Teachable

All-in-one online course platform with course hosting, sales pages, built-in checkout, drip scheduling, and coaching tools — a popular choice for solo creators and educators monetising expertise.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Teachable For?
  2. Course Builder & Content
  3. Sales Pages & Checkout
  4. Coaching & Digital Downloads
  5. Student Experience & Community
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Teachable For?

Teachable is one of the original all-in-one online course platforms, launched in 2014 and now hosting tens of thousands of courses from creators, educators, coaches, and experts. It handles the full end-to-end workflow for selling knowledge products online — hosting video lessons, building sales pages, processing payments, issuing certificates, and managing students — without requiring a separate checkout, email tool, or membership plugin.

The ideal user is a solo creator, subject-matter expert, or coach who wants to package their knowledge into a paid course or coaching program and start selling without learning WordPress, plugins, or developer tooling. Teachable's pitch is simple: record your lessons, upload them, drop in a sales page, and you're selling — most new instructors have a functional first course live within a day or two.

It's also a common pick for educators transitioning from one-off workshops to scalable online products. The platform handles enrolment, progress tracking, and certificate generation that would otherwise require multiple tools to assemble.

Teachable is less suited for large-scale learning organisations with complex compliance, SCORM, xAPI, or enterprise SSO requirements — those use cases typically need a dedicated LMS like Canvas, Docebo, or LearnWorlds. It's also not the best pick for creators who primarily want a community-first business; Circle, Skool, or Mighty Networks do community better.

Where Teachable shines is in time to first sale. Between the hosted video, pre-built sales page templates, and built-in checkout, a creator can go from blank page to accepting payments faster than with almost any competing stack. For individuals prioritising shipping over flexibility, this remains Teachable's biggest advantage.

Course Builder & Content

The course builder is the core of Teachable and handles everything from content structure to drip scheduling to student progress tracking.

In daily use, the course builder is straightforward but not as polished as newer competitors. Thinkific and LearnWorlds both feel more modern in their builders. Teachable's interface shows its age in places (older UI patterns, some slower loading screens), but it's functional and reliable — and the video transcoding quality is consistently good.

The main content limitation is that Teachable's built-in content types are relatively narrow. For anything beyond video, text, and simple quizzes, you'll end up embedding external tools (Typeform for surveys, Google Docs for worksheets, etc.) which adds friction. LearnWorlds has a broader native content library for interactive learning.

Sales Pages & Checkout

Teachable's sales pages and checkout are designed so creators can launch paid courses without a separate landing page builder or payment processor. Out of the box, you get a hosted sales page for every course with a built-in checkout flow.

The built-in sales and checkout flow is Teachable's biggest time-saver. Compared to assembling WordPress + WooCommerce + membership plugin + video hosting, Teachable gets you to a working sales page in hours rather than days. For non-technical creators, this is the core value proposition.

The main limitation is sales page flexibility. The templates are functional but not especially creative, and the builder doesn't match dedicated landing page tools like Leadpages or ClickFunnels for design flexibility. Creators who care deeply about sales page conversion optimisation often build landing pages externally and embed Teachable's checkout.

Coaching & Digital Downloads

Beyond courses, Teachable supports coaching services and digital downloads as separate product types, letting creators monetise multiple formats from the same platform.

Adding coaching to a course business is a natural upsell path, and Teachable's built-in coaching product makes it straightforward to start. Before coaching became a native product type, creators needed separate tools (Calendly, Stripe, intake forms) to offer coaching alongside courses — now it's one platform.

The main limitation is that coaching is best for simple one-to-one sessions. Group coaching programs, cohort-based workshops, or complex multi-step coaching journeys are better served by dedicated tools like Paperbell or CoachAccountable.

Student Experience & Community

The student-facing experience is important because it's where the majority of a student's time is spent — and where refund rates and word-of-mouth growth are decided.

The student experience is good but not the best in the category. LearnWorlds and Kajabi both offer more polished student interfaces with richer interaction. Teachable's experience is perfectly functional and rarely a source of complaints, but it's not a differentiator.

The lack of a strong built-in community is Teachable's biggest gap. Comments on lectures are not a substitute for proper community discussion, and most serious creators end up pairing Teachable with a separate community tool (Circle, Skool, or Discord). Kajabi's built-in community feels more integrated.

Pricing & Plans

FeatureFreeBasic ($59)Pro ($159)Pro+ ($249)
Courses1550200
Transaction fee$1 + 10%5%0%0%
Coaching products1YesYesYes
Custom domainNoYesYesYes
Drip contentNoYesYesYes
Affiliate programNoNoYesYes
Advanced reportsNoNoYesYes
Unbranded checkoutNoNoYesYes
Bulk student actionsNoNoNoYes

The free plan lets you test the platform with one course and one coaching product, but transaction fees of $1 + 10% make it impractical for any real selling. It's more of a trial than a viable plan.

Basic at $59/month unlocks custom domains, drip content, 5 courses, and reduces transaction fees to 5%. Suitable for creators launching their first course — but the 5% fee adds up, so serious sellers tend to upgrade quickly.

Pro at $159/month eliminates transaction fees entirely, unlocks affiliate programs, unbranded checkout, graded quizzes, and advanced reports. This is where Teachable becomes cost-effective for active creators — if you're doing $3,000+/month in sales, the elimination of transaction fees usually justifies the plan upgrade.

Pro+ at $249/month adds 200 courses, bulk student actions, and advanced custom user roles. Designed for creators running multiple course brands or managing larger catalogues.

Compared to competitors, Teachable's pricing is roughly mid-range — more expensive than Podia, roughly on par with Thinkific, cheaper than Kajabi. The transaction fee on lower tiers is a real cost consideration that's easy to overlook: at $5,000/month sales, a 5% fee means $250/month in transaction costs on top of the subscription.

Teachable — Course Platform for Creators

All-in-one course hosting, sales pages, checkout, and coaching tools with built-in student management. Free tier and custom domains on Basic and above.

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