Video Transcript
Teachable and Skool represent two fundamentally different philosophies about online education. Teachable is a course-selling platform — you build courses, market them, and optimize checkout. Skool is a community-first platform — you build a community, and courses exist inside it as supporting content. The right choice depends on a deceptively simple question: are you selling a course or building a community?
Teachable vs Skool at a Glance
| Teachable | Skool | Ruzuku | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starting price (annual) | $29/mo | $99/mo (no annual discount) | Free |
| Transaction fees | 7.5% on Starter | 0% | 0% on all plans |
| 0% fee tier | Builder ($69/mo annual) | All plans | All plans including free |
| Course limits | 1–25 by plan | Unlimited | Unlimited (Core+) |
| Student/member limits | 100–unlimited by plan | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Mobile apps | iOS & Android | No native apps | No native apps |
| Community | Basic, separate from courses | Core product (feed, events, gamification) | Integrated in every course |
| Gamification | No | Leaderboards, points, levels | No |
| Affiliate marketing | Strong, built-in | Not available | Not built-in |
| Cohort/scheduled courses | Basic drip scheduling | No — always open access | Purpose-built |
| Live teaching (Zoom) | No native integration | Event scheduling (no Zoom embed) | All plans |
| Student tech support | Not included | Not included | Included on all plans |
| Best for | Course selling at scale | Paid community businesses | Teaching-first course businesses |
The Fundamental Philosophy Clash
Most platform comparisons list features side by side. But Teachable and Skool aren't really competing on features — they're competing on architecture. The two platforms are built around opposite ideas about what the primary product should be.
Teachable: content is king
Teachable is built for selling courses. You create structured content — video lessons, quizzes, downloads — package it into a product, and sell it through an optimized checkout. The platform's strongest features are selling tools: affiliate marketing, upsells, order bumps, cart recovery emails, and native mobile apps that make consumption seamless.
Community on Teachable exists as a feature, but it's separate from the course itself. Students take the course in one area and visit the community in another. The architecture says: the course is what you're selling; community is optional support.
Skool: community is king
Skool flips this entirely. When you create a Skool group, the community feed is the front door — it's what members see first. Courses live inside a "Classroom" tab as content that supports the community. The platform's strongest features are engagement tools: gamification with leaderboards, points, and levels that reward participation; event scheduling for live sessions; and a social feed where members interact.
This isn't a subtle difference. On Skool, you don't sell a course — you sell access to a community that includes courses. The architecture says: the community is the product; courses are supporting material.
Why the architecture matters
One course creator captured this tension perfectly when they told us: they loved their course platform for structured teaching but wanted "one place to have your community while they take courses from you" — comparing Skool, Mighty Networks, and Circle. This is the real question: do you want courses that include community, or a community that includes courses?
There's a third option, too. On Ruzuku, community discussions are built into each lesson — not in a separate tab, not in a separate feed, but right where students are learning. Across 32,000+ courses on our platform, courses with active discussions average 65.5% completion compared to 42.6% for those without. Where discussions happen matters for learning outcomes.
Pricing: What You Actually Pay
Skool's pricing is radically simple. Teachable's is not.
Skool: one plan, one price
Skool charges $99/month — no tiers, no annual discount, no transaction fees. You get unlimited courses, unlimited members, unlimited communities. Every feature is available to every user. There's nothing to upgrade to.
This simplicity is appealing but also means you're paying $99/month from day one, even if you have zero members. There's no lower entry point to test the model.
Teachable: tiered complexity
Teachable has three main tiers, each unlocking more products, students, and features:
- Starter ($39/mo, or $29/mo annual): 1 product, 100 students, 7.5% transaction fee
- Builder ($89/mo, or $69/mo annual): 5 products, 1,000 students, 0% transaction fees
- Professional ($199/mo): 25 products, unlimited students, 0% transaction fees
The Starter plan's 7.5% transaction fee is the key cost to watch. At any meaningful revenue, it adds up fast.
The revenue math
Here's what each platform costs at different monthly revenue levels, comparing Teachable's two most relevant tiers against Skool and Ruzuku:
| Monthly revenue | Teachable Starter | Teachable Builder | Skool | Ruzuku Core |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000/mo | $29 + $75 = $104/mo | $69/mo | $99/mo | $83/mo |
| $5,000/mo | $29 + $375 = $404/mo | $69/mo | $99/mo | $83/mo |
| $10,000/mo | $29 + $750 = $779/mo | $69/mo | $99/mo | $83/mo |
Annual pricing shown for Teachable and Ruzuku. Skool has no annual discount. Teachable Starter limited to 1 product and 100 students. All plans also incur standard payment processing fees (Stripe/PayPal ~2.9% + 30¢).
At scale, Teachable Builder ($69/mo) is the cheapest option — but it caps you at 5 products and 1,000 students. Skool's flat $99/mo with no limits is simpler. Ruzuku Core ($83/mo annual) falls between them with zero fees and no student or course limits.
The deeper question is what you get for that price. Teachable's $69/mo gets you selling tools. Skool's $99/mo gets you community tools. Ruzuku's $83/mo gets you teaching tools. Same price range, completely different capabilities. (For a detailed breakdown, see our Teachable pricing guide.)
Where Teachable Wins
Native mobile apps
Teachable's iOS and Android student apps are a genuine competitive advantage. Students can download content for offline viewing, get push notifications, and access courses from their phones without using a browser. Skool does not have native apps — everything is browser-based on mobile. If your students consume content on the go, Teachable has a real edge here.
Affiliate marketing tools
Teachable's built-in affiliate system lets you set custom commission rates, track referral sources, and manage payouts from the dashboard. This is critical for JV launches and influencer promotions. Skool has no affiliate marketing tools at all. If affiliate-driven sales are part of your business model, Teachable is the clear choice.
Checkout optimization
Upsells, order bumps, cart recovery emails — Teachable is built to maximize revenue per checkout. These are selling-first features that reflect Teachable's DNA. Skool doesn't have checkout optimization because its model is different: you're not selling individual products, you're selling community access.
Email marketing integrations
Teachable integrates with major email platforms (ConvertKit, Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign) for marketing automation. Skool has no email marketing tools and no integrations — your only communication channel is the community feed itself. For course creators who rely on email funnels, Teachable's integration ecosystem matters.
Where Skool Wins
Community engagement and gamification
Skool's gamification system — leaderboards, points, levels — drives daily community engagement in a way no other course platform matches. Members earn points for posting, commenting, and completing courses. Levels can unlock gated content. This creates a participation loop that keeps members active and reduces churn in subscription communities.
Radical pricing simplicity
One plan, $99/month, everything included. No calculating whether you need the next tier, no worrying about transaction fees eating your margins, no student caps forcing an upgrade. For creators who hate pricing complexity, Skool's model is refreshing. You never need to think about your platform bill again.
Community-first discovery
Skool's community feed makes it easy for members to engage even when they're not actively taking a course. Members see new posts, events, and discussions as soon as they log in — the community is always alive. This is powerful for membership businesses where ongoing engagement justifies the recurring subscription.
Event scheduling
Skool includes built-in event scheduling with calendar views and RSVP tracking. While it doesn't embed Zoom directly into the platform, it provides a centralized place to organize live sessions, Q&As, and community calls. Teachable doesn't have native event scheduling.
What Both Platforms Miss
Having built and run a course platform for 14 years, we've watched thousands of course creators navigate the courses-vs-community tension. Here's what we've observed that neither Teachable nor Skool addresses well:
Discussions integrated into learning
Teachable's community is separate from its courses. Skool's courses are inside its community. But neither architecture puts discussion inside the lesson — where a student is actively learning, reflecting, and forming questions.
This matters because research consistently shows that engagement during learning — not before or after — drives retention and outcomes. On Ruzuku, every lesson can include a discussion where students respond to prompts, share work, and interact with peers right in the learning flow. That's why courses with active discussions on our platform see 54% higher completion rates.
Cohort and scheduled course delivery
Skool doesn't support scheduled or cohort-based courses at all — everything is always-open, self-paced. Teachable offers basic drip scheduling but nothing designed for true cohort programs with start dates, live sessions, and group progression.
Our platform data shows that cohort-based courses achieve 64% median completion versus 48% for open access courses. A coaching institute we spoke with, teaching therapeutic frameworks to therapists, was comparing Skool, Kajabi, and Ruzuku specifically because they needed to "transition from content development to scalable delivery" — the kind of structured, cohort-based experience neither Teachable nor Skool is built for.
Student tech support
When a member can't log in, can't access a video, or has a payment issue, who handles it? On both Teachable and Skool, you do. Both platforms offer creator support, but neither provides direct technical support for your students or community members.
On Ruzuku, our support team handles student technical issues directly — password resets, browser compatibility, access problems — so you can focus on teaching and building your community.
Three Scenarios: Which Platform Fits?
Scenario 1: Alex sells a $497 self-paced marketing course with affiliate partners
Alex has built an audience through YouTube and wants to sell a polished, pre-recorded course on Facebook advertising. He plans to recruit affiliate partners for the launch and wants students to have mobile app access for watching lessons on the go.
Best fit: Teachable. Mobile apps for on-the-go consumption, strong affiliate marketing tools for the launch, and checkout optimization (upsells, order bumps, cart recovery) all align with Alex's selling-first approach. The Builder plan ($69/mo annual) eliminates transaction fees and gives him the marketing infrastructure he needs.
Scenario 2: Maya runs a $49/mo fitness community with weekly challenges
Maya is a fitness coach building a paid community around accountability and weekly workout challenges. She wants members to interact daily, earn points for participation, and access a library of workout programs. The community energy is the product — the courses are supporting content.
Best fit: Skool. Gamification drives daily engagement with leaderboards and levels. The community feed keeps members active between workouts. Event scheduling organizes weekly challenges. And the flat $99/mo means Maya never worries about member caps or transaction fees as she grows.
Scenario 3: Dr. Chen runs a 6-week CE cohort for therapists
Dr. Chen teaches Self-Directed Change frameworks to licensed therapists. Her program includes weekly live sessions, peer discussion of clinical cases, written reflections, and a certificate of completion. She runs four cohorts per year with 25 participants each.
Best fit: Ruzuku. Cohort scheduling with defined start and end dates. Zoom integration for live sessions on all plans. Discussion prompts built into each lesson for case reflection. Exercise submissions for written assignments. And student tech support handled by Ruzuku's team — so Dr. Chen can focus on teaching, not troubleshooting login issues for her therapist participants.
Switching Between Platforms
The architectural difference between Teachable and Skool makes switching between them more than a content migration — it's a business model decision:
- Teachable to Skool: You're moving from selling individual courses to selling community access. Your pricing model, marketing, and student expectations all change. Course content transfers manually (download and re-upload), but the experience you're offering is fundamentally different.
- Skool to Teachable: You're moving from community-first to course-first. Your community feed, gamification history, and member engagement data don't transfer. You'll need to rebuild your audience's habits around a course-centric experience.
- Either to Ruzuku: If you want to combine structured courses with integrated discussion — without choosing which is "primary" — that's what switching to Ruzuku looks like. Course content transfers manually; our support team can help with the transition.
In all cases, student/member accounts don't transfer automatically. Active subscriptions need to be coordinated with your community. Custom domains can point to any platform.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Skool better than Teachable?
It depends on what you're building. Skool is better for community-first businesses where courses support an engaged membership — think paid communities, coaching groups, and accountability programs. Teachable is better for course-selling businesses where marketing, affiliates, and checkout optimization drive revenue. If your priority is teaching outcomes — live cohorts, student engagement, completion rates — neither platform focuses there. That's where teaching-first platforms like Ruzuku differ.
Does Skool have a mobile app?
No. Skool does not have native iOS or Android apps. Students access Skool communities and courses through a mobile browser. Teachable offers native mobile apps where students can download content for offline viewing and receive push notifications. Ruzuku also doesn't offer native apps — mobile access is browser-based.
Can I run cohort-based courses on Skool?
Skool does not support scheduled or cohort-based course delivery. All courses on Skool are open-access — students can start anytime and work at their own pace. Teachable offers basic drip scheduling to release content over time, but it's not designed for true cohort programs with group start dates and live sessions. Ruzuku is purpose-built for cohort courses with scheduled content, Zoom integration, and integrated discussions on all plans.
Does Skool have email marketing?
No. Skool has no built-in email marketing tools and no integrations with external email platforms. Your only communication channel with members is the Skool community feed itself. Teachable integrates with ConvertKit, Mailchimp, and ActiveCampaign for email-based marketing and automation. If email funnels are central to your sales strategy, this is a significant Skool limitation.
Which has better customer support?
Both offer support for creators — Teachable via email and chat (priority on higher tiers), Skool via its own community and email. However, neither provides direct technical support for your students or members. When someone can't log in or has a payment issue, you handle it. This is one of the most common frustrations we hear from creators switching to Ruzuku, where student support is included on every plan.
What about Mighty Networks or Circle?
Mighty Networks and Circle are also community-focused platforms worth considering if Skool's model appeals to you. Mighty Networks offers native mobile apps (which Skool lacks) and more advanced course features. Circle provides more customization and integrations. Both are community-first, but with different strengths. See our full comparison hub for detailed breakdowns.
Bottom Line
Teachable and Skool aren't really competing with each other — they're built for different business models. Comparing them is less about which has better features and more about which architecture matches how you want to serve your audience.
If you're building a course-selling business — affiliate launches, checkout optimization, mobile-first students — Teachable gives you the selling infrastructure. If you're building a paid community business — gamification, daily engagement, community-as-product — Skool gives you the engagement infrastructure. And if you're building a teaching-first business where courses and community are integrated, cohorts run on a schedule, and student outcomes matter more than either marketing tools or gamification — Ruzuku is worth a look.
Not sure which fits? Take our 2-minute platform quiz for a personalized recommendation, or explore all platform comparisons.
Pricing verified as of May 2026. Teachable and Skool update pricing periodically — check their websites for the latest. See our detailed breakdowns: Teachable pricing · Ruzuku vs Skool · Ruzuku vs Teachable