Kajabi is an all-in-one platform at $143-399/month with courses, email, and funnels included. WordPress with an LMS plugin costs $58-240/month but you manage hosting, updates, security, and plugin conflicts yourself. Short answer: Kajabi wins on simplicity and speed. WordPress wins on control, customization, and SEO. The right choice depends on whether you'd rather spend time teaching or managing infrastructure.
What Does Each Approach Actually Cost?
"WordPress is free" is technically true — and practically misleading. The CMS is free, but running a course business on WordPress requires hosting, an LMS plugin, email marketing, a theme, payment processing, and security. Here's what each approach realistically costs.
Kajabi: one bill, everything included
| Plan | Annual price | Products | Contacts | Includes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | $143/mo | 5 | 2,500 | Courses, email, funnels, website |
| Growth | $199/mo | 50 | 25,000 | + cohorts, affiliates, automations |
| Pro | $399/mo | Unlimited | 100,000 | + branded app, API, code editor |
All prices are annual billing. See our full Kajabi pricing breakdown including surcharges and feature gating.
WordPress: assemble your own stack
| Component | Budget | Serious | Growing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Managed hosting | $10/mo | $50/mo | $80/mo |
| LMS plugin (LearnDash) | $17/mo | $17/mo | $33/mo |
| Email marketing | $0 (free tier) | $30/mo | $50/mo |
| Theme | $5/mo | $8/mo | $19/mo |
| Security/backups | $6/mo | $17/mo | $25/mo |
| E-commerce/payments | $0 | $17/mo | $33/mo |
| Monthly total | ~$38/mo | ~$139/mo | ~$240/mo |
| + Your time | 3-8 hours/month for updates, security, troubleshooting | ||
At the budget level, WordPress is clearly cheaper — $38/month vs Kajabi's $143. But the "serious creator" stack at $139/month is within $4 of Kajabi Basic, and it doesn't include sales funnels or landing pages. Factor in 3-8 hours of monthly maintenance, and the true cost comparison shifts further.
Where Does Kajabi Win?
Zero maintenance, zero technical overhead
This is Kajabi's fundamental advantage. No hosting to manage, no plugins to update, no security patches, no database optimization. When something breaks on Kajabi, their team fixes it. When something breaks on WordPress, you figure out which of your 15 plugins caused the conflict.
All-in-one marketing stack
Kajabi includes email marketing, landing pages, sales funnels, checkout pages, and analytics in one platform. Replicating this on WordPress requires ConvertKit or ActiveCampaign ($30-80/month), a page builder ($50-200/year), CartFlows or WooCommerce extensions ($200-400/year), and an analytics dashboard. Kajabi's version is well-integrated; the WordPress version is assembled from parts that don't always communicate smoothly.
Launch speed
A non-technical creator can go from zero to selling courses on Kajabi in a day. WordPress setup — hosting configuration, WordPress installation, LMS setup, theme customization, payment integration, email tool connection — realistically takes a week or more for someone learning as they go.
One support team for everything
When you have a problem on Kajabi, you contact Kajabi support. On WordPress, you're navigating between your hosting provider ("it's a plugin issue"), your LMS vendor ("it's a hosting issue"), and your theme developer ("it's the LMS plugin's fault"). This finger-pointing is one of the most cited frustrations in WordPress LMS communities.
Where Does WordPress Win?
Complete ownership and data portability
Your WordPress database lives on your server. Your files, your backups, your control. If you decide to switch hosts or rebuild, you take everything with you. If Kajabi raises prices (they removed their $89/month plan in 2025) or changes policies, you're locked into their ecosystem unless you migrate — which means rebuilding everything.
SEO flexibility that Kajabi can't match
WordPress with Yoast or RankMath gives you granular control over URL structure, schema markup, server-side rendering, page speed optimization, and technical SEO. If organic search is your primary acquisition channel, WordPress provides tools Kajabi simply doesn't offer. Kajabi's SEO tools are adequate, but limited compared to the WordPress ecosystem.
No artificial limits
WordPress imposes no course limits, no student limits, and no contact limits. Your ceiling is your hosting capacity, which you control. Kajabi Basic limits you to 5 products and 2,500 contacts. For large-scale operations with extensive course catalogs and big email lists, WordPress removes the artificial caps — though you'll need to invest in hosting that can handle the load.
SCORM and advanced LMS features
LearnDash supports SCORM packages, advanced quiz types, certificates, and learning paths. Kajabi's course builder is solid for standard video-based courses but lacks SCORM support and the depth of assessment tools that WordPress LMS plugins provide. For corporate training, compliance courses, or academic programs, WordPress is the stronger foundation.
A lower realistic floor
If you're bootstrapping and comfortable with WordPress, you can start a legitimate course business for under $40/month. Kajabi's floor is $143/month with no plan below that. For creators in early stages who'd rather invest in content than platform fees, WordPress' modular pricing is genuinely more accessible.
What Both Approaches Miss
Here's what I think gets lost in the "Kajabi vs WordPress" debate: both approaches are built around the creator experience. Kajabi asks, "how do we help you market and sell?" WordPress asks, "how do we give you maximum control?" Neither starts with the question that actually determines student outcomes: "how do your students learn best?"
Who Should Consider Kajabi?
- Non-technical creators who want to launch fast. If you don't want to manage hosting, plugins, and security updates, Kajabi removes all of that. The trade-off is price and platform lock-in.
- Creators starting from scratch. If you don't have an existing WordPress site or email list, Kajabi's all-in-one approach means you're building everything in one place from day one.
- Marketing-focused businesses. If email sequences, landing pages, and funnels drive your revenue, Kajabi's built-in marketing tools save you from assembling a multi-tool stack.
- Solo creators without developer support. When something breaks at 10pm before a launch, Kajabi support is there. WordPress support is "Google the error message."
Who Should Consider WordPress?
- Creators with existing WordPress sites. If you already have a WordPress blog with SEO authority, adding LearnDash ($199/year) is vastly more cost-effective than migrating to Kajabi and losing your search rankings.
- Technical creators (or those with a developer). If you're comfortable with WordPress administration or have a developer on retainer, the maintenance burden is manageable and the customization upside is enormous.
- Corporate trainers and compliance programs. SCORM support, advanced quizzing, and detailed analytics make WordPress LMS plugins better suited for formal training programs than Kajabi.
- Bootstrappers optimizing for cost. A $38/month WordPress setup is real and functional. You'll spend more time on infrastructure, but you'll spend less money while your course business is finding its footing.
- SEO-driven businesses. If organic search is your primary acquisition channel, WordPress' SEO flexibility gives you an edge Kajabi can't match.
The Third Option
The Kajabi vs WordPress debate frames the choice as "pay for simplicity" vs "DIY for control." But there's a middle path: a hosted platform that's as simple as Kajabi but focused on teaching instead of marketing.
Ruzuku starts at $99/month — $44 less than Kajabi. Unlimited courses. Unlimited students. Zero transaction fees. Zero Stripe surcharges. Discussion threads in every lesson. Native Zoom integration. Cohort scheduling on all paid plans. And student tech support included — when your students get stuck, they email us, not you.
No WordPress maintenance. No Kajabi-level pricing. Just the teaching tools that actually drive student outcomes. You can start free and build your first course in an afternoon.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Kajabi or WordPress cheaper for courses?
A minimal WordPress setup starts around $38/month. Kajabi starts at $143/month. But a realistic WordPress stack with managed hosting, email, and security runs $139-240/month — comparable to Kajabi when you include the 3-8 hours of monthly maintenance time. Kajabi includes email marketing and funnels; WordPress doesn't.
Can WordPress handle online courses?
Yes, with an LMS plugin like LearnDash ($199/year), Tutor LMS ($199/year), or LifterLMS ($299/year). These add course creation, quizzes, certificates, and drip content. But WordPress alone is a CMS — you need to assemble and maintain the full stack yourself.
Is Kajabi worth it if I already have a WordPress site?
Usually not. Adding an LMS plugin to your existing WordPress site ($199/year) is far more cost-effective than migrating to Kajabi ($143/month). You'd lose your existing SEO authority and spend weeks rebuilding. Kajabi makes more sense when starting fresh.
What are the hidden costs of WordPress for courses?
Maintenance time is the biggest hidden cost: 3-8 hours/month for updates, security patches, and plugin conflict troubleshooting. Additional costs include managed hosting ($30-80/month), email marketing ($30-50/month), security plugins ($99-199/year), and premium themes ($60-228/year). Plugin renewal prices can also jump in year two.
Does Kajabi have better SEO than WordPress?
No. WordPress with Yoast or RankMath provides more granular SEO control — URL structure, schema markup, page speed optimization, and technical SEO. Kajabi's SEO tools are adequate but limited. If organic search drives your business, WordPress is the stronger choice.
Can I switch from Kajabi to WordPress?
Yes, but it requires manual migration. You'll re-create courses, re-upload content, and migrate your email list. Budget 1-2 weeks or hire a migration specialist ($500-2,000). The same applies when moving from WordPress to Kajabi.
Related Resources
- How Ruzuku Works — the simplicity of a hosted platform with teaching-first features
- Kajabi Pricing Breakdown — every plan, contact limit, surcharge, and feature gate
- Ruzuku vs LearnDash — how a hosted platform compares to WordPress LMS
- Is Kajabi Any Good? (Honest Review) — Trustpilot data and 477 Help Scout conversations
- Compare All Course Platforms