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12 Best Skool Alternatives in 2026, Including Ones You Can Own

The 12 best Skool alternatives for 2026, from Circle and Mighty to Discord, Whop, and Discourse, ranked honestly with the ownership angle nobody else covers.

Andrew Lee Jenkins9 min readOwnership
12 Best Skool Alternatives in 2026, Including Ones You Can Own

Search “Skool alternatives” and you get a wall of listicles that are really affiliate rankings wearing a lab coat. Every vendor ranks itself first. So let me disclose the same bias up front. I sell one of the options on this list, and I put it at number one. You should read that skeptically, which is exactly why every entry below carries its honest trade-offs, mine included. The thing that actually separates these twelve is not features, it is whether you rent the software or own it. I sorted them with that in mind and said so out loud.

Prices and fees are the verified July 2026 figures from each vendor's own pages. They drift, so treat this as a starting map, not gospel.

12 Skool alternatives at a glance
PlatformEntry priceTransaction feeOwn the software?
Seedly Communities$399 once0%Yes, full source
Circle$89 to $219/mo + add-ons2% / 1% + StripeNo
Mighty Networks$79 to $215/mo2% / 1% + StripeNo
Heartbeat$49 to $849/mo5% / 2.5% / 1.25%No
Discourse$0 self-host to $100/mo hosted0%Yes, open source
DiscordFreeNone nativeNo
Whop$0/mo~5.7% + $0.30No
GroupApp$24 to $384/mo0%No
Nas.io$9 to $99/mo4.9% / 2.9% / 1% + gatewayNo
Kajabi Communities$179 to $499/moprocessing + 0.5 to 5% third-partyNo
Facebook GroupsFreeNone nativeNo
phpFox / FluentCommunityone-time license0%Yes, owned source

Compiled from each vendor's public pricing and fee pages, July 2026. Fees marked with Stripe stack on top of card processing. Re-verify before you commit.

Prices verified July 2026, re-check on publish.

1. Seedly Communities, the one you own

Full disclosure again, this one is mine. Seedly Communities is the full source code of a community platform sold once for $399, or $249 as an add-on bought in the same checkout as Seedly CRM. Feed, chat, classroom, events, live streaming, and gamification are six modules in one codebase, members are unlimited, and the transaction fee is 0% because members pay through your own Stripe in USD or GBP. The candid trade-offs, because I promised them. You deploy it yourself onto Vercel and Convex Cloud accounts you control and pay those bills directly, live video needs a Daily.co key, and the mobile story is responsive web plus Capacitor iOS and Android shells, not a separate native app. It is the most ownership on this list and the most setup. If your community is a business, that trade is the whole point. If it is three weeks old, it is not.

You are not buying alone

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Owners trade setups, share add-ons, and swap playbooks. See what people are building before you commit.

2. Circle, the polished rental

Circle is the best-looking, most professional rental in the category, and if you are going to rent, it is my first recommendation. Professional runs $89 a month billed annually or $129 monthly, plus a 2% fee that sits on top of Stripe. Watch the add-ons though. Email Hub, custom profile fields, and a custom sender email are separate line items that push a real setup toward $188 to $277 a month. Pricing on circle.so/pricing. The full teardown is in the Circle pricing post, and the head-to-head is here.

3. Mighty Networks

Mighty pairs community, courses, and events with a branded-app upsell path, and leans on AI engagement features. Launch is $79 a month annual or $95 monthly with a 2% fee, and the recent restructure killed the cheap entry plan, so the floor to get in nearly doubled. White-label and a branded app are locked to the custom Pro tier. Export is a member .xlsx and little else. Pricing on mightynetworks.com/pricing. Compared row by row here.

4. Heartbeat

Heartbeat is the closest feature-for-feature all-in-one for creators. Feed, chat, courses, events, live rooms, badges, and full monetization on every plan. The catch is the fee ladder, 5% on the $49 Build plan, 2.5% on the $149 Grow plan, 1.25% on the $849 Scale plan, all on top of Stripe. The mobile app carries real complaints about reliability. Good breadth, steep percentage until you are paying a lot monthly.

5. Discourse, the open-source standard

If your community is discussion-shaped and you have a little technical comfort, Discourse is the gold standard and genuinely free to self-host under an open-source license. You truly own it. You also truly operate it, servers, upgrades, and email deliverability included, which their own docs warn is hard. Hosted plans start free and run to $100 a month if you would rather they ran it. No payments or courses natively. Pricing on discourse.org/pricing.

6. Discord, if real-time chat is the point

Discord is free, instant, and where a lot of audiences already hang out. For live, chat-first communities it is unbeatable on price and energy. But it is not a course platform or a paid-membership platform in any native sense, monetization and structure mean bolting on third-party tools, and you own none of it. Great front porch, poor foundation for a business.

7. Whop

Whop is a marketplace and storefront with community apps attached, popular with a younger, Discord-native crowd. There is no monthly cost, which is the draw, but the effective take is roughly 5.7% plus 30 cents once processing and platform fees stack, per docs.whop.com/fees. The real risk in its record is not the fees but payout holds, so read the reviews on that specifically before you route revenue through it.

8. GroupApp

GroupApp is the budget pick, $24 to $384 a month with a genuine 0% transaction fee, which makes it the price leader among hosted rentals. The footprint is tiny though, a couple dozen public reviews total, and support gets described as thin. A reasonable low-fee rental if you can live with a small, young vendor.

9. Nas.io

Nas.io targets non-technical international creators and does chat integrations with WhatsApp and Telegram well. Plans run $9 to $99 a month plus fees from 4.9% down to 1%, with a payment gateway cut on top. The weak spot is ownership. I could find no documented export path of any kind, which for a data question is its own answer.

10. Kajabi Communities

Kajabi is a full knowledge-commerce suite and community comes bundled, never sold alone, from $179 to $499 a month. The January 2026 restructure raised prices 20 to 25% with no grandfathering and added a 0.5 to 5% fee for using a third-party processor. Its contacts export is strong, but recurring subscriptions do not migrate out, which is the lock-in that matters. Pricing on kajabi.com/pricing.

11. Facebook Groups

Free, frictionless, and where your audience already is, which is the entire case for it. There are no native paid memberships, no courses, no custom domain, and no export, and the June 2025 mass-ban wave showed how little recourse admins have when it goes wrong. Best used as a top-of-funnel front door, not the home for anything you cannot afford to lose. The story is in the mass-bans post.

12. phpFox and FluentCommunity, the other owned options

I name these because a list of ownable platforms with only my product on it would be a tell. phpFox has sold owned-source community software for years, and FluentCommunity sells lifetime deals in the WordPress world. Both are real, both let you own the code, and both are worth a look if you want to price-check the owned end of the market. A category with one vendor in it is usually a vendor inventing a category, and this one is not that.

How I ranked these

One axis did the sorting, do you own the software or rent it. Everything you own clustered near the top, everything you rent below it, and within each band I weighed fees, features, and the quality of the exit door. That is a biased axis and it is mine, so if what you want is the easiest possible start and you do not care who holds the database, flip the list and put Circle or Skool itself at the top with a clear conscience. The export comparison tests the exit doors, and the five-year cost post does the money.

FAQ

What is the best Skool alternative?

If you want a better rental, Circle is the polished pick. If you want to stop renting entirely, Seedly Communities is $399 once with 0% fees and full source. The right answer depends on whether owning the software matters to you.

Are there free Skool alternatives?

Yes. Discord and Facebook Groups are free but carry no native payments or courses, and Discourse is free to self-host if you can run it. Free almost always means you trade money for either features or ownership, so read what each one actually costs you in the table above.

Which Skool alternative has the lowest fees?

Among rentals, GroupApp charges 0% and Circle charges 2% on top of Stripe. The only structural 0% comes from owning the software so payments run through your own Stripe, which is how Seedly Communities gets to zero. Verified July 2026.

Can I move my Skool community to another platform?

You can take your member emails via CSV. Posts, comments, and courses have no export path out of Skool, so most migrations are a rebuild plus a member re-invite, not a clean transfer. Details in the export comparison.

Most lists like this one want you to click an affiliate link to a monthly plan. This one wants you to notice which of these you would actually own. If that idea lands, the owned option is one checkout away at $399, and you can pressure-test it against the biggest incumbent on the Skool vs page or read the fuller Skool review first.

Run your own

You are not buying alone.

Seedly owners trade setups and share add-ons. Join the community, or take the platform for a spin first.