Why Most Course Creators Underprice
The universal pricing anxiety — and why charging more leads to better outcomes for everyone
Most course creators underprice their work — and it costs them revenue, student results, and long-term business sustainability. If you've ever stared at a blank pricing field and felt your stomach tighten, you're not alone. Pricing anxiety is nearly universal. As pricing coach Tom Buford puts it:
"I don't think I've ever had anybody set a price, and I said, 'Oh, you should come down.'"
— Tom Buford, Charge What You Deserve
Understanding why creators underprice is the first step toward fixing it.
What Are the Three Reasons Creators Underprice?
Three forces push creators toward prices that are too low:
Impostor syndrome. You look at your own knowledge and think, "Who am I to charge that much?" Your expertise feels easy to you — because you've spent years developing it. The yoga teacher who spots alignment issues in a glance doesn't realize that skill took a decade to build. The marketing consultant who instinctively knows which headline will convert doesn't see how rare that instinct is.
The comparison trap. You search your topic on Udemy, see a $19 course with 4.5 stars, and panic. But mass-market platforms compete on volume — they need tens of thousands of enrollments to make the math work. You're building something fundamentally different: a focused transformation with personal attention. Comparing your course to Udemy is like comparing a private cooking class to a YouTube recipe video.
Fear of rejection. A low price feels safer. If someone says no to $47, it stings less than a no at $497. But this safety is an illusion. Low prices don't just attract fewer committed students — they actively push away the people who would benefit most from your work.
Why Does Charging More Lead to Better Student Outcomes?
Here's what most new creators don't expect: charging more actually produces better outcomes for your students. Tom Buford describes it this way — imagine you have a health problem. You find two solutions: a $17 e-book and a $1,700 guided program. You buy both. Which one do you use first? Every time, it's the $1,700 program. The investment creates commitment.
When students pay a meaningful amount, they show up differently. They complete more of the course. They do the exercises. They ask better questions. They implement what they learn. And because they're more engaged, they get better results — which means better testimonials, more referrals, and an easier time marketing your next launch.
The paradox is real: charging more often leads to happier students.
Why Do Low Prices Push Away Your Best Students?
There's another dynamic that catches creators off guard. When a serious buyer sees a course priced at $47, their first thought isn't "what a deal!" — it's "how much value could this really deliver?" Low pricing sends a signal, and it's not the signal you intend.
The people with the budget and motivation to invest in real transformation will often skip right past a cheap course, assuming it can't offer what they need. Tom compares the anxiety of raising your price to skydiving: "The scariest part isn't the jump — it's the drive to the drop zone." Once you actually raise your price and see that people still enroll (and get better results), the fear dissolves.
The Path Forward
None of this means you should slap a $2,000 price tag on an untested course. Pricing well is a skill, and this guide will walk you through it step by step — from understanding what drives your course's value, to finding your price range, to testing and refining over time.
But start with this shift in mindset: your goal isn't to find the lowest price people will accept. It's to find the price that reflects the real value of the transformation you deliver.
As Danny Iny of Mirasee has said: "The best thing you can do for your students is charge enough that they take you seriously."