# LearnDash Pricing in 2026: The New Liquid Web Tiers

https://cubite.io/blogs/learndash-pricing-2026

**By:** Amir Tadrisi
**Updated:** 2026-06-23

If you are shopping LearnDash pricing in 2026, here is the short version: the plugin now sells in three feature-based tiers, billed annually, and the old per-site model is gone. Essentials is $259/yr, Pro is $399/yr, and Elite is $599/yr (verified on liquidweb.com, June 2026). Every tier includes unlimited courses, unlimited learners, no per-student fees, no transaction fees, and MemberDash bundled in.

That is the easy answer. The harder, more expensive answer is what a real production LearnDash stack actually costs once you add the paid add-ons a serious course business needs. This page gives you both: the verified plugin price, then the all-in total cost of ownership (TCO), so you can compare it honestly against an all-in platform. If you have landed here while weighing a switch, you can also compare all the ways off LearnDash on our hub page.

## LearnDash pricing 2026 at a glance (the quick answer)

These are the current self-hosted plugin tiers. All are billed annually. There is no monthly option on the self-hosted plugin.

| Tier | Price (annual) | Best for | What it adds over the tier below |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Essentials | $259/yr | Solo creators, simple course catalogs | Core LMS: unlimited courses, unlimited learners, quizzes, drip content, MemberDash bundled |
| Pro | $399/yr | Growing course businesses, teams | AI course and quiz builder, advanced reporting, weighted grading, groups and cohorts |
| Elite | $599/yr | Academies, multi-instructor programs | Multi-instructor management, front-end course creation, ratings and reviews |

Every tier shares the same baseline that matters most for budgeting: unlimited courses, unlimited learners, and zero per-student or transaction fees on the plugin itself. You are not taxed for growing your audience. The differences between tiers are features, not seat counts.

A quick read on which tier fits:

- Essentials is enough if you sell a handful of courses and do not need cohorts, AI authoring, or deep reporting.
- Pro is the practical floor for most businesses, because groups, weighted grading, and real reporting are table stakes once you have more than a few learners.
- Elite earns its price only if you run multiple instructors or want learners and instructors building courses from the front end.

## What changed in LearnDash pricing in 2026

If you priced LearnDash a couple of years ago, the numbers above will not match your memory, and that is the point. The model changed in two structural ways.

The pricing axis flipped from site count to features. The previous model was roughly $199, $399, and $799, tiered by the number of sites you could activate on. The 2026 model drops site-count tiers in favor of feature tiers: Essentials, Pro, and Elite. Do not budget against the old $199/$399/$799 numbers - they are no longer current, and we list them here only so you can see what moved.

MemberDash is now bundled. Membership and content-protection functionality that you might previously have stitched in separately now ships inside every tier. That genuinely lowers the entry cost for a membership-style course site compared to buying memberships separately - which matters for the TCO math later on.

For decided switchers, the takeaway is simple: the plugin got more capable at the bottom tier, but the price floor moved up, and the structure now rewards staying current rather than locking in a one-time deal.

## The lapse trap: legacy pricing does not come back

This is the single most expensive footnote in LearnDash pricing, and it rarely shows up in comparison posts.

If your subscription lapses, you cannot reactivate your old price. A lapsed plan forces you to buy a new plan at current pricing. Legacy and grandfathered rates cannot be reactivated once they expire. So if you are sitting on an older, cheaper renewal locked in years ago, that rate is contingent on never letting the subscription break - not on a one-time purchase.

Why it matters for budgeting:

- A missed renewal, an expired card, or a deliberate pause resets you to today's tiers.
- The "I bought it years ago for less" advantage is fragile. It survives only as long as the auto-renew chain is unbroken.
- When you model multi-year cost, model it at current pricing, not the rate you remember, because one lapse erases the difference.

If price stability over five years is a deciding factor for you, this is the clause to weigh most carefully.

## The hosted option: a caveat we will not fake

LearnDash has historically offered a hosted product (formerly known as LearnDash Cloud) that bundles hosting with the plugin so you do not manage WordPress yourself. A hosted option still exists in some form in 2026.

Here is the honest part: we could not confirm the current hosted tier names or prices on a first-party page as of June 2026. Rather than print a number we cannot stand behind, we are flagging it. If a hosted plan is on your shortlist, get the current price directly from Liquid Web before you budget, and confirm what is and is not included (some hosted bundles cap features or add usage limits the self-hosted plugin does not have). Treat any "LearnDash Cloud pricing" figure you see floating around older blog posts as unverified until you check the source page yourself.

## The plugin tax: what a real LearnDash stack actually costs

This is where the sticker price and the real price diverge. LearnDash is a plugin, not a platform. The base price buys you a capable core, but a production course business almost always needs paid add-ons that LearnDash does not include - plus LMS-grade managed hosting, because shared budget hosting buckles under quiz traffic and video.

We call this the plugin tax: the recurring, easy-to-underestimate spend that turns a $399 line item into a four-figure annual bill. Here is a realistic stack with typical annual costs (verified ranges, June 2026). Not every site needs every row, but most serious ones need several.

| Stack component | What it does | Typical annual cost |
| --- | --- | --- |
| LearnDash Pro | The LMS plugin itself | $399/yr |
| BuddyBoss | Community, social learning, mobile app | ~$299 first year, then ~$399/yr |
| GrassBlade / Tin Canny LRS | SCORM and xAPI support (corporate training) | ~$89 to $249/yr |
| ProPanel | Advanced reporting and dashboards | ~$99/yr |
| MemberPress | Memberships, payments, subscriptions | ~$350 to $700/yr (intro doubles at renewal, plus 4.9% fee on Launch tier) |
| WPML | Multilingual courses | ~$99/yr |
| Zoom integration | Live sessions inside courses | ~$40 to $150/yr |
| LMS-grade managed hosting | Performance, uptime, backups, security | ~$360 to $2,040/yr |

Add the rows your business actually needs and the picture changes fast. A modest stack (plugin + hosting + reporting + one or two integrations) lands in the low four figures. A full corporate-training stack (SCORM via an LRS, community, memberships, multilingual, live sessions, premium hosting) realistically runs about $2,500 to $5,000+ per year, every year.

Three things make this worse than it looks on a spreadsheet:

- Renewals are not stable. Several add-ons (MemberPress is the clearest example) sell at an intro rate that doubles at renewal, and some layer a percentage fee on payments on top.
- You are the integrator. Every plugin is a separate vendor, a separate update cycle, and a separate thing that can break when WordPress or another plugin updates. Compatibility is your problem, not theirs.
- The costs are recurring and they compound. This is annual spend that grows as you add capability, not a one-time build.

None of this means LearnDash is a bad product. It means the honest price of a real LearnDash deployment is the stack price, not the plugin price - and that is the number you should compare against an all-in platform.

## The all-in comparison: Cubite vs a full LearnDash stack

Once you price the whole stack, the comparison stops being "plugin vs plugin" and becomes "assemble-and-maintain vs all-in." That is the comparison that matters for a switcher.

Cubite LMS is $290/mo, which is $3,480/yr, all-in. That single number includes hosting, maintenance, support, SCORM and xAPI, SSO, white-label, certificates, and analytics - the exact line items that become separate paid plugins in the LearnDash column. There are unlimited users and unlimited courses, 0% transaction fees, and no plugin renewals to track, because there are no plugins.

| What you are paying for | LearnDash stack (realistic) | Cubite LMS |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Annual cost | ~$2,500 to $5,000+/yr | $2,900/yr ($290/mo), all-in |
| Pricing model | Plugin + many add-ons + hosting | One platform, one bill |
| Users / courses | Unlimited (on plugin) | Unlimited |
| Transaction fees | 0% on plugin, but add-ons may charge (e.g. 4.9%) | 0% |
| Hosting | You buy and manage it | Included |
| Maintenance and updates | Your job, across every plugin | Included |
| Support | Per-vendor, varies | Included |
| SCORM + xAPI | Add-on (LRS) ~$89 to $249/yr | Included |
| SSO | Add-on or custom | Included |
| White-label | Varies / add-on | Included |
| Certificates and analytics | Often add-ons | Included |
| Migration from LearnDash | n/a | One-click migration pipeline |

The honest read: if your needs are tiny and stay tiny, the LearnDash Essentials plugin at $259/yr can be the cheaper line item, and that is a legitimate choice. But the moment you need SCORM, SSO, community, memberships, multilingual, or genuinely reliable hosting, the stack price climbs into the same range as an all-in platform - except you are now the one assembling, integrating, and maintaining it, and absorbing renewal spikes and per-vendor support. Cubite collapses that stack into one predictable bill and one vendor to call. (For completeness, self-hosted open-source platforms like Open edX exist too, but they shift the maintenance burden onto you, which is the opposite of what most switchers want.)

If you want to see exactly how the move works, here is how to migrate from LearnDash to Cubite without losing data, including the one-click migration pipeline that pulls your courses, learners, and progress across.

## Book a free migration assessment

Tell us your current LearnDash stack and we will map it to an all-in number, line by line, so you can see your real before-and-after cost.

[Book a free migration assessment](https://calendly.com/cubite/30min)

## Frequently asked questions about LearnDash pricing in 2026

### How much does LearnDash cost in 2026?

The LearnDash self-hosted plugin costs $259/yr (Essentials), $399/yr (Pro), or $599/yr (Elite), billed annually, verified on liquidweb.com in June 2026. All three tiers include unlimited courses, unlimited learners, no per-student fees, no transaction fees, and MemberDash bundled in. The tiers differ by features, not by seat or site count. The cheaper read is the plugin price. The realistic read is the stack price: a production LearnDash site usually adds paid add-ons (community, SCORM, reporting, memberships, multilingual, live sessions) plus managed hosting, which together push the all-in cost to roughly $2,500 to $5,000+ per year.

### What is the difference between LearnDash Essentials, Pro, and Elite?

All three tiers share unlimited courses, unlimited learners, and zero transaction fees. Essentials ($259/yr) is the core LMS. Pro ($399/yr) adds the AI course and quiz builder, advanced reporting, weighted grading, and groups and cohorts. Elite ($599/yr) adds multi-instructor management, front-end course creation, and ratings and reviews. Pick Essentials for a simple catalog, Pro for most growing businesses (groups and reporting are usually non-negotiable), and Elite only if you run multiple instructors or want front-end course building.

### Did LearnDash change its pricing?

Yes. LearnDash moved from a site-count model (roughly $199, $399, and $799 by number of sites) to a feature-based model: Essentials $259, Pro $399, and Elite $599 per year. MemberDash is now bundled into every tier. Do not budget against the old numbers - they are no longer current and are shown here only for reference. The structural shift means you now pay for capabilities rather than for how many sites you activate on, and the entry price floor moved up.

### Can I keep my old LearnDash price?

Only if your subscription never lapses. A lapsed plan forces you to buy a new plan at current pricing, and legacy or grandfathered rates cannot be reactivated once they expire. An expired card, a missed renewal, or a deliberate pause resets you to today's tiers. When you model multi-year cost, use current pricing rather than the rate you remember, because a single lapse erases any grandfathered discount permanently.

### Is LearnDash cheaper than an all-in LMS like Cubite?

It depends entirely on your stack. The LearnDash plugin alone ($259 to $599/yr) is a smaller line item than Cubite's $3,480/yr. But a real production LearnDash site adds paid add-ons and managed hosting that push the all-in total to roughly $2,500 to $5,000+ per year. At that point Cubite at $290/mo ($3,480/yr) sits in the same range, except hosting, maintenance, support, SCORM and xAPI, SSO, white-label, certificates, and analytics are all included, with 0% transaction fees and no plugins to maintain.

### Does LearnDash still offer a hosted (Cloud) plan?

A hosted option (formerly LearnDash Cloud) still exists in some form in 2026. We could not confirm the current hosted tier names or prices on a first-party page as of June 2026, so we will not quote a number. If a hosted plan is on your shortlist, confirm the current price and inclusions directly with Liquid Web before budgeting. Treat any "LearnDash Cloud pricing" figures in older blog posts as unverified until you check the source page yourself.

## The bottom line on LearnDash pricing in 2026

- Verified plugin pricing (June 2026): Essentials $259/yr, Pro $399/yr, Elite $599/yr, all annual, all with unlimited courses and learners and zero transaction fees.
- The model changed: from site-count tiers (old ~$199/$399/$799) to feature tiers, with MemberDash now bundled. Budget against the new numbers.
- The lapse trap is real: legacy pricing cannot be reactivated, so model multi-year cost at current rates.
- The plugin tax is the real number: a production stack with add-ons and hosting runs roughly $2,500 to $5,000+/yr.
- All-in changes the math: Cubite at $3,480/yr bundles hosting, support, SCORM/xAPI, SSO, white-label, certificates, and analytics, with 0% fees and a one-click LearnDash migration.

## Ready to get started?

If your stack is creeping toward four figures and you are tired of being the integrator, the smartest next step is to price your real LearnDash TCO against one all-in bill. Book a free migration assessment and we will do that math with you.

[Get Started](https://calendly.com/cubite/30min)

Pricing verified on first-party sources (liquidweb.com) in June 2026. Verify current figures before purchase, as vendor pricing changes.
