Platform & Tools

    Skool vs Circle: Simple Community or Feature-Rich? (2026)

    Skool Pro costs $99/mo with 0% fees and radical simplicity. Circle Professional costs $89/mo with 2% fees and deeper features. Which community model fits?

    Abe Crystal, PhD11 min readUpdated March 2026
    Video Transcript
    Circle vs Skool? Here's the short answer. Both of these are community-first platforms... but they take very different approaches. Circle gives you structure — Slack-like spaces, threaded discussions, live rooms, events, member directories, and workflow automations on the Business plan. It's built for professional communities that need organization. Skool gives you simplicity and gamification — a social feed, leaderboards, points, levels, and content unlocks. It's built to make community participation feel like a game. Circle starts at eighty-nine dollars on Professional with a two percent transaction fee. Skool is ninety-nine dollars on Pro with zero platform fees. At five thousand a month in revenue... Circle costs you a hundred dollars more in fees. That's a meaningful difference over a year. Circle's strength is professional community infrastructure. Spaces work like Slack channels — you can create dedicated areas for different topics, cohorts, or tiers. Live rooms for real-time audio and video. Events with scheduling and RSVPs. Rich member profiles and directories. On the Business plan at a hundred and ninety-nine dollars, you get workflow automations, white-labeling, and branded emails. Circle also has a native mobile app, which Skool doesn't. If you're running a professional network, a branded membership community, or something where organizational structure matters more than gamification... Circle gives you deeper tools to work with. Skool's strength is radical simplicity plus gamification. There's a social feed that works like a private Facebook group. Points for engagement. Levels that unlock gated content. Leaderboards that create competition. And everything just WORKS — setup takes minutes, not hours. Skool also added livestreaming and webinars in twenty twenty-five. For mastermind groups, accountability circles, or membership communities where you want people showing up daily because the platform rewards them for it... Skool's gamification loop is hard to beat. It's less customizable than Circle... but that simplicity is the point. Here's what both platforms share — and it's the reason I wanted to make this video. NEITHER Circle nor Skool is a course platform. Both have added course features... but in both cases, it's content delivery bolted onto a community tool. No quizzes on either platform. No graded assignments. No completion certificates on standard plans. No native Zoom integration for live teaching. No student tech support. If your product is purely community — mastermind, membership, discussion-driven — both can work. But if you need students to LEARN something structured and demonstrate their understanding... you're choosing between two platforms that weren't built for that. Our data from thirty-two thousand courses shows a clear pattern. Courses with structured assessments and discussion have sixty-five percent completion rates. Content libraries without those features average closer to forty percent. So here's how to decide. Consider Circle if you need professional community infrastructure — branded spaces, workflow automations, white-labeling, mobile app. You're building something polished and organizational where structure matters. Consider Skool if you want simplicity and engagement — gamification, quick setup, zero transaction fees on Pro. You're running a community where participation and daily engagement drive the value. And consider a teaching platform if courses are your actual product. If students need quizzes, live sessions with Zoom, drip scheduling, assignments, or certificates... neither Circle nor Skool was designed for that. The honest answer is that community and courses are different problems. Some platforms do one well. Some do the other. Very few do both. Want the full picture? I wrote a detailed side-by-side comparison of Skool and Circle — every feature, every pricing tier, and who each one fits best. Plus pricing deep dives for both platforms. Links are in the description. Updated for March twenty twenty-six.

    Skool Pro costs $99/month ($82 annual) with zero transaction fees, gamification, and radical simplicity. Circle Professional costs $89/month with a 2% transaction fee, deeper features, and a Slack-like community structure. Short answer: Skool wins on simplicity and zero fees. Circle wins on feature depth, white-labeling, and a native mobile app. Both are community-first platforms that add courses — neither is built for structured educational programs.

    What Does Each Platform Actually Cost?

    SkoolCircle
    Entry planHobby: $9/mo ($7.50 annual)Professional: $89/mo
    Main planPro: $99/mo ($82 annual)Business: $199/mo
    Transaction feesHobby: 10% / Pro: 0%Professional: 2% / Business: 1%
    MembersUnlimitedUnlimited
    GamificationLeaderboards, points, levelsBasic
    Mobile appNo native appiOS + Android
    White-labelingNot availableBusiness ($199/mo)
    Workflows/automationsNot availableBusiness ($199/mo)
    Course builderBasic (no quizzes/certs)More capable (structured lessons)

    See our full Skool pricing breakdown and Circle pricing breakdown.

    The fee gap matters at scale

    Skool Pro charges zero transaction fees — you only pay standard Stripe processing. Circle charges 2% on Professional and 1% on Business, with no way to reach 0%. At $10,000/month in community revenue:

    • Skool Pro: $82/month total (annual billing)
    • Circle Professional: $89 + $200 fees = $289/month
    • Circle Business: $199 + $100 fees = $299/month

    Skool is 3.5x cheaper than Circle at this revenue level. The gap widens as revenue grows. If you're building a paid community that generates meaningful revenue, Skool's zero-fee model is a significant financial advantage.

    What Do the Reviews Say?

    One data point worth noting: Skool scores 1.9/5 on Trustpilot from 34 reviews — though the sample is very small and Trustpilot skews toward complaints. The low score reflects a handful of billing and spam-related issues, not widespread platform problems. Circle has minimal Trustpilot presence. Both platforms have stronger ratings on Capterra and G2 where the user base is more representative.

    Where Does Skool Win?

    Radical simplicity drives engagement

    Skool's interface is deliberately simple — a feed, a classroom, a calendar, and leaderboards. That's it. No nested spaces, no complex navigation, no feature overwhelm. Members know exactly where to post, what to read, and how to engage. The gamification (points, levels, leaderboards) creates a competitive dynamic that drives daily visits. Circle has more features, but Skool's simplicity is itself a feature for communities that prioritize active participation over structure.

    Zero transaction fees on Pro

    At $99/month ($82 annual), Skool Pro includes everything the platform offers with zero platform fees on revenue. Circle never reaches 0% — even the $199/month Business plan charges 1%. For communities generating $5,000+/month, Skool's fee structure saves hundreds per month.

    One price, everything included

    Skool Pro gives you all features for one flat price. Circle gates workflows, API access, white-labeling, and increased admin seats behind the Business plan ($199/month). Circle also charges add-on fees: branded emails ($40/month) and custom profile fields ($49/month). Skool's "one tier, one price" approach is refreshingly transparent.

    Where Does Circle Win?

    More structured community architecture

    Circle's Slack-like space structure — with threaded discussions, sub-groups, and customizable layouts — gives community managers more control over how members interact. You can create separate spaces for different topics, cohorts, or membership tiers. Skool's flat feed works well for single-topic communities but can get noisy as communities grow beyond a few hundred active members.

    Native mobile app

    Circle provides iOS and Android apps for members. Skool doesn't have a native app — members use mobile browsers. For communities where members check in throughout the day (like fitness, accountability, or daily practice groups), a native app with push notifications makes a real difference in engagement.

    White-labeling and brand control

    Circle Business ($199/month) lets you remove Circle branding and present the community entirely as your own. Skool always shows Skool branding — you can't remove it. For professional communities, agency white-label offerings, or brands that want full ownership of the member experience, Circle is the only option.

    A more capable course builder

    Circle's course tools include structured lessons with progress tracking, drip content, and richer content types. Skool's "classroom" is intentionally minimal — video modules without quizzes, assignments, certificates, or drip scheduling. If courses are a meaningful part of your community offering (not just bonus content), Circle gives you more to work with.

    What Do Both Platforms Miss for Course Creators?

    Skool and Circle are both excellent at building community. But here's what I've learned from watching 32,000+ courses: community that happens alongside a course isn't the same as community that happens inside a course. The difference matters for completion.

    Who Should Consider Skool?

    • Community-first creators who value simplicity. If you want a clean, engaging community without configuring spaces and workflows, Skool's simplicity is a genuine advantage.
    • Revenue-focused communities. Zero transaction fees means you keep more of your community revenue. At $10K/month, that's $100-200/month more than Circle.
    • Gamification-driven engagement. Leaderboards, points, and levels create a competitive dynamic that drives participation. Circle's gamification is less developed.
    • Creators who want one transparent price. No add-ons, no tiered feature gates, no surprise fees.

    Who Should Consider Circle?

    • Professional or enterprise communities. White-labeling, workflows, API access, and structured spaces give Circle more polish for professional communities.
    • Mobile-first audiences. Circle's native app provides a better mobile experience than Skool's browser-based approach.
    • Communities with courses as a core feature. Circle's course tools are more capable than Skool's minimal classroom — though neither matches a dedicated course platform.
    • Multi-tier communities. Circle's space structure handles different membership levels, topic areas, and cohort groups more elegantly than Skool's flat feed.

    When Neither Fits

    If you're comparing Skool and Circle specifically for courses — not just community — both have limitations. Skool has no quizzes, no certificates, no assignments, no drip content. Circle is better but still treats courses as a community feature rather than a core product.

    Ruzuku is built for the intersection: community integrated into every lesson, not in a separate tab. Quizzes, certificates, exercise submissions, native Zoom, and student tech support — at $99/month with zero transaction fees. If teaching is your primary work and community is how you make it effective, that's the model we're built for.

    You can start free on Ruzuku and see how integrated community + courses works. No credit card required.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Skool or Circle better for courses?

    Circle has more capable course tools — structured lessons, progress tracking, and drip content. Skool's classroom is intentionally minimal: video modules with no quizzes, certificates, or assignments. For course-heavy offerings, Circle. For community-heavy with courses as bonus content, Skool works.

    Does Skool charge transaction fees?

    Skool Hobby charges 10%. Skool Pro ($99/month, $82 annual) charges 0% platform fees — only standard Stripe processing applies. Circle charges 2% (Professional) or 1% (Business) on every plan with no way to reach 0%.

    Does Circle have a mobile app?

    Yes — native iOS and Android apps. Skool doesn't have a native app; members use mobile browsers. Circle's app advantage matters for communities with high daily engagement.

    Which has better community features?

    Different strengths. Skool: gamification, leaderboards, and Facebook-like simplicity. Circle: Slack-like spaces, workflows, white-labeling, and more granular structure. Skool for simplicity and engagement. Circle for structure and customization.

    Can I white-label Skool or Circle?

    Circle Business ($199/month) supports white-labeling. Skool cannot be white-labeled on any plan. If brand ownership matters, Circle is the only option.

    Related Resources

    Topics:
    skool vs circle
    circle vs skool
    skool pricing
    circle pricing
    community platform comparison
    online community platforms 2026

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