The Skool.com Illusion Inside the "Fishless Lake" of the Creator Economy

AlexH

Administrator
Staff member
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An unfiltered, data-backed look at hidden fees, aggressive censorship, the KYC trap, and why the platform’s math rarely adds up for solo creators.
When you decide to launch an online community, the marketing engine of the internet points you toward one massive hype train: Skool.com.
Like thousands of other creators, I wanted a clean space to host my courses and interact with my audience. In my initial research, I stumbled upon Whop—a platform that is fundamentally free to start. But I backed away from Whop because of their strict KYC (Know Your Customer) verification process. I wanted privacy and a friction-free setup.

Every review, affiliate post, and YouTube video assured me that Skool didn't require this. So, I jumped ship and chose Skool.

What a massive reality check that turned out to be.
Not only did Skool eventually demand KYC verification the moment I tried to set up a payment gateway and withdraw my hard-earned money, but I quickly realized how deep the rabbit hole goes. Online, people frequently refer to the Skool ecosystem as a "cult." I brushed it off as internet hyperbole—until I actually got inside.
Here is the raw, unvarnished truth about Skool.com, how it compares to platforms like Whop, and the psychological engineering keeping thousands of creators paying monthly fees for a dream that is structurally rigged against them.


Whop vs. Skool: The Financial Reality

Before diving into the community dynamics, let’s look at the raw infrastructure and numbers.
On Whop, you get a massive suite of features for free. They offer integrated AI tools to help you build your courses, lower base transaction fees, and the ability to create unlimited communities under one account. If you want to scale up past their free tier limits to host more than 50 courses, a simple $50 upgrade unlocks everything. You can have a fully operational ecosystem ready in a single day, costing you significantly less than Skool.
Driven by my initial fear of KYC, I chose Skool instead. Here is what that choice actually looks like on paper:


Feature & Cost Breakdown


FeatureWhop.comSkool.com
Base Monthly CostFree ($0)$9.99 / month (Basic)
Transaction FeesLow (around 3%)10% on the Basic Tier
Community LimitUnlimitedPer Community (Pay again for a 2nd)
Premium TierN/A$99 / month (VIP Tier)
AI Course AssistantsIncludedNon-existent / Highly limited
By choosing Skool, I ended up paying for two separate communities, managing higher transaction fees, and eventually doing the exact KYC verification I was running from in the first place.

The "Growth Boost" Trap: Welcome to the 40% Tax

Recently, Skool introduced a feature called Growth Boost. On the surface, the concept sounds revolutionary: Skool organically promotes your community on their platform, and if they bring you a client, they take a 30% affiliate commission.
For a solo creator, this sounds like a dream. No external affiliate networks to set up, no complex tracking links, and no expensive Facebook or Instagram ad campaigns to run. Skool handles the marketing; you reap the rewards.

But when you read the fine print, the mechanics are predatory.
The issue isn't external marketing—it’s how Skool defines an "organically brought" client inside their own walls:

  • The Discovery Loop: If someone is already on Skool.com and organically searches for a keyword in your niche, finds your community, and signs up, Skool takes 30%.
  • The Profile Loop: Skool features a default master community called Skooler (accessible only to community owners). If you write a helpful comment in Skooler, and another admin clicks your profile, discovers your independent community, and joins it—Skool takes 30%.
In both scenarios, you did the networking, you built the profile, and you provided the value. Yet, Skool takes nearly a third of your revenue.
The True Math: When you combine the 30% Growth Boost commission with Skool's standard 10% processing fee on the basic tier, Skool takes a staggering 40% of your total revenue.
Can you opt out of Growth Boost? Yes. But the moment you turn it off, the algorithm penalizes you. Your community immediately drops by at least 20% in the internal Rankings, and you are effectively shadowbanned or heavily demoted in the "Discovery" tab. You either pay the 40% tax, or you become invisible.

 
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The "Fishless Lake" Analogy​

If you look at the macro data, roughly 40% of the hundreds of thousands of communities on Skool make some money. But out of that 40%, only about 10% (which means a tiny 4% of total creators) are making life-changing wealth. Yet, if you browse the Skool ecosystem, you are bombarded with the narrative that everyone is getting rich.

How do they maintain this illusion? It happens inside the Skooler community.
Let’s use an analogy to understand how this ecosystem functions:
Imagine the Skooler community is a giant lake. Surrounding this lake are hundreds of thousands of fishermen. Deep down, all the fishermen know there are no fish in this lake. Yet, everyone sits there with their lines cast into the water, waiting.
Suddenly, a creator from the elite, high-ticket circle walks up to the shore holding a massive net overflowing with prize-winning fish. To make the catch believable, a few other creators—who belong to the exact same inner circle or are directly employed by them—crowd around shouting: "Yes! It's true! I watched him pull these monsters out of this very water!"

When you fail to catch anything in a lake that you know is empty, the narrative shifts back to shame: "Look at him, he caught fish! If you aren't catching anything, it’s entirely your fault. You aren't working hard enough. Buy this strategy and try again."
The crowd believes it, gets re-motivated, and continues fishing. This cycle is perfectly timed. The moment overall engagement on the platform dips or sentiment turns slightly negative, the elite circle drops a massive motivational post or an income-bragging affiliate update to artificially pump the morale of the lake.
Everyone stays in the fishless lake, hoping for a miracle, while their $9.99 or $99.99 monthly subscription fees keep quietly rebilling.

Echo Chambers and Structural Censorship​

This "wow-factor" is meticulously guarded. If you analyze the Skooler forum deeply, you notice that any post deviating from absolute praise is systematically scrubbed.
I recently made a post detailing the genuine, day-to-day administrative struggles of running a community. It didn't break any terms of service; it was a real critique meant to spark an honest discussion. It was deleted almost instantly. The moderator's excuse? "It looked like it was generated by AI." It didn't matter that it wasn't AI, nor did they care about the actual problem being discussed. It disrupted the utopian narrative, so it was removed.
Furthermore, Skool has strict rules against self-promotion or promoting others within the main hub. If a regular creator tries it, their post is wiped. However, if you watch the top-ranking creators, they bypass this constantly using a subtle loop: the "Shoutout to X" method. Elite admins publicly praise each other, cross-pollinating their audiences perfectly within the rules, while independent creators remain locked out.

Why Are Big Influencers Leaving?​

Have you noticed that several massive YouTubers who heavily promoted Skool a year or two ago have quietly closed their communities or moved them elsewhere?
If the platform was the ultimate money-printing machine advertised by the "Skool Games," these massive traffic sources would dominate the leaderboards. Instead, the top spots are perpetually occupied by the exact same rotating group of insiders.

When you look past the hype, you discover three things about the communities making the "real" money:
  1. They are an organized syndicate: If you dig into their digital footprints, these top creators knew each other long before Skool existed. They form an insular ring of mutual recommendations.
  2. They have massive corporate teams: The face of the community might be a solo creator, but behind the curtain, they employ dozens or hundreds of setters, closers, and managers.
  3. Their ad budgets are astronomical: One prominent admin openly admitted to investing $500,000 into advertising his community. Others, like the heavily promoted "Ads Queen" Evelyn, scale heavily because they have capital most solo creators can only dream of. They rely entirely on Facebook and Instagram ad arbitrage—not Skool's organic magic.
Add to this the fact that Skool’s dedicated iOS and Android mobile apps are notoriously buggy—frequently crashing to the point where many users (including myself) abandon the app entirely to use a mobile browser—and the "premium" illusion begins to crack.

The European VAT Abuse

For European creators, there is another glaring issue: The 21% Value Added Tax (VAT) addition.
Skool automatically tacks on a 21% VAT for European users. Ostensibly, this is standard compliance for digital services. However, digital content like educational courses and eBooks are frequently subject to specific exemptions depending on how they are delivered.
More importantly, Skool claims they collect this VAT to pay it directly to your local government on your behalf. But ask yourself a logical business question: If Skool does not collect or require your local Tax Identification Number (TIN) or business registration details, how can they legally attribute and pay that VAT under your name to your specific tax authority?

Furthermore, as an unregistered individual, you are generally not legally obligated to collect VAT from your customers unless you operate a formalized corporate entity. By enforcing this sweeping tax without proper localization, Skool heavily inflates the end price for your customers.

If you charge a premium fee of $1,000 for a VIP tier, a European client is forced to pay $1,210. Over a year, that extra $210 per client severely damages your conversion rates and hurts your sales, while the exact destination of that collected tax remains incredibly murky.

How to Play the Game Safely (My Advice)​

To be entirely clear: This is not a blind hate post against Skool, nor is it an uncritical ad for Whop. I don't have anything live on Whop; I am simply a creator who currently runs two active communities on Skool and realized I was swept up by a highly sophisticated marketing machine.
Skool does have a major advantage: they spend millions on aggressive advertising to make their interface the default vocabulary for this niche. If you want to capitalize on their massive brand awareness, you can use it to your benefit. For $9.99 a month, having a unified space for unlimited videos, courses, and an integrated checkout system is still a highly competitive utility.

But you have to play the game smartly without falling for the Hype. If you choose Skool, here is the exact financial blueprint you should follow:
  • Step 1: Start strictly on the $9.99/month Basic Tier. Accept the heavy 10% transaction fee early on while your volume is low.
  • Step 2: Focus purely on driving your own external traffic. Do not rely on their algorithm or their 40% Growth Boost trap.
  • Step 3: The exact moment your community hits $1,000/month in revenue, immediately upgrade to the VIP Tier ($99/month or $850/year upfront).
Why? Because at $1,000 in revenue on the basic tier, you are paying $100 a month just in processing fees. When you upgrade to VIP, your transaction fees drop from 10% down to 2.9%.
On a $1,000 volume, your fee drops from $100 to $29. Even when you add the $99 VIP subscription, you structurally break even while gaining advanced features and completely bypassing the platform's basic-tier tax.

Final Thoughts​

The creator economy is built on selling shovels during a gold rush. Skool.com is an incredibly well-designed shovel, wrapped in an elite psychological framework designed to keep you paying a monthly subscription while fishing in an empty lake.
Go into it with open eyes. Realize that the people dominating the leaderboards are operating with massive corporate budgets, corporate teams, and pre-existing networks. Use the platform strictly as a software utility, look out for the hidden tax traps, and never assume an algorithm will build a business for you.

Now, I want to hear from you:
If you are hosting a community, which platform did you choose—Skool, Whop, or an independent alternative like Kajabi or Substack? If you've been inside the Skool ecosystem, what has your experience been with the Growth Boost algorithm or the Skooler forum? Let’s get an honest discussion going in the comments below.
 
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