How to Create and Sell Online Courses in 2026 (Free Platforms)

Published February 27, 2026 · 14 min read

Online Courses Passive Income Free Platforms 2026
Table of Contents

The online course market is projected to exceed $450 billion by 2028. The best part? You no longer need to pay for hosting, software, or marketing tools to get started. Free platforms in 2026 give you everything you need to build, launch, and sell your first course without upfront investment.

This guide walks you through every step — choosing a platform, creating content, pricing, marketing, and launching — using only free tools and strategies that work right now.

1. Why Online Courses Are Still the Best Digital Product

Online courses offer a unique combination of advantages that other digital products cannot match:

The barrier to entry has never been lower. You need a topic you know well, a microphone (your phone works), and a free platform. That is it.

2. Free Course Platforms Compared

Each platform has different strengths. Here is how the major free options compare in 2026:

PlatformFree Plan LimitsTransaction FeeBest ForCustom Domain
Teachable (Free)1 course, unlimited students$1 + 10%Polished course experienceNo (free plan)
GumroadUnlimited products10%Simple digital product salesNo
UdemyUnlimited courses37-63% revenue shareBuilt-in marketplace trafficNo
SkillshareUnlimited classesRoyalty pool modelCreative/skill-based topicsNo
Thinkific (Free)1 course, unlimited students0%Full course siteNo (free plan)
PatreonUnlimited content5-12%Ongoing course/membershipNo

Platform Breakdown

Teachable Free is the best starting point for most creators. The free plan allows one course with unlimited students. The trade-off is a $1 + 10% transaction fee, but you get Teachable's polished student experience, drip content, and basic analytics.

Gumroad is ideal if you want to sell your course as a simple digital product — no LMS features, but the checkout is frictionless, and you keep 90% after their fee. Great for PDF courses, video bundles, and cohort-based pricing.

Udemy takes a significant revenue share (37-63% depending on how the student found you), but provides access to millions of active learners. If you have no audience yet, Udemy's built-in traffic is valuable for your first 100 students.

Skillshare pays through a royalty pool based on minutes watched. Income per student is lower, but the platform drives discovery. Best for creative skills (design, photography, writing, music).

Thinkific Free stands out with 0% transaction fees on the free plan. You get one course with unlimited students and a basic course site. The cleanest deal for keeping maximum revenue.

3. How to Create Your Course (Step-by-Step)

1 Validate your topic before creating anything. Search Reddit, Quora, and X for questions people ask about your topic. Check Udemy for competing courses — competition means demand. Aim for topics where existing courses have 100+ reviews (proven demand) but poor ratings or outdated content (room for improvement).
2 Outline your curriculum. Break your course into 4-8 modules, each with 3-6 lessons. Every module should deliver a specific outcome. Structure: Introduction → Foundation → Core Skills → Advanced Application → Implementation. Keep total runtime between 2-6 hours for your first course.
3 Record your lessons. Start with screen recordings (Loom free or OBS Studio) for tutorials, or talking-head videos (phone camera + natural light). Audio quality matters more than video quality — use a $20 lapel mic or record in a quiet room. Aim for 5-15 minutes per lesson.
4 Create supporting materials. Worksheets, checklists, templates, and cheat sheets increase perceived value dramatically. Use Canva free for design and Google Docs for editable resources. Every module should have at least one downloadable resource.
5 Edit and polish. Use DaVinci Resolve (free) or CapCut (free) for video editing. Cut "ums," add chapter markers, and include text overlays for key points. Add a professional intro/outro using Canva video templates.
6 Upload and configure. Upload to your chosen platform, set up your landing page, enable student reviews, and test the full student experience yourself. Check video playback, download links, and mobile responsiveness.

4. Pricing Strategies That Actually Work

Pricing is where most course creators overthink and undercharge. Here is what the data shows:

Price Tiers That Convert

Price PointBest ForExpected Conversion RateRevenue Model
Free (lead magnet)Building email list10-25% of visitorsUpsell to paid course
$27-$49First course, impulse buy2-5% of visitorsVolume sales
$97-$197Comprehensive course1-3% of visitorsBalanced revenue
$297-$497Premium/cohort course0.5-2% of visitorsHigh-ticket

Start at $47-$97 for your first course. This price is low enough for impulse purchases but high enough to signal value. Underpricing ($10-$20) actually reduces conversions because buyers associate low price with low quality.

Launch discount strategy: Set your "regular" price at $97 and launch at $47 with a 7-day deadline. This creates urgency and lets early buyers feel they got a deal. After launch week, keep the price at $67-$97 depending on sales velocity.

5. Marketing and Launch Strategy

The biggest mistake course creators make is building in silence. Start marketing before your course is finished.

Pre-Launch (4-6 weeks before)

Launch Week

Post-Launch (ongoing)

6. Scaling Beyond Your First Course

1 Analyze your first course data. Which modules have the highest completion? Where do students drop off? What questions do they ask? This data shapes your second course.
2 Create a course ladder. Your first course is the entry point. Build an intermediate course ($97-$197) and an advanced course or coaching program ($297+). Each course naturally upsells to the next.
3 Add a community. A free Discord or paid community (via Skool or Circle) increases retention, provides ongoing value, and creates a moat competitors cannot replicate.
4 Diversify platforms. Publish on Udemy for marketplace traffic, Teachable for premium experience, and Gumroad for quick sales. Different platforms reach different audiences.
5 Invest in production quality. Once you are generating revenue, upgrade your setup — better microphone, lighting, and editing. Production quality correlates with higher pricing power.

Generate Your Course Outline in 60 Seconds

Enter your topic and audience, and our Course Outline Generator creates a complete module-by-module curriculum with lesson titles, learning outcomes, and resource suggestions.

Open Course Outline Generator

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to create an online course?

A focused creator can go from idea to published course in 4-8 weeks. Week 1-2: outline and validation. Week 3-5: recording and editing. Week 6-7: platform setup and beta testing. Week 8: launch. The most common mistake is spending months perfecting content instead of launching and iterating based on student feedback.

Do I need to be an expert to create a course?

You do not need to be a world-class expert — you need to be two steps ahead of your students. If you have achieved a specific result (built a website, landed a freelance client, learned a software tool), you can teach others how to do the same. Beginners often make the best teachers because they remember what it is like to not understand something.

Which free platform should I start with?

If you have zero audience, start with Udemy — it provides built-in traffic. If you have even a small audience (500+ social followers or email subscribers), start with Thinkific Free (0% fees) or Teachable Free. If you want the simplest possible setup, use Gumroad — upload your videos as a product and start selling in under an hour.

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