Original Research
2026 Course Platform Satisfaction Report
What 118 sourced creator reviews reveal about 8 major course platforms — pricing, support, reliability, and more.
Key Findings
We analyzed 118 sourced quotes from public forums — Reddit, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, IndieHackers, LinkedIn, creator blogs, and podcasts — collected between July 2025 – April 2026. Every quote has a date, source, and platform attribution. This is a qualitative analysis of complaint patterns, not a statistical survey.
Methodology & Transparency
What we analyzed
118 sourced quotes from public forums collected between July 2025 – April 2026. Platform breakdown: Teachable (29), Kajabi (23), Circle (14), Thinkific (13), Mighty Networks (12), Podia (11), LearnDash (9), LearnWorlds (9), plus cross-platform sources.
How we collected data
Trustpilot reviews filtered to 1-3 star ratings. Reddit posts from r/Teachable, r/kajabi, r/elearning, r/SaaS, r/onlinecourses, and r/DigitalMarketing. Public blog posts and podcast episodes from named creators documenting platform departures. No private communications, no paid review mining.
How we categorized complaints
Each quote was tagged with one or more of seven pain point categories. Categories emerged from the data (bottom-up), not from a predetermined framework. A single quote can appear in multiple categories if it describes multiple issues.
Limitations
- This is qualitative, not statistically representative. People with complaints post more than satisfied users.
- Sample sizes vary by platform (Teachable 29 vs. Podia 2). Smaller samples should be interpreted with more caution.
- We are a competing platform. We chose not to include Ruzuku to avoid bias.
- All quotes are paraphrased. Original sources are linked in our review articles for verification.
Complaint Volume by Platform
Complaint Volume by Platform
118 sourced quotes from public forums, April 2026
Chart shows platform-specific complaints (120 of 118). -2 additional quotes from independent creator blogs and podcasts are cross-platform and not shown. Volume reflects our sample, not total complaints in existence.
Thinkific has the lowest Trustpilot rating (2.3/5) despite fewer complaint quotes in our sample, suggesting a high density of dissatisfaction relative to its review volume.
The Seven Complaint Patterns
Complaint Categories
118 quotes across 7 categories (quotes can span multiple categories)
1. Support Unresponsive or Degraded (35 quotes)
Support quality declining as platforms scale — documented across all 8 platforms. AI replacing humans, email-only with week-long waits, zero member-side support, support staff causing additional problems.
2. Pricing Escalation & Hidden Fees (34 quotes)
Significant price increases — often 40-160% — with reduced limits or features at each tier. Unannounced price hikes, automatic upgrades into paid features, and multilingual pricing traps.
3. Bugs, Instability & Data Loss (21 quotes)
Revenue-destroying failures: checkout systems rejecting valid cards, courses that won't load, content randomly deleted, complete site outages with no communication, CSS changes breaking legal compliance.
4. Lock-In & Migration Difficulty (14 quotes)
Platforms that are difficult to leave — proprietary payment processors tying subscriptions to the platform, sunk-cost traps from community investment, Stripe lock-in making businesses unsellable.
5. Feature Removal & Forced Downgrades (13 quotes)
Existing functionality removed and resold at higher prices. Unlimited courses capped retroactively. Features replaced with paid add-ons. Basic features moved to higher tiers after creators commit.
6. Billing & Cancellation Difficulties (13 quotes)
Charges continuing after confirmed cancellation, card deletion blocked within accounts, charges for plans never activated, unauthorized recurring billing.
7. Missing Features & Gaps (12 quotes)
Functionality gaps at premium price points: no offline mode, blocked ad tracking, no SCORM support, no completion tracking, 50-field form limits, ugly sales pages.
Trustpilot Rating Comparison
Trustpilot Ratings Compared
Aggregate ratings from verified Trustpilot profiles, April 2026
Higher review counts generally correlate with more stable ratings. Kajabi's 2,311 reviews make its 3.5 rating more statistically reliable than Podia's 3.7 from 112 reviews.
Named Creator Departures
These are named, verifiable sources who publicly documented their decision to leave a course platform. Unlike anonymous reviews, these creators have established businesses and public-facing content.
Kerstin Cable
Left TeachableLanguage education creator who migrated 30+ courses in 2025, calling it a "monster project" planned for over a year. Cited Teachable's focus on new customer acquisition over supporting existing users.
Blog post →Andrea Jones (OnlineDrea)
Left TeachableHosted courses on Teachable for 8 years. Dedicated a podcast episode to explaining her departure, citing the platform's limitations as a membership tool despite offering membership features.
Podcast episode →Alex Welsh
Left Kajabi7-year Kajabi user who publicly documented cancellation in a January 2026 Trustpilot review. Cited Kajabi Payments lock-in and escalating prices as primary factors.
Trustpilot review →Learn German With Anja
Left KajabiGerman language educator who documented persistent checkout failures, removed subtitle functionality, and poor automation tools in a January 2026 Trustpilot review.
Trustpilot review →Five Questions to Ask About Any Course Platform
You can apply this framework to any platform — including ours. These questions are drawn directly from the complaint patterns documented above.
1. What has your platform's pricing done over the past 3 years?
Pricing escalation was the #1 complaint category in our analysis (26 of 71 quotes). Platforms that have raised prices 2-3 times in 3 years are likely to continue.
Green flags
- ✓Pricing has remained stable for 3+ years
- ✓Price increases were accompanied by genuine new features
- ✓Existing customers were grandfathered or given extended notice
Red flags
- ✗Prices have increased 40%+ in the past 2 years
- ✗Contact or course limits were reduced alongside price increases
- ✗Changes were communicated with 30 days or less notice
2. Can you export your students, payment history, and course content today?
Don't assume — test it. Multiple creators discovered they couldn't export payment history only when they tried to leave.
Green flags
- ✓Student lists export as CSV with email, enrollment date, and purchase data
- ✓Payment history is downloadable in standard formats
- ✓Course content (videos, text, files) can be downloaded individually
Red flags
- ✗No CSV export of payment/transaction history
- ✗Must maintain subscription just to access historical records
- ✗Subscription customers tied to a proprietary payment processor
3. Submit a support ticket about a real issue. What happens?
Support degradation was the #2 complaint category (17 quotes). The test isn't whether support exists — it's whether a human responds with a real answer in a reasonable timeframe.
Green flags
- ✓Human response within 24 hours
- ✓Issue actually resolved, not just acknowledged
- ✓Support quality doesn't change based on your plan tier
Red flags
- ✗AI chatbot is the only first point of contact
- ✗Multi-hour chats that end with 'we'll email you later'
- ✗Support quality degrades when you downgrade or try to cancel
4. What exactly happens to your students and data if you cancel?
Billing and cancellation concerns appeared across multiple platforms (8 quotes). Some platforms require content deletion before account closure.
Green flags
- ✓Clear cancellation process documented in help center
- ✓Content remains accessible after cancellation
- ✓No content deletion required to close account
Red flags
- ✗Must delete all course content before account can be closed
- ✗Users report charges continuing after cancellation
- ✗No formal cancellation confirmation beyond a support chat
5. What percentage of your income runs through this platform?
Revenue dependency determines your vulnerability to any of the patterns above. The higher your dependency, the more leverage the platform has on pricing, terms, and feature access.
Green flags
- ✓You own your payment processor (Stripe, PayPal) directly
- ✓Your email list lives on an independent service
- ✓Your course content is backed up locally
Red flags
- ✗90%+ of revenue flows through one platform's payment system
- ✗All email marketing is built inside the platform's tools
- ✗No local backups of course content or student data
Detailed Platform Reviews
Each review article contains the full complaint data with source attributions, Trustpilot analysis, and feature-by-feature comparisons.
About This Report
Published by Ruzuku (ruzuku.com), an online course platform founded in 2011. Ruzuku is a competitor to the platforms analyzed and was not included in the analysis.
Data collection and analysis conducted in Q1 2026.
Questions or corrections: [email protected]