The ultimate LMS showdown, in plain speak, for real people who need to launch learning without losing it.
Welcome to the jungle… of learning LMS and platforms, that is.
If you’ve ever had 18 browser tabs open—Kajabi, Circle, Thinkific, LearnDash, TalentLMS, and about three different Google Docs full of pros and cons—you’re not alone.
Choosing a learning platform should be exciting. But most of the time, it just feels overwhelming. Every platform claims to do everything. They all have pretty landing pages and logos of companies you’ve vaguely heard of. And every comparison list online? Either too fluffy, too outdated, or clearly written by someone trying to get that affiliate commission.
So let’s fix that.
This is your real, practical, cut-through-the-spin breakdown of the major LMS players—built from hands-on testing, deep-dive research, and helping dozens of teams find what actually works.
Whether you’re delivering internal training, launching a coaching program, selling digital courses, or running a community-led experience—this guide is here to help you pick the right tool for you.
No hype. No jargon. Just the truth.
This isn’t just about features—it’s about fit. We’re evaluating each platform across real-world needs like:
Now let’s meet the contenders…
Before we dig into the reviews, here’s how to make sense of what kind of platform you’re even looking at.
Because “learning platform” can mean a dozen different things. Some are full-fledged LMSs built for compliance and credentials. Others are creator-friendly storefronts. A few are really community tools wearing a course-shaped hat.
Use this table to check what type of platform you’re even dealing with—and where its sweet spot (and limits) really sit.
Platform |
Type |
Best for |
Key limitations |
Kajabi |
Course + Business |
Solo creators & coaches |
No SCORM. |
Thinkific |
Course + Business |
Educators & small teams |
No SCORM unless you’re on Plus tier. Limited customisation of portal |
LearnWorlds |
Course + Business |
Training businesses, learning designers |
Can’t charge separately for community sub-groups |
LearnDash |
LMS (WordPress) |
Dev-supported teams, RTOs, EdTech |
Requires plugin management and WordPress upkeep |
iSpring Learn |
Enterprise LMS |
Corporate, compliance, internal training |
No sales/marketing features; funnel support is nil |
TalentLMS |
Cloud LMS |
Trainers, consultants, client education |
Limited community or branding flexibility |
Circle |
Community-first |
Coaching, peer-led learning, communities |
No built-in quizzes or certificates |
Mighty Networks |
Community-first |
Mobile-first learning tribes, lifestyle |
Very limited learning features and analytics |
Not sure where your program fits? Start by asking what matters more: content control, community experience, or structured learner tracking. That’ll point you in the right direction.
“The all-in-one creator suite (with a learning system attached)”
Coaches, digital entrepreneurs, content creators, and anyone selling online programs, memberships, or digital products.
If you want to sell and scale without stitching 10 tools together, Kajabi is gold. But it’s not built for instructional complexity. Think: clean delivery, beautiful branding, high conversions—not formal pedagogy.
“The quiet achiever: practical, clean, and ready to scale”
Course creators, coaches, and educators who want a platform that’s easy to use, with enough flexibility to grow over time.
Thinkific is ideal for educators who want something that works out of the box and scales without becoming a tech headache. You won’t get deep learning design tools or built-in community-led learning, but for traditional courses, it’s a solid choice.
“If course experience matters just as much as your sales funnel”
Professional learning providers, training businesses, or creators who want interactive content and a branded course platform.
LearnWorlds is a “learning-first” platform with business chops. If you care about what learners do inside the course—not just what they buy—it’s one of the best-balanced options on this list.
“Like Slack and a forum had a baby—and it went to design school”
Community-led programs, coaching groups, masterminds, or hybrid course + community models.
If your program is built on community, peer-to-peer engagement, or cohort-based delivery, Circle nails it. But it’s not a learning platform in the traditional sense—it’s about connection, not compliance.
“Social network vibes, made for learning tribes”
Membership communities, personal brands, wellness or lifestyle educators, and anyone building around identity, community, and repeat engagement.
Mighty is perfect for programs built on energy, shared values, or peer connection. If your content needs quizzes or structure, it’ll feel limiting. But for experiences where community is the outcome? It’s magic.
“The clean-cut corporate cousin—built for training and scale”
SMBs, client-facing education, internal training, and organisations with multiple learners, groups, or departments.
TalentLMS is a practical workhorse. It’s not here to “wow”—it’s here to function, scale, and make your job easier. If you’re training 200 people and want to sleep at night, this is a safe bet.
“Your internal training LMS that’s not pretending to be something it’s not”
Corporate training, onboarding, compliance, professional development—especially where tracking and structure matter.
iSpring Learn knows what it is. And it doesn’t try to do everything. If you’re not trying to sell a course but are trying to deliver repeatable, high-quality internal learning—this is a strong choice.
“The WordPress-powered giant—for those who want total control (and don’t mind getting their hands dirty)”
RTOs, training organisations, universities, or digital learning teams who live in WordPress and want ultimate flexibility.
LearnDash is powerful—but like most powerful things, it’s not plug-and-play. If you love tinkering and want your site to do exactly what you want, it’s worth it. If you don’t? Look elsewhere.
Now that you’ve met the platforms, here’s where they stand on the features people ask about most.
You know—the “can it do quizzes?”, “does it support SCORM?”, “can I sell courses directly from it?” stuff. This chart gives you the answers fast, especially if you're comparing a few final options.
Feature |
Kajabi |
Thinkific |
LearnWorlds |
LearnDash |
iSpring |
TalentLMS |
Circle |
Mighty |
SCORM support |
No |
No* |
Yes |
Yes* |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Advanced quizzes |
Basic |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
Basic |
Interactive video |
No |
No |
Yes |
No |
No |
No |
No |
No |
Drip scheduling |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Community tools |
Basic |
Yes |
Yes |
Add-on |
Minimal |
Minimal |
Strong |
Strong |
Live class support |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Built-in ecommerce |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Add-on |
No |
Yes |
Yes* |
Yes |
Custom branding |
Strong |
Moderate |
Strong |
Theme |
Moderate |
Basic |
Strong |
Strong |
How to read this:
Still can’t decide? Bookmark this table and compare it against your top priorities. It’s not about who has more features—it’s about which features you’ll actually use.
Because not all “course builders” are created equal.
Some platforms are perfect for linear, video-based content with a nice progress bar. Others let you create complex learning journeys with prerequisites, branching, deadlines, and certifications. Here’s how they compare when it comes to organising your learning experience.
Bottom line: If you need structure and control, go with LearnDash, iSpring, or LearnWorlds. For simpler self-paced courses, Thinkific and Kajabi keep it streamlined.
If your learning model thrives on connection, this section’s for you.
The difference between “discussion thread” and actual community is massive. If your program depends on interaction, reflection, or peer support, here’s how platforms stack up in creating a social learning experience.
In short: Circle and Mighty are in a league of their own. Everyone else adds community on top of the course—not as a central experience.
Let’s talk about what happens after the video ends.
Some platforms call it a “quiz” if it checks a box. Others give you a full suite of learning assessment tools. Whether you’re measuring compliance, tracking progress, or testing knowledge, assessment matters.
Translation: If assessment is critical, skip Kajabi, Circle, and Mighty. LearnDash, iSpring, and LearnWorlds give you full control.
Because “who’s engaging” matters more than you think.
Whether you need to prove ROI, track learner progress, or just keep your finger on the pulse—reporting tools can make or break your ability to scale or demonstrate impact.
What to remember: For structured learning with accountability, go for LearnWorlds, LearnDash, TalentLMS, or iSpring. If you care more about vibe than data, Circle or Mighty will do the trick.
Your shortcut to the right platform, based on what you’re actually trying to do.
Alright, let’s bring it all together with the part people really need: clear, honest recommendations based on actual needs—not marketing promises. Because there’s no such thing as a “best” LMS. There’s only the best one for you.
You want something that looks good, feels professional, and doesn’t need you to learn seven systems just to get paid.
Your focus is compliance, tracking, learning paths, and admin controls—not branding or funnels.
You’re not just delivering content. You care about how people learn, interact, and reflect.
Your learners get value from talking to each other, attending events, and sharing experiences.
You’re tech-comfy, maybe already on WordPress, and want to fully own your stack—content, payment, marketing, all of it.
First: you are not alone. The LMS space is noisy, full of hype, and often built around business models—not learner outcomes. That’s why it’s hard to decide.
Here’s your next best step:
And if you need someone to talk it through with? We do this every day. Reach out. Book a call. Send an email (hello@oppida.co). We’ll help you make a confident choice (and not end up replatforming three months from now).
Still weighing up your options? Need to know exactly how assessments work in Kajabi, or whether Circle lets you run asynchronous challenges?
You don’t need to guess—and you definitely don’t need to wait for a sales demo. Most of these platforms have rich support libraries, and some have AI-powered bots or live chat teams who’ll dish out details before you’ve even signed up.
Here’s where to go when you want to go down a feature rabbit hole (with a flashlight and a plan).
Kajabi’s support site is packed. You’ll find breakdowns on automations, pipelines, integrations, and how each piece works together. Their AI chatbot is fast and surprisingly helpful—it’s like a customer success assistant that doesn’t sleep.
Start here: Kajabi Help Center
Want to know how to build a 5-week cohort program with live sessions, post-drip prompts, and feedback threads? Circle’s support docs are basically a design manual.
Start here: Circle Help Center
Their chatbot is more old-school—expect to chat with a real person. Often, that person is gently nudging you toward a demo call. But if you ask specific tech questions, they will help. The help docs are clean and clear, especially when it comes to SCORM, assessments, and learning paths.
Start here: iSpring Support Portal
No chatbot, but their help centre is excellent. If you’re trying to compare branches, run user reports, or figure out which plan includes SCORM—you’ll probably find it within two clicks. Great for trainers who like to self-serve.
Start here: TalentLMS Help Docs
One of the best-organised help centres around. Their articles are deep, well-written, and clearly aimed at creators. You’ll find step-by-step guides for almost every feature, plus honest explanations of what you can’t do unless you upgrade.
Start here: Thinkific Support
Documentation is thinner than most. You’ll find enough to get started and manage your Spaces, but if you want deep dives into course setup or automations, it might take a bit more digging. Their community support spaces can be helpful, though.
Start here: Mighty Networks Help
The help centre is limited, and live support can be slow. You’ll find basic articles, but for anything nuanced, expect to rely on forums, YouTube tutorials, and third-party devs. If you’re not comfortable poking around plugins, prepare for some trial-and-error.
Start here: LearnDash Docs
Strong help centre with a helpful AI chat bot, similar to Kajabi. Their content is deep—especially when it comes to assessments, video tools, and course player setup.
Start here: LearnWorlds chatbot
If you’re teetering between two or three options, go explore their support sites. Test their chatbots. Ask them the hard stuff. The way a platform responds before you pay is usually a pretty good sign of what life will be like after.
Still unsure which rabbit hole to jump down first? I can help with that too. Let’s chat.
Learning platforms aren’t magic. But when you choose the right one for your goals, your audience, and your team’s capacity—you make room for what actually matters: the learning.
Here’s to platforms that work for you, not against you.
Let’s build something brilliant.
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