language (Tamil, Marathi, Kannada, Bengali, etc.)
This is the most under-appreciated option. For families whose mother tongue is different from their current state of residence, R3 is a free heritage language program. A Marathi family living in Bangalore can finally give their child formal Marathi education. A Tamil family in Delhi can keep the language alive across generations.
Best for: Families trying to preserve a heritage language, especially diaspora and inter-state families where the home language differs from the school's dominant language.
French — The Global Default
French is the world's most widely taught foreign language after English. It's the language of diplomacy, international organizations, and a strong job market in Canada, Africa, and Europe. CBSE's French curriculum is well-established, textbooks are plentiful, and scoring is moderate to high with effort.
Best for: Students planning to study in Canada or France, interested in humanities and international careers, or who want a practical foreign language without the steep learning curve of German or Japanese.
German — The Study-Abroad Play
German's strategic value is hard to overstate for Indian families with study-abroad ambitions. German public universities charge near-zero tuition, and B2-level German opens doors to engineering, medicine, and applied sciences programs that would cost ₹40+ lakhs in the US. The language is harder than French — cases, gendered nouns, long compound words — but the ROI is substantial.
Best for: Academically strong students with clear plans for German or European higher education, especially in STEM fields.
Japanese — The Passion Pick
Japanese is rarely offered in Indian schools, but when it is, enrollment is driven almost entirely by anime, manga, and pop culture. That motivation is real and valuable. The downside: Japanese uses three writing systems (Hiragana, Katakana, Kanji), making it one of the hardest languages for Indian students to master at a high level within CBSE's time constraints. Scoring can suffer if the child doesn't put in the work.
Best for: Highly motivated students with a genuine passion for Japanese culture who are willing to invest significantly more time than they would in French or Sanskrit.
Spanish — The Rising Star
Spanish is gaining ground in private CBSE schools. It's the second-most spoken language in the world by native speakers, shares alphabet familiarity with English, and has forgiving pronunciation. Career relevance in India is still limited compared to French or German, but it's growing in BPO and global services sectors.
Best for: Students who find European languages appealing but want something easier than French or German, or families with ties to Spanish-speaking regions.

The Decision Framework
If you're still stuck, use this simple rule of thumb:
- If scoring is the top priority → Sanskrit
- If heritage and cultural connection matter most → your family's mother tongue or regional language
- If study abroad in Europe is the goal → German
- If general global career flexibility matters → French
- If the child is genuinely passionate about a specific culture → follow that passion (Japanese, Korean, Mandarin)
- If the child has no preference and you have no clear goal → Sanskrit or a heritage Indian language is the safest default
One Thing Most Parents Miss
The most important decision isn't which language you pick. It's how your child actually learns it.
CBSE textbooks alone rarely build real proficiency in any language. Whether you choose Sanskrit, French, or Tamil, your child will need supplementary resources — ideally ones they enjoy using. Apps, podcasts, movies, music, and conversation practice matter as much as the school syllabus. A child who listens to 15 minutes of a French podcast during the school bus ride will outperform one who only touches the subject during class time.
This is where modern learning formats start to outperform traditional rote methods. Podcast-based learning in your native language — the approach Langmitra takes — keeps kids engaged because it feels more like listening to a story than studying. Audio immersion trains the ear, which is the hardest part of any language, and it fits into daily routines without adding screen time.
A Final Note to Parents
Resist the temptation to pick based on what sounds impressive to relatives. "My daughter is learning German" is a great line at family functions, but if she ends up miserable in class and loses marks in boards, you've paid for the brag in the wrong currency.
The best third language is the one your child will still be using, in some form, ten years from now. Sometimes that's the language of a grandmother they adore. Sometimes it's the language of a university they dream of. Sometimes it's the language of a culture they discovered on YouTube at age eleven.
Listen to your child. Factor in the practical constraints. Then commit — and support them with real learning resources, not just a school textbook.
The policy gave you the flexibility. Use it thoughtfully.
