Comprehensible input is target-language content that you can mostly understand. The idea, rooted in Stephen Krashen's Input Hypothesis, is that language acquisition happens when you're exposed to input that's just slightly above your current level — enough to challenge you, but not so much that you're lost.
Your brain can't acquire language from input it doesn't understand at all. If you listen to a language you've never studied, nothing sticks no matter how many hours you listen. But if you understand 70-90% of what you hear, your brain can use context (or tools) to figure out the remaining 10-30% — and that's where acquisition happens.
Getting from understanding nothing at all to that 70-90% is what the first few Phases are all about. Learning words, going slowly and building up your ability to understand.
There is a slight difference between "comprehensible input" and "Comprehensible Input." The first one refers to any content that is comprehensible. The second one is a specific genre of language learning content that's made for people who are new to the language, in order to be comprehensible.
Foundations (Phase 1): Content made specifically for learners — YouTube channels, apps, graded podcasts. Some channels create Comprehensible Input (the genre) content using slow speech, visual aids, and limited vocabulary.
Beginner (Phase 1-2): Content made for natives, but that's simpler or easier — Kids TV shows, basic vlogs or even dubs/translations of content you've consumed before. This kind of material is especially important for languages without much specially made Comprehensible Input.
Intermediate (Phase 2): Native content made comprehensible through tools — TV shows with subtitles, dictionaries, pausing. The content isn't simplified, but your tools make it comprehensible.
Advanced (Phase 3+): Most native content becomes comprehensible without special tools. Your focus shifts from finding whatever comprehensible content you can to sifting through the hundreds or thousands of options to find what you're most interested in.
The Input Hypothesis, formalized by Krashen (1982), is foundational to modern language acquisition theory. His central claim — that learners acquire language by understanding input that is slightly above their current level — has become a cornerstone of SLA research despite decades of debate about its exact scope and interaction with other factors.
The hypothesis predicts that input must be comprehensible for acquisition to occur. This is supported by research on attention and learning: learners must process meaning to establish the neural connections needed for language. Long (1996) expanded on Krashen's work with the Interaction Hypothesis, showing that it's not comprehensible input per se but comprehensible input combined with the opportunity to negotiate meaning that drives acquisition most effectively. We do that using language learning tools and interactive immersion.