How to Tell If an Online Course Is Worth the Price
The online education market has grown into a multi-billion dollar industry built on one reliable psychological trigger: the belief that one purchase will change everything. Buy this $997 course, learn this skill, transform your income.
Sometimes it delivers. More often, the course sits unfinished in a browser bookmark, a monument to optimism over planning.
The question isn’t whether online courses are worth it generally, some are extraordinarily valuable, some are scams, and most fall somewhere between. The question is whether a specific course is worth its specific price for your specific situation.
Here’s the framework. Run your numbers at the Online Course ROI Calculator before you buy.
Step 1: Define the Specific Outcome
Most buyers evaluate a course based on what it promises. The better approach is to evaluate it based on what you will specifically do with what you learn.
“I want to learn Python” is a vague goal. “I want to qualify for entry-level data analyst roles paying $65,000–$75,000 within 12 months” is a measurable outcome.
With a specific outcome, you can answer:
- What’s the income increase I’m targeting?
- How likely is this course to help me achieve it?
- What else do I need beyond the course to get there?
- What’s the timeline?
Without a specific outcome, you’re buying hope. Hope is more expensive per unit of result.
Step 2: Calculate the ROI
Course ROI is calculable, even if imprecisely. Here’s the framework:
Expected annual benefit = (expected income increase) × (probability you achieve it) × (probability the course meaningfully contributed)
Example: Data analyst bootcamp, $2,000
- Current salary: $48,000
- Target salary: $72,000
- Income increase: $24,000/year
- Probability of getting the new role within 18 months: 60%
- Probability the course contributed significantly: 70%
- Expected annual benefit: $24,000 × 0.60 × 0.70 = $10,080/year
- ROI in year 1: $10,080 − $2,000 = $8,080
- ROI multiple: 5x
That’s a strong investment. Most financial assets don’t produce 5x in year 1.
Example: $997 “build a six-figure business” course
- Target income increase: $50,000/year
- Probability you build a six-figure business after taking the course: 10%
- Probability the course specifically caused it (vs. you figuring it out yourself): 40%
- Expected annual benefit: $50,000 × 0.10 × 0.40 = $2,000
- ROI in year 1: $2,000 − $997 = $1,003
- ROI multiple: 2x on paper, but with 10% success probability, most buyers see -$997
The math changes dramatically based on realistic success probability. That’s the number sellers never give you.
Step 3: What the Sales Page Won’t Tell You
High-converting course sales pages are designed by professional copywriters. Here’s what they’re optimized to obscure:
Completion rates are abysmal. The online education industry average course completion rate is approximately 10–15%. Most courses are bought with intention and abandoned before completion. If you’re an average buyer (statistically), you won’t finish it.
Income claims often reflect outliers. “Students have earned up to $400,000” means someone did it, not that you will. The meaningful metric is median student outcome, which sellers rarely disclose because it’s unflattering.
The course is necessary but not sufficient. A programming course doesn’t get you a job. The course + a portfolio + networking + job applications + interview practice + maybe a bootcamp + time does. Many buyers complete the course and then discover the gap between “learned the content” and “achieved the outcome” is much larger than advertised.
Skills decay if unused. Buying a Spanish course and learning conversationally doesn’t produce fluency if you don’t maintain it. A marketing course with 6 months of strategies you don’t implement doesn’t produce marketing results.
Step 4: The Pre-Mortem Questions
Before buying any course over $200, answer these honestly:
Do you have a specific plan to use this skill? “Get a new job” isn’t a plan. “Apply to 5 data analyst positions per week for 6 months” is a plan.
What will you do with the course in the first 7 days? If you can’t answer specifically, you’re buying it for the future version of yourself who is more disciplined. That person is less reliable than present-you thinks.
Have you checked free alternatives? freeCodeCamp, Khan Academy, MIT OpenCourseWare, YouTube, and Coursera’s free tier cover an enormous range of skills at zero cost. A $2,000 coding bootcamp may contain the same technical content as a free curriculum plus a few hundred dollars in books. What premium courses often provide is structure, accountability, community, and live instruction, worth paying for if those are genuinely what you need.
What’s your completion track record? If you’ve bought and abandoned 3 previous online courses, the fourth follows the same pattern until you change something. Buying another course before finishing an existing one is an excellent predictor of not finishing either.
Can you get a partial refund if it’s not right? Most legitimate platforms (Udemy, Coursera, Teachable-hosted courses) offer 30-day refunds. A seller without a refund policy is a yellow flag.
Step 5: Price Tiers and What They Actually Indicate
Course prices span an enormous range. Here’s what different price tiers typically signal:
$15–$29 (Udemy-style marketplace): Commodity content. Heavily discounted from inflated “list prices.” Quality varies widely. Good for structured introductions to topics, certifications prep, and specific technical skills. ROI is easy if you use it; low risk if you don’t.
$99–$499: Mid-tier direct courses. Often includes more current content, community access, or instructor interaction. Requires evaluation: does the price reflect actual content quality, or just a higher-margin sales funnel?
$500–$2,000: Structured programs, cohort courses, or courses with live components. The price usually includes accountability structures (cohort timing, office hours) that genuinely improve completion rates. More worth it if community and accountability are why you didn’t finish the $15 version.
$2,000–$10,000 (bootcamps, intensive programs): Serious money that demands serious ROI analysis. The honest case for this tier: verified track record of job placement outcomes (not “graduates have landed jobs at Google”, median salary change at 6 months post-graduation).
$10,000+ (masterminds, elite programs): At this price, you’re paying for access and network, not content. The content is rarely worth $10,000+. The question is whether the peer network and mentorship access provide that value for your specific situation and goals.
The Comparison That Changes the Calculation
Courses aren’t just competing against “doing nothing.” They’re competing against:
Books ($15–$30): A single well-chosen book covers an enormous amount of the content in most $197 courses. Books require self-direction but are 99% cheaper.
YouTube: Free, comprehensive, algorithmically optimized for engagement. For most skill areas, a structured YouTube learning path is available at zero cost.
Community college and extension programs: Often cheaper than online bootcamps, with accreditation and in-person accountability. A 12-week night class at $400 may produce better outcomes than a $2,000 self-paced course for learners who need structure.
Doing the thing: For many skills, hands-on practice in the actual domain is worth more than course content. Learning to write by writing every day beats most writing courses. Learning to code by building projects beats watching hours of video.
Courses have genuine value when they provide structure, curated content, community, and accountability that you can’t easily replicate with free resources. When the value is purely content, the ROI calculus usually favors cheaper alternatives.
FAQ
What completion rate should I realistically expect for an online course? Industry average is 10–15%. Even highly engaged learners in cohort-based courses average 40–60% completion. For self-paced courses you buy without a specific deadline or use case, completion rates drop significantly. Build your ROI calculation on the assumption that you might not finish it, what’s the value of partial completion?
Are cohort-based courses worth the premium over self-paced? Often yes, if completion and accountability are your barriers. Cohort courses with fixed start dates, peer accountability, and live sessions have 3–5x higher completion rates than self-paced alternatives. If you’re someone who needs external structure to follow through, the premium is buying the accountability, which is genuinely valuable.
What questions should I ask before buying a $1,000+ course? Ask: What specific outcomes have your students achieved? What’s the median, not the best case? What percentage complete the program? Is there a refund policy? Can I speak to an alumni? What’s included that I can’t get from cheaper alternatives? If a seller dodges these, treat it as a significant signal.
Should I take a course before or after practicing the skill? Depends on the skill. For structured fields (programming, accounting, finance), a course first gives you the conceptual framework that makes practice more effective. For creative fields (writing, design, marketing), practice first reveals the gaps that a course can then fill specifically. “Course before practice” risks spending 30 hours learning theory you’ll never apply. “Practice before course” risks reinforcing bad habits, know which applies to your field.
Bottom Line
Most course purchase mistakes are made without defining the specific outcome, calculating a realistic ROI, or honestly assessing completion likelihood. The Online Course ROI Calculator asks you to put numbers on these variables, expected income increase, probability of success, timeline, course cost, and shows you the break-even point and expected return.
If the ROI calculation looks good and you’re genuinely prepared to use the skill immediately, buy it. If you’re buying it for the future version of yourself who will definitely follow through this time, put the money in your savings account instead and revisit when you have a real plan.