The Real Difference
Discord is a chat app. Think Slack meets gaming. Great for real-time conversations, voice calls, and spontaneous hangouts. Not great for organized content or charging money.
Skool is a community platform with courses built in. Great for paid memberships, structured content, and keeping discussions organized. Not great for real-time chat or voice calls.
What Each Platform Actually Does
Discord
"Where gamers hang out"
- Real-time text chat in channels
- Voice and video calls (unlimited)
- Screen sharing for gaming or work
- Bots and custom integrations
- Free for unlimited users
- Mobile and desktop apps
- Threads for organized discussions
- Roles and permissions
Skool
"Where courses meet community"
- Forum-style discussions (like Reddit)
- Built-in course hosting with videos
- Payment processing included
- Leaderboard and gamification
- Calendar for events
- $9/month flat rate
- Clean, distraction-free interface
- No voice/video calls
When to Use Which Platform
Running a Paid Course
You're selling access to video lessons and want a community where students can discuss the content.
โ Use Skool. Built for this exact use case.
Gaming Community
You run a gaming clan, stream on Twitch, or just want a place where your gaming friends can hang out and voice chat.
โ Use Discord. This is literally what it was built for.
Free Community Chat
You want a casual place for your audience to chat in real-time. No courses, no paid access, just conversation.
โ Use Discord. It's free and everyone already has it.
Coaching Program
You're charging $200/month for coaching. You need lesson content, organized discussions, and member management.
โ Use Skool. Better for structured paid programs.
Study Group
You're running a book club, study group, or accountability circle. Quick messages, voice calls, screen sharing.
โ Use Discord. The voice features are unbeatable.
Membership Site
You're building a business around recurring revenue. Members pay monthly for access to content and community.
โ Use Skool. Payment processing and content hosting included.
What It Actually Costs
Discord
For most communities
- โ Unlimited members
- โ Unlimited text channels
- โ Voice and video calls
- โ Screen sharing
- โ Bots and integrations
- Optional: Discord Nitro ($10/user/mo) for better streaming quality and larger uploads
Skool
Everything included
- โ Unlimited members
- โ Course hosting
- โ Payment processing
- โ Calendar and events
- โ Gamification
- Plus: Stripe fees (2.9% + 30ยข per transaction)
The Real Cost Breakdown
If you're charging for your community: Skool at $9/month breaks even with just 2-3 members at $49/month. After that it's pure profit minus Stripe fees.
If your community is free: Discord makes way more sense. Why pay $9/month when Discord gives you everything for free?
Feature Breakdown
Can You Use Both Together?
Actually, yeah. Lots of communities do this. Here's a common setup:
Skool for:
- โข Course content and lessons
- โข Organized Q&A discussions
- โข Payment processing
- โข Member management
- โข Announcements
Discord for:
- โข Real-time chat
- โข Voice study sessions
- โข Screen sharing help
- โข Casual hangouts
- โข Live events
Example: You run a $9/month coaching program on Skool with video lessons and organized discussion. But you also have a free Discord for quick questions, voice coaching calls, and community hangouts. Members get the Discord invite when they join Skool.
What Community Managers Actually Say
"We started on Discord because it was free. Grew to 3,000 members but could never figure out how to charge for it. Moved to Skool, lost about half the members but now we're making $12k/month. Kept the Discord for casual chat though."
โ Tyler R., Fitness Coaching
"Discord is where my community lives. We do voice calls every day, screen share for coding help, and just hang out. Tried Skool for a month but everyone missed the real-time chat. Skool felt like posting into the void."
โ Alex K., Developer Community
"Best decision was using both. Skool for the course content and paying members. Discord for the free tier and casual chat. The paid members get access to both. It's extra work but the revenue covers it."
โ Maria L., Marketing Course
So Which One Should You Pick?
Pick Discord If:
- โ Your community is free and always will be
- โ You need voice calls and screen sharing
- โ Real-time chat is essential
- โ Your community is gaming-related
- โ You can't afford $9/month yet
- โ You want spontaneous hangouts
Pick Skool If:
- โ You're charging for your community
- โ You have course content to host
- โ You want organized, searchable discussions
- โ You need payment processing built-in
- โ Real-time chat isn't critical
- โ You want gamification features
Manage Your Skool from One Dashboard
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