Skool vs Classentra: Which One Fits Your Use Case
Skool is a paid community with a courses tab. Classentra is a teaching platform with a community tab. Pick by which question your business depends on most.
Por Classentra Editorial
Esta traducción está en curso. El contenido a continuación está en inglés.
People ask "Skool vs Classentra" as if they're competitors aimed at the same job. They aren't. Skool is a paid community platform with a courses tab. Classentra is a live teaching platform with a community tab. The right pick depends on which one your business actually depends on.
This post is a decision framework, not a feature war. The question to answer first is: what is the customer paying for?
Pick Skool If…
- The peer network is the product. Members pay because being in the room with other members is the value. The coach or teacher is the gathering force, not the one delivering most of the value.
- Mobile is non-negotiable. Your audience lives on their phones and won't engage with a web-only experience.
- Gamification matters more than live teaching. Points, levels, and the leaderboard drive behaviors you care about (daily check-ins, posting cadence, peer accountability).
- You don't run live classes — or you do, but only occasionally, and the Zoom round-trip is fine.
- You want the "Skool feed" discovery effect to surface your community to other Skool users.
If three or more of those bullets are true, Skool is your platform. Don't overthink it.
Pick Classentra If…
- Live teaching is the core product. Your business is "show up at 7pm Tuesday and teach this group of students live this thing." That's the value.
- You need attendance, grades, or assignments as part of the offer (cohorts, certifications, parent-visible progress, B2B training).
- You're running a multi-instructor org — an academy, a tutoring company, a corporate training provider — where multiple teachers each own their own students.
- Stripe Connect direct payouts matter more than community-platform discovery. You'd rather take 100% of the gross at 0% platform fee than pay for the network effect.
- You're already losing time to the Zoom + spreadsheet + courses-tab patchwork and want one tool.
If three or more of those are true, Classentra is your platform.
Pricing Breakeven Math
This is the version most teachers actually want to see.
Skool: $99 / month flat, plus a community-payment fee on top of standard Stripe (~2.9% + $0.30) and a separate Zoom Pro at ~$15 / month if you teach live. Real out-of-pocket on a small business: ~$130-200 / month.
Classentra Pro: $59 / month + 0% platform fee (Stripe still applies at 2.9% + $0.30). Real out-of-pocket: ~$60-150 / month at the same scale, native live video included.
The breakeven flips fast as transaction volume grows. By the time you're processing $5K / month in member payments, Classentra Pro is approximately $80-100 / month cheaper end-to-end, and you've eliminated the Zoom subscription, the manual recording uploads, and the attendance-tracking spreadsheet.
What the math doesn't capture: the operational drag of two-tool living. That's the real cost of staying on Skool when your business is teaching, not community.
Decision Matrix
| If your business is… | Lean toward |
|---|---|
| Paid community with peer network as core value | Skool |
| Mobile-first creator with gamification appeal | Skool |
| Live cohorts (weekly classes, recurring schedule) | Classentra |
| Multi-instructor academy or tutoring company | Classentra |
| B2B / corporate training with audit-grade records | Classentra |
| Hybrid (community + occasional teaching) | Either; pick by which side you'll grow |
| Pre-recorded info-product seller with light community | Skool |
| Live-teacher tired of Zoom + Skool stitching | Classentra |
Honest Edge Case: Why Not Both?
Some teachers run both for a season. They keep their Skool community for the gamification and the discovery feed, and they use Classentra for the actual live teaching layer. That's not insane — the cost is two subscriptions, the gain is each tool doing what it's best at. We see this most often with teachers who built an audience on Skool first and then added a structured teaching offer.
Eventually most consolidate. Direction of consolidation depends on which side of the business is paying the bills.
Cross-Link
For the side-by-side feature comparison and pricing snapshots, see /vs/skool. For the manual onboarding flow if you decide to move, see /migrate-from-skool.