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Online Course Profit Calculator: Real Numbers You Need
Online Course Profit Calculator: Real Numbers You Need
Online Course Profit Calculator: Real Numbers You Need
by
Jason Zook
You've built your course. You know what you want to charge. But how much will you actually take home after platform fees, refunds, marketing costs, and taxes?
Most course creators guess at their profit margins and end up shocked by their first year's tax bill. The difference between gross revenue and net profit can be 30-50% or more, depending on your platform and business model.
Key Facts
Platform fees vary dramatically: Teachable charges 5% transaction fees on Basic plans, while Teachery charges 0% on all plans
Refund rates average 5-10% across most course niches, with business courses seeing higher rates
Marketing costs typically eat 20-30% of gross revenue for most course creators
Tax implications can reduce profit by 25-35% depending on your business structure and location
The Course Creator's Profit Reality Check
Here's what happened to Sarah, a designer who launched a $297 Photoshop course:
Her projections: 200 students × $297 = $59,400 in revenue
Her reality: After Teachable's 5% transaction fee ($2,970), 8% refund rate ($4,752), Facebook ad spend ($12,000), and taxes (30%), she netted $27,769.
That's 47% of her gross revenue. Sound brutal? It's pretty typical.
The problem isn't that Sarah did anything wrong. The problem is she didn't calculate her real profit margins before setting her price and marketing budget.
Online Course Profit Calculator Framework
Instead of building another generic calculator widget, let me give you the framework to calculate your course profits accurately. You can plug your own numbers into this system.
Step 1: Calculate Your Gross Revenue
Students × Course Price = Gross Revenue
This is the easy part. If you plan to sell 100 courses at $497 each, your gross revenue is $49,700.
But here's where most creators stop calculating. Big mistake.
Step 2: Subtract Platform and Payment Processing Fees
Every course platform takes a cut. Here's what the major platforms charge in 2026:
Teachery: 0% transaction fees (only Stripe's ~3% payment processing)
Teachable: 5% transaction fees on Basic plan + Stripe fees
Kajabi: 0% transaction fees + payment processing
Thinkific: 0% transaction fees + payment processing
Podia: 5% transaction fees on Starter plan
Calculation: Gross Revenue × (Platform Fee % + 3% payment processing)
Using Sarah's example: $59,400 × 8% = $4,752 in total fees
This is where choosing the right platform matters. If you're serious about keeping more of your revenue, try Teachery's 0% transaction fee structure with a 14-day free trial.
Step 3: Account for Refunds and Chargebacks
Even the best courses get refunds. Industry averages:
Business/marketing courses: 8-12% refund rate
Creative/design courses: 5-8% refund rate
Health/fitness courses: 6-10% refund rate
Technical/software courses: 4-7% refund rate
Calculation: Gross Revenue × Refund Rate %
For a $49,700 business course with 10% refunds: $49,700 × 10% = $4,970 lost to refunds
Step 4: Subtract Marketing and Advertising Costs
This is where course profits get decimated if you're not careful. Common marketing expenses:
Facebook/Instagram ads: $2-15 cost per email subscriber
Google ads: $3-25 cost per click (varies wildly by niche)
YouTube ads: $0.10-0.30 per view
Affiliate commissions: 20-50% of course price
Email marketing tools: $50-500/month depending on list size
A realistic marketing budget is 20-40% of gross revenue for most creators.
Calculation: Marketing Budget ÷ Gross Revenue = Marketing Cost %
Real Course Profit Examples
Let me show you three different scenarios using real numbers:
Example 1: The Bootstrap Launch
Course: $197 productivity course
Students: 150
Gross Revenue: $29,550
Expenses:
Platform fees (Teachery): $0 transaction + $886 Stripe fees = $886
Refunds (6%): $1,773
Marketing (organic + $2,000 ads): $2,000
Tools/software: $1,200/year
Net Revenue: $29,550 - $5,859 = $23,691
Profit Margin: 80.2%
Example 2: The Paid Ads Launch
Course: $497 marketing course
Students: 200
Gross Revenue: $99,400
Expenses:
Platform fees (Teachable Basic): $4,970 + $2,982 Stripe = $7,952
Refunds (12%): $11,928
Facebook ads: $25,000
Tools/software: $3,000/year
VA for customer service: $4,800
Net Revenue: $99,400 - $52,680 = $46,720
Profit Margin: 47.0%
Example 3: The High-End Course
Course: $2,997 business course
Students: 50
Gross Revenue: $149,850
Expenses:
Platform fees (Kajabi): $0 transaction + $4,496 Stripe = $4,496
Refunds (8%): $11,988
Webinar software + ads: $15,000
Affiliate commissions (30%): $44,955
Tools/team: $8,000
Net Revenue: $149,850 - $84,439 = $65,411
Profit Margin: 43.6%
The Hidden Costs Most Calculators Miss
Generic profit calculators forget these expenses that can kill your margins:
Time Investment Costs
Creating a quality course takes 80-200 hours. If you value your time at $50/hour, that's $4,000-10,000 in opportunity cost before you sell anything.
Customer Support
Plan for 2-5 support emails per student. At 15 minutes per email, that's 5-12.5 hours of support time per 100 students.
Course Updates and Maintenance
Software changes, laws change, best practices evolve. Budget 10-20 hours per year updating your course content.
Tax Implications
Don't forget Uncle Sam wants his cut. Depending on your business structure:
Sole Proprietorship: Income tax + 15.3% self-employment tax
LLC (S-Corp election): Potentially lower self-employment taxes
State taxes: 0-13.3% depending on your state
Platform Choice Impact on Profits
Your platform choice dramatically affects your bottom line. Let's compare total costs on a $50,000 course business:
Teachery (Lifetime Deal):
Platform cost: $550 one-time
Transaction fees: $0
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total platform costs: $2,050
Teachable (Basic Plan):
Platform cost: $468/year
Transaction fees: $2,500 (5%)
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total first year costs: $4,468
Kajabi (Basic Plan):
Platform cost: $1,068/year
Transaction fees: $0
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total first year costs: $2,568
Over two years, that's a difference of $3,886 between the most and least expensive options.
Building Your Personal Profit Calculator
Here's a simple spreadsheet formula you can use:
Net Profit = (Students × Price) - Platform Fees - Refunds - Marketing Costs - Operating Expenses - Taxes
Create columns for:
Gross Revenue (Students × Price)
Platform/Payment Fees (% of gross)
Refunds (% of gross)
Marketing Spend (fixed $ amount)
Operating Costs (software, VA, etc.)
Tax Estimate (25-35% of net)
Final Net Profit
Run three scenarios: conservative, realistic, and optimistic. This gives you a profit range to work with.
Optimizing Your Course Profit Margins
Choose Platforms Wisely
Transaction fees add up fast. On $100,000 in course sales, a 5% transaction fee costs you $5,000. That's real money.
Teachery's 0% transaction fee policy has saved our users thousands compared to platforms like Teachable. The real cost of running a course business includes these often-overlooked fees.
Price for Profit, Not Just Revenue
A $97 course that sells 1,000 copies generates the same gross revenue as a $497 course that sells 200 copies. But the profit margins are completely different:
$97 Course (1,000 students):
Higher refund rates (more buyers = more refund requests)
Higher support costs (10× the students)
Higher marketing costs (need 5× the traffic)
$497 Course (200 students):
Lower support burden
More qualified buyers
Better profit margins after fixed costs
Front-Load Your Marketing Investment
Instead of spreading marketing spend across months, consider investing heavily in your launch period. This creates momentum and often results in better cost-per-acquisition.
When the Numbers Don't Work
What if your profit calculator shows thin margins? You have three levers:
Increase price: Often the easiest fix. A 20% price increase can double your profit margins.
Decrease costs: Choose lower-fee platforms, reduce ad spend, automate support.
Increase volume: More students spread fixed costs across more sales.
Don't launch a course with less than 40% profit margins unless you have a clear plan to improve them. The market will test you with unexpected costs and lower-than-expected conversions.
Your Course Profit Action Plan
Before you launch your next course:
Build a profit calculator spreadsheet with your real numbers
Test three pricing scenarios ($X, $X+25%, $X+50%)
Research platform fees and choose strategically
Set aside 25-35% of profits for taxes
Track actual costs against projections monthly
Course creation is a business, not a hobby. Profitable course creators obsess over their unit economics just as much as their content quality.
Most creators focus on gross revenue because it feels good to say "I made six figures." Smart creators focus on net profit because that's what actually pays their bills and funds their next course.
Ready to keep more of your course revenue? Start your free Teachery trial and see how 0% transaction fees impact your bottom line. No credit card required, and you'll have your profit projections clear within the 14-day trial period.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much profit should I expect from my first online course?
Realistic profit margins for first-time course creators range from 40-60% after all expenses. This includes platform fees, marketing costs, refunds, and taxes. Higher-priced courses ($500+) typically see better margins than low-priced courses due to lower support costs per dollar of revenue.
What's the biggest expense most online course profit calculators miss?
Marketing costs are the biggest expense most calculators overlook. Successful course launches typically spend 20-40% of gross revenue on marketing and advertising. This includes Facebook ads, Google ads, affiliate commissions, email marketing tools, and webinar software.
Do platform transaction fees really matter for course profits?
Platform fees significantly impact profits. On $50,000 in course sales, Teachable's 5% transaction fee costs $2,500 while Teachery charges 0%. Over multiple course launches, these fees can cost thousands in lost profit that could be reinvested in business growth.
Should I factor in my time when calculating course profit?
Yes, especially for your first course. Creating quality course content takes 80-200 hours. If you value your time at $50/hour, that's $4,000-10,000 in opportunity cost. Factor this into your pricing to ensure you're compensated fairly for the significant time investment required.
Most course creators guess at their profit margins and end up shocked by their first year's tax bill. The difference between gross revenue and net profit can be 30-50% or more, depending on your platform and business model.
Key Facts
Platform fees vary dramatically: Teachable charges 5% transaction fees on Basic plans, while Teachery charges 0% on all plans
Refund rates average 5-10% across most course niches, with business courses seeing higher rates
Marketing costs typically eat 20-30% of gross revenue for most course creators
Tax implications can reduce profit by 25-35% depending on your business structure and location
The Course Creator's Profit Reality Check
Here's what happened to Sarah, a designer who launched a $297 Photoshop course:
Her projections: 200 students × $297 = $59,400 in revenue
Her reality: After Teachable's 5% transaction fee ($2,970), 8% refund rate ($4,752), Facebook ad spend ($12,000), and taxes (30%), she netted $27,769.
That's 47% of her gross revenue. Sound brutal? It's pretty typical.
The problem isn't that Sarah did anything wrong. The problem is she didn't calculate her real profit margins before setting her price and marketing budget.
Online Course Profit Calculator Framework
Instead of building another generic calculator widget, let me give you the framework to calculate your course profits accurately. You can plug your own numbers into this system.
Step 1: Calculate Your Gross Revenue
Students × Course Price = Gross Revenue
This is the easy part. If you plan to sell 100 courses at $497 each, your gross revenue is $49,700.
But here's where most creators stop calculating. Big mistake.
Step 2: Subtract Platform and Payment Processing Fees
Every course platform takes a cut. Here's what the major platforms charge in 2026:
Teachery: 0% transaction fees (only Stripe's ~3% payment processing)
Teachable: 5% transaction fees on Basic plan + Stripe fees
Kajabi: 0% transaction fees + payment processing
Thinkific: 0% transaction fees + payment processing
Podia: 5% transaction fees on Starter plan
Calculation: Gross Revenue × (Platform Fee % + 3% payment processing)
Using Sarah's example: $59,400 × 8% = $4,752 in total fees
This is where choosing the right platform matters. If you're serious about keeping more of your revenue, try Teachery's 0% transaction fee structure with a 14-day free trial.
Step 3: Account for Refunds and Chargebacks
Even the best courses get refunds. Industry averages:
Business/marketing courses: 8-12% refund rate
Creative/design courses: 5-8% refund rate
Health/fitness courses: 6-10% refund rate
Technical/software courses: 4-7% refund rate
Calculation: Gross Revenue × Refund Rate %
For a $49,700 business course with 10% refunds: $49,700 × 10% = $4,970 lost to refunds
Step 4: Subtract Marketing and Advertising Costs
This is where course profits get decimated if you're not careful. Common marketing expenses:
Facebook/Instagram ads: $2-15 cost per email subscriber
Google ads: $3-25 cost per click (varies wildly by niche)
YouTube ads: $0.10-0.30 per view
Affiliate commissions: 20-50% of course price
Email marketing tools: $50-500/month depending on list size
A realistic marketing budget is 20-40% of gross revenue for most creators.
Calculation: Marketing Budget ÷ Gross Revenue = Marketing Cost %
Real Course Profit Examples
Let me show you three different scenarios using real numbers:
Example 1: The Bootstrap Launch
Course: $197 productivity course
Students: 150
Gross Revenue: $29,550
Expenses:
Platform fees (Teachery): $0 transaction + $886 Stripe fees = $886
Refunds (6%): $1,773
Marketing (organic + $2,000 ads): $2,000
Tools/software: $1,200/year
Net Revenue: $29,550 - $5,859 = $23,691
Profit Margin: 80.2%
Example 2: The Paid Ads Launch
Course: $497 marketing course
Students: 200
Gross Revenue: $99,400
Expenses:
Platform fees (Teachable Basic): $4,970 + $2,982 Stripe = $7,952
Refunds (12%): $11,928
Facebook ads: $25,000
Tools/software: $3,000/year
VA for customer service: $4,800
Net Revenue: $99,400 - $52,680 = $46,720
Profit Margin: 47.0%
Example 3: The High-End Course
Course: $2,997 business course
Students: 50
Gross Revenue: $149,850
Expenses:
Platform fees (Kajabi): $0 transaction + $4,496 Stripe = $4,496
Refunds (8%): $11,988
Webinar software + ads: $15,000
Affiliate commissions (30%): $44,955
Tools/team: $8,000
Net Revenue: $149,850 - $84,439 = $65,411
Profit Margin: 43.6%
The Hidden Costs Most Calculators Miss
Generic profit calculators forget these expenses that can kill your margins:
Time Investment Costs
Creating a quality course takes 80-200 hours. If you value your time at $50/hour, that's $4,000-10,000 in opportunity cost before you sell anything.
Customer Support
Plan for 2-5 support emails per student. At 15 minutes per email, that's 5-12.5 hours of support time per 100 students.
Course Updates and Maintenance
Software changes, laws change, best practices evolve. Budget 10-20 hours per year updating your course content.
Tax Implications
Don't forget Uncle Sam wants his cut. Depending on your business structure:
Sole Proprietorship: Income tax + 15.3% self-employment tax
LLC (S-Corp election): Potentially lower self-employment taxes
State taxes: 0-13.3% depending on your state
Platform Choice Impact on Profits
Your platform choice dramatically affects your bottom line. Let's compare total costs on a $50,000 course business:
Teachery (Lifetime Deal):
Platform cost: $550 one-time
Transaction fees: $0
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total platform costs: $2,050
Teachable (Basic Plan):
Platform cost: $468/year
Transaction fees: $2,500 (5%)
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total first year costs: $4,468
Kajabi (Basic Plan):
Platform cost: $1,068/year
Transaction fees: $0
Payment processing: $1,500 (3%)
Total first year costs: $2,568
Over two years, that's a difference of $3,886 between the most and least expensive options.
Building Your Personal Profit Calculator
Here's a simple spreadsheet formula you can use:
Net Profit = (Students × Price) - Platform Fees - Refunds - Marketing Costs - Operating Expenses - Taxes
Create columns for:
Gross Revenue (Students × Price)
Platform/Payment Fees (% of gross)
Refunds (% of gross)
Marketing Spend (fixed $ amount)
Operating Costs (software, VA, etc.)
Tax Estimate (25-35% of net)
Final Net Profit
Run three scenarios: conservative, realistic, and optimistic. This gives you a profit range to work with.
Optimizing Your Course Profit Margins
Choose Platforms Wisely
Transaction fees add up fast. On $100,000 in course sales, a 5% transaction fee costs you $5,000. That's real money.
Teachery's 0% transaction fee policy has saved our users thousands compared to platforms like Teachable. The real cost of running a course business includes these often-overlooked fees.
Price for Profit, Not Just Revenue
A $97 course that sells 1,000 copies generates the same gross revenue as a $497 course that sells 200 copies. But the profit margins are completely different:
$97 Course (1,000 students):
Higher refund rates (more buyers = more refund requests)
Higher support costs (10× the students)
Higher marketing costs (need 5× the traffic)
$497 Course (200 students):
Lower support burden
More qualified buyers
Better profit margins after fixed costs
Front-Load Your Marketing Investment
Instead of spreading marketing spend across months, consider investing heavily in your launch period. This creates momentum and often results in better cost-per-acquisition.
When the Numbers Don't Work
What if your profit calculator shows thin margins? You have three levers:
Increase price: Often the easiest fix. A 20% price increase can double your profit margins.
Decrease costs: Choose lower-fee platforms, reduce ad spend, automate support.
Increase volume: More students spread fixed costs across more sales.
Don't launch a course with less than 40% profit margins unless you have a clear plan to improve them. The market will test you with unexpected costs and lower-than-expected conversions.
Your Course Profit Action Plan
Before you launch your next course:
Build a profit calculator spreadsheet with your real numbers
Test three pricing scenarios ($X, $X+25%, $X+50%)
Research platform fees and choose strategically
Set aside 25-35% of profits for taxes
Track actual costs against projections monthly
Course creation is a business, not a hobby. Profitable course creators obsess over their unit economics just as much as their content quality.
Most creators focus on gross revenue because it feels good to say "I made six figures." Smart creators focus on net profit because that's what actually pays their bills and funds their next course.
Ready to keep more of your course revenue? Start your free Teachery trial and see how 0% transaction fees impact your bottom line. No credit card required, and you'll have your profit projections clear within the 14-day trial period.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much profit should I expect from my first online course?
Realistic profit margins for first-time course creators range from 40-60% after all expenses. This includes platform fees, marketing costs, refunds, and taxes. Higher-priced courses ($500+) typically see better margins than low-priced courses due to lower support costs per dollar of revenue.
What's the biggest expense most online course profit calculators miss?
Marketing costs are the biggest expense most calculators overlook. Successful course launches typically spend 20-40% of gross revenue on marketing and advertising. This includes Facebook ads, Google ads, affiliate commissions, email marketing tools, and webinar software.
Do platform transaction fees really matter for course profits?
Platform fees significantly impact profits. On $50,000 in course sales, Teachable's 5% transaction fee costs $2,500 while Teachery charges 0%. Over multiple course launches, these fees can cost thousands in lost profit that could be reinvested in business growth.
Should I factor in my time when calculating course profit?
Yes, especially for your first course. Creating quality course content takes 80-200 hours. If you value your time at $50/hour, that's $4,000-10,000 in opportunity cost. Factor this into your pricing to ensure you're compensated fairly for the significant time investment required.
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© 2013 - Present | Teachery Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2013 - Present | Teachery Inc.
All rights reserved.
© 2013 - Present | Teachery Inc. All rights reserved.
