Short verdict
Masteriyo is the strongest free LMS for WordPress in 2026: its core, no-cost features let you build and monetize courses without being forced to upgrade. The other four—LearnPress, Academy LMS, Tutor LMS, and Fox LMS—each have useful strengths for particular use cases, but most reserve important functionality behind paid upgrades.
Overview
This guide compares five leading free WordPress LMS plugins tested in 2026. For each plugin I summarize the free feature highlights, when you’ll likely need to upgrade, what the admin/user experience is like, and the main Pro additions.
1) Masteriyo — Best overall free LMS
Why it stands out: Masteriyo’s free tier includes real commerce (cart, checkout, coupons) and multiple native payment gateways (Stripe, PayPal, SureCart, Lemon Squeezy, Mollie) plus unlimited courses, students, lessons and quizzes. That makes it a genuinely usable free LMS rather than a light demo.
Key free features: drag-and-drop course/lesson/quiz builder; built-in e‑commerce (cart/checkout/order management); several native gateways; certificate builder with QR verification; SCORM import; OpenAI (ChatGPT) assisted course creation; sequential content drip; one-click import/migration from other LMS plugins; frontend dashboards, course Q&A, lesson previews; page builder compatibility; optional WooCommerce integration.
When to skip the free plan: If you need built-in multi-instructor revenue sharing, cohort workflows, prerequisites, a full gradebook, or live-class integrations, those are Pro-only. For free multi-instructor administration, Academy LMS or Fox LMS may be better fits.
Admin experience: Clean, modern interface with clearly labeled menus. I was able to connect Stripe and OpenAI quickly and assemble a basic course in a short session.
Pro highlights: multi-instructor revenue splits; advanced drip and prerequisites; assignments and gradebook; advanced certificate templates; cohort/group features and B2B pricing; white-labeling; richer quiz types, PDF/audio lessons, native Zoom lesson type, 2FA and extra integrations.
2) LearnPress — Flexible lesson content and a long track record
Why it stands out: LearnPress has been around for years and is a solid, no-cost option for schools and nonprofits. Its lesson editor behaves like a regular post, letting you mix video, audio, text and images inside the same lesson easily.
Key free features: unlimited courses/lessons; multimedia lessons; OpenAI integration; reusable lesson/question banks; quizzes with timed options; built-in checkout with PayPal and offline payments; external checkout redirects; free add-ons (coming soon, student list, prerequisites, reviews, bbPress/BuddyPress integrations); SEO-friendly URLs.
When to skip the free plan: Monetization beyond PayPal and offline payments requires paid add-ons. Certificates, assignments, drip, and many gateway integrations are sold separately. If you need many of those right away, Masteriyo may be a better free starting point.
Admin experience: The classic wp-admin dashboard can feel dated, but there’s a separate modern course builder once you find it; navigation is generally beginner-friendly after the initial setup.
Pro highlights/add-ons: drag-and-drop certificate builder, assignments and gradebook, content drip, live integrations (Zoom/Meet), Stripe/other gateways, WooCommerce and WPML support, co-instructor/commission add-ons.
3) Academy LMS — Best for instructor marketplaces
Why it stands out: Academy LMS’s free tier is one of the rare no-cost options that includes multi-instructor revenue sharing, instructor earnings/withdrawals, and WooCommerce integration—making it attractive for Udemy-style marketplaces.
Key free features: frontend course builder and dashboards; multi-instructor revenue management; Academy Player to unify video presentation; basic certificates; course reviews and wishlist; analytics SPA; CSV import/export; built-in form builder, webhooks and RTL support.
When to skip the free plan: Many advanced features are Pro-only: content drip, email notifications, course prerequisites, assignments, SCORM and some security extras. Also, payment collection often requires a second plugin (StoreEngine), so setup is a little more involved.
Admin experience: Powerful but has a steeper on-ramp. You’ll likely install Academy LMS plus StoreEngine and spend time connecting the two; setup wizards help but expect a longer initial configuration.
Pro highlights: advanced quiz types, email/on-site push notifications, drill/PREREQ features, Zoom/Google Meet/Google Classroom integrations, assignments and gradebook, SCORM, white-label, team/group training tools and many marketing integrations.
4) Tutor LMS — Commerce-focused core with many paywalls
Why it stands out: Tutor LMS gives you a solid set of commerce/checkout features (coupons, tax, refunds, order management) in the free layer, but many “standard” LMS features (certificates, drip, assignments) are reserved for Pro.
Key free features: unlimited courses/students/instructors; PayPal payments or WooCommerce conversion; coupon/tax/order management; quiz builder; separate student/instructor dashboards; Q&A and lesson comments; video lessons via YouTube/Vimeo; page builder compatibility; migration tool.
When to skip the free plan: If you need certificates, content drip, assignments, gradebook, subscriptions, or live classes, those are Pro features. You may outgrow the free plan sooner than with Masteriyo or LearnPress.
Admin experience: Setup wizard is clean and helpful; the course builder is well designed. Some admin tasks (like adding instructors) can be less intuitive and require using WordPress user roles.
Pro highlights: live classes (Zoom/Meet), content drip, certificates, multi-instructor messaging and revenue features, many payment gateways (Stripe, Klarna, Razorpay, etc.), robust integrations including OpenAI, push notifications and memberships.
5) Fox LMS — Simple and friendly for beginners
Why it stands out: Fox LMS is newer but gives beginners a fast, guided path to launching courses. The free tier covers the essentials (courses, quizzes, instructors, PayPal) and includes helpful in-dashboard tutorials and setup wizards.
Key free features: unlimited courses/lessons/students/instructors; drag-and-drop builder; text/video lessons; course-level sequential lesson drip; user-specific dashboards; unlimited quizzes; Q&A and announcements; PayPal payments; Gutenberg/Elementor/Classic support; course permalinks; coupons and course discounts.
When to skip the free plan: Certificates, course reviews, more advanced drip scheduling and additional payment methods (Stripe/WooCommerce) are Pro-only. Revenue sharing is also a paid feature, so it’s not ideal for marketplaces that need consolidated commission handling without upgrading.
Admin experience: Minimalist and approachable. Fewer settings reduce confusion; built-in video tutorials and small setup wizards guide you step-by-step.
Pro highlights: certificate builder, AI lesson builder, revenue sharing, Stripe and WooCommerce integration, advanced quizzes, wishlist/bundles, email/dashboard notifications and gamification support.
Is a free LMS plugin enough?
Yes—depending on your project. If you want to launch and monetize without paying for a plugin, Masteriyo is the most complete free option. If you need very flexible lesson content and lots of free add-ons, LearnPress is strong. For a multi-instructor marketplace, Academy LMS is purpose-built; for commerce-oriented features in the core, consider Tutor LMS; for the simplest, fastest setup, Fox LMS is a good beginner-friendly pick.
How to choose
1) List absolute must-have features (gateways, certificates, drip, multi-instructor, SCORM). 2) Pick the plugin whose free core covers most of those. 3) Test installation and a short proof-of-concept course to validate the workflow before committing to Pro plans.
If you want help narrowing choices for your exact situation, tell me which features matter most (payments you need, multi-instructor support, certificates, SCORM, live classes, AI assistance, etc.) and I’ll recommend the best fit.