The 9 best AI tutor platforms in 2026, compared
2026-07-07 · The Alltutors.ai team
TL;DR
- The category is crowded with three different things wearing the same label: subject-bound tutoring apps for students, AI course generators for corporate training, and enterprise LMS platforms with AI bolted on top.
- A good AI tutor platform turns specific knowledge into a checkable practice loop, not just a nicer way to deliver a video or a slide deck.
- We checked each platform's own homepage before writing a word about it. Where a claim or number appears below, it's the vendor's own claim, not one we verified independently.
- No pricing is listed for most of these because most of them don't publish it. We didn't guess.
- Alltutors.ai is on the list and gets the same treatment: strong for turning your own expertise into a talking, practicing tutor fast, not yet built for enterprise SSO, embeds, or payments.
What "AI tutor platform" covers
Search for "AI tutor platform" and you'll get results for three different products wearing the same label: apps that tutor a student through a fixed subject, tools that generate corporate training courses from a prompt, and enterprise LMS suites that added an AI layer on top of a system built for something else. None of those descriptions is wrong. They're just answering different questions, and picking the wrong one for your situation is how a lot of these purchases end up unused six months in.
The best one turns what you know into a practice loop the learner gets checked against. Not a slicker way to ship a video. Several strong products on this list publish content fast and are honest that they don't run a practice loop.
We fetched every platform's own homepage before writing about it below, current as of this piece's publish date. Any number below - a completion rate, a customer count, a rating - is the vendor's own stated claim, attributed as such. We didn't verify it independently, and we skipped pricing anywhere it wasn't published on the page we checked, rather than estimate it.
If you want the argument for why "checkable" beats "polished," we covered the gap between finishing a course and retaining any of it in Completion isn't competence. Low completion is what turns into refund requests and one-star reviews.
The 9 platforms
1. Khan Academy's Khanmigo
Khanmigo is Khan Academy's AI tutoring and teaching assistant, built to guide a student toward an answer through questions rather than handing it over outright. It sits on top of Khan Academy's existing free content library and covers math, science, coding, history, and writing from elementary through college. Access is a paid subscription for parents and individual learners, free for teachers, and available to districts at scale. Their site says free teacher access reaches educators in 44+ countries, and cites a 4-star rating from Common Sense Media.
Best for: a student or family who wants a guided-discovery style tutor layered onto Khan Academy's own curriculum, or a teacher looking for a free classroom prep assistant. Worth knowing: it's anchored to Khan Academy's subject library. If you want a tutor built around your own material or your own specific expertise rather than a standard K-12/college curriculum, this isn't built for that job. (khanmigo.ai)
2. Squirrel AI
Squirrel AI pairs an adaptive learning engine, breaking a subject into what it calls nano-level objectives, with human instructors, delivered through physical, tablet-equipped learning centers rather than a pure self-serve app. It currently focuses on PreK-5, math-first; their site states it's expanding into California and New York after a long run of centers in China. Their site describes a flat enrollment-fee model, similar to a gym membership, with pricing set locally by each center.
Best for: a family that wants supervised, center-based adaptive tutoring for a young learner, with a human instructor in the room alongside the AI system. Worth knowing: this is a hybrid in-person model tied to physical centers in specific locations, not something you sign up for and use entirely online today, and the subject coverage is still narrow (math-first). (squirrelai.com)
3. CENTURY Tech
CENTURY combines an AI-personalized learning engine with a library of videos and self-marking questions for English, math, and science, aimed mostly at schools, colleges, and training providers, with a parent-facing home-learning subscription on the side. Their site lists parent pricing starting around £8.33/month for home learning and about £20.66/month for entrance-exam prep, with school and enterprise pricing gated behind a demo request.
Best for: a school, college, or training provider that wants a curriculum-aligned personalization layer with teacher-facing workload reduction and intervention data. Worth knowing: it's built around a fixed set of school subjects rather than an open "teach anything you know" model, so it's a poor fit if what you need is a tutor built from your own custom content. (century.tech)
4. Coursebox.ai
Coursebox generates full courses, quizzes, scenarios, flashcards, and video, from a prompt or an uploaded document, aimed at training providers, compliance teams, and organizations building corporate onboarding or safety training at scale. Their homepage claims 150,000+ training providers, 300,000+ courses created across 180+ countries, and a 4.7 Capterra rating. No pricing tiers are disclosed, though the site says even the free tier supports unlimited learners.
Best for: a compliance or training team that needs to turn existing documents into a structured, quizzed corporate course quickly and at volume. Worth knowing: the "personal AI tutor" the site advertises sits inside a fairly conventional course structure, generated fast, but still a course you build once and learners click through, closer to an accelerated course builder than a live tutoring conversation. (coursebox.ai)
5. LearnWorlds
LearnWorlds is a cloud LMS and course-marketplace platform for building, selling, and hosting online courses, aimed at training businesses, independent course creators, and organizations that want their own branded storefront. It bills itself as "the #1 AI-powered LMS built for learning businesses," and their site cites 13,000+ customers with a 4.7/5 G2 rating; specific pricing isn't shown on the homepage.
Best for: a creator or training business that wants to sell courses under its own brand, with payments, a mobile app, and a page-builder-style authoring flow already built in. Worth knowing: the AI here is assistive tooling layered onto a traditional course-builder (transcripts, quiz generation, reporting help), not a conversational tutor a learner talks with directly. If you're sitting on a half-finished Teachable or LearnWorlds course, tools like this sell and host well; the open question is whether your learner side is a click-through or a conversation. (learnworlds.com)
6. Docebo
Docebo is an enterprise-grade LMS, LXP, content-authoring, and analytics suite, built for large organizations training employees, customers, and partners at scale, with AI features spanning content authoring, personalized learning paths, autonomous "AgentHub" agents for admin work, cross-tool knowledge search, and AI-run roleplay coaching. Their site states 3,500+ organizations use the platform and names Zoom (training 2 million learners) and Booking.com as customers. It cites case-study claims like 30% faster onboarding and 80% lower admin overhead. Pricing isn't published; you'll need a sales conversation.
Best for: a large enterprise that needs a single, deeply integrated system of record for training employees, customers, and partners, with heavy admin and analytics tooling. Worth knowing: this is the heavyweight end of the category. The depth that makes it valuable to a 3,500-person rollout is exactly what makes it overkill, and likely cost-prohibitive, for a solo creator or a small team just trying to stand up one tutor. (docebo.com)
7. Synthesia
Synthesia generates studio-quality video using AI avatars and voiceovers, aimed at enterprise L&D, sales, HR, and marketing teams that need training or explainer video without a camera crew. Their site offers 240+ avatars and 160+ languages with one-click translation, claims up to 90% time and cost savings versus traditional video production, and lists SOC 2, GDPR, and ISO 42001 compliance; a free plan includes 10 minutes of video per month, with paid tiers detailed on a separate pricing page.
Best for: a team that needs to produce a lot of training video fast, and already has, or plans to build, somewhere else to house it as a structured course. Worth knowing: Synthesia makes the video. It doesn't build the study plan or the practice around it. Most teams using it are producing content that then gets loaded into an LMS or tutor elsewhere, not replacing one. (synthesia.io)
8. SC Training (formerly EdApp), by SafetyCulture
SC Training is a mobile-first microlearning LMS, rebranded from EdApp under SafetyCulture, built for training distributed frontline teams across manufacturing, retail, healthcare, hospitality, and logistics. It offers AI-assisted course creation from an existing document or a prompt, including PDF-to-course conversion, and their site advertises 1,000+ ready-made editable courses alongside it. Their site claims training built up to 3x faster, an average 5-minute lesson, and an 82% completion rate, with clients including Coca-Cola, Audi, and Pernod Ricard. Pricing isn't on the homepage.
Best for: an operations or L&D team training a large, distributed, often non-desk workforce on short, mobile-first lessons. Worth knowing: it's built for fast compliance and onboarding content at scale, not for building a single AI tutor around one person's specific expertise. (training.safetyculture.com)
9. Alltutors.ai
Alltutors.ai starts somewhere else. Instead of writing a course outline or uploading a slide deck, a creator talks through what they know in a chat interview. It captures who the learners are, the goal, the depth, and the materials to ground it in. From that, the platform co-builds a study plan out of formats a learner actually does: a Socratic sparring chat where they argue a case against the tutor persona, plus quizzes, flashcards, a two-voice podcast, narrated lectures, tap-to-explore infographics, comic-panel stories, and 1v1 battle modes with a course leaderboard. Not one content type on repeat. You can give the tutor a generated avatar and a synthetic voice with its own teaching and feedback persona, so what a learner meets reads as you, not a generic bot. Uploaded files and links (Google Drive too) get chunked and embedded, then encrypted at rest, so answers trace back to your own material instead of the model's general knowledge. When it's ready, you publish to a share link: private, link-only, or public.
Best for: three kinds of people. If you've built an audience and want an AI version of you your fans can learn from one-on-one, one that keeps teaching while you're offline, this is aimed at you. If you're a tutor or coach whose income is capped by the hours you can sell and whose course stalls out at low completion, the point is getting learners to practice and finish. And if you own onboarding and a key expert is about to leave with knowledge nobody wrote down, it turns a handbook plus one recorded interview into a guide new hires can talk to. Worth knowing: there's no embeddable widget for your own site yet. Access is a share link, not an embed. There's no built-in payments either, so if you want to charge, you gate the tutor behind a private link and run checkout on your own side for now, with native payments on the roadmap. SSO and audit logs aren't live yet; they're planned for Team plans. If any of those three is a hard requirement today, this isn't your fit yet. You can see the interview-style build in our quickstart guide, try it yourself at /create, or book a walkthrough if you'd rather see it against your own material first.
Comparison at a glance
| Platform | Best for | Worth knowing |
|---|---|---|
| Khanmigo | Students/families and teachers wanting a guided-discovery tutor on Khan Academy's curriculum | Bound to Khan Academy's own subject library, not your own content |
| Squirrel AI | Families wanting supervised, center-based adaptive math tutoring for young learners | Physical-center model in specific locations, not a pure online self-serve tool |
| CENTURY Tech | Schools and colleges wanting an AI personalization layer over fixed subjects | Curriculum-bound, not built for custom or expert-specific content |
| Coursebox.ai | Compliance/training teams turning documents into corporate courses fast | Tutor chat is a layer on a fairly conventional course structure |
| LearnWorlds | Creators and training businesses selling courses under their own brand | AI is assistive tooling on a traditional course-builder, not a live tutoring agent |
| Docebo | Large enterprises needing one integrated LMS/LXP for employees, customers, partners | Deep and heavy; likely overkill for a solo creator or small team |
| Synthesia | Teams needing fast, camera-free AI-avatar training video | Makes the video, not the study plan or the practice loop around it |
| SC Training (SafetyCulture) | Ops/L&D teams training large distributed frontline workforces | Built for fast compliance/onboarding content, not one person's specific expertise |
| Alltutors.ai | Creators, tutors and coaches, and onboarding owners turning what they know into a talking, practicing tutor | No embed widget, no payments, no SSO/audit logs yet |
How to choose
Start from the job, not the category label. If you've got an audience and you're tired of splitting revenue with a platform for ads and sponsors, the job is packaging yourself, not authoring slides. If you're a tutor or coach whose income tops out at the hours you can sell and whose course sits half-finished, the job is getting learners to practice and complete, not to publish more video. And if you own onboarding and a key expert is about to walk out with everything only they know, the job is capturing that before it leaves.
The other jobs on this list have clear homes too. Standing up training for a distributed frontline workforce? SC Training or Coursebox will get you there faster than a from-scratch build. A 3,000-person enterprise rollout with procurement and security review is what Docebo's depth is for. A school evaluating a curriculum-wide personalization layer should be talking to Khanmigo or CENTURY.
But if the bottleneck is that you know something well and don't have a course, a script, or a syllabus for it yet, most of the platforms above still expect you to arrive with an outline or a document. That's the specific gap an interview-first build is meant to close, and it's worth trying against your own material rather than taking anyone's word for it, ours included.
And if the platform you're comparing Alltutors.ai against is ChatGPT itself, not another vendor on this list, we've written a fuller side-by-side of a custom GPT vs a purpose-built AI tutor that goes dimension by dimension.
If you want to see what that looks like before deciding anything, start building at /create or book a short walkthrough and bring your own subject to it.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between an 'AI tutor' and an 'AI course creator'?
An AI tutor holds something like a conversation: it asks a question, checks your answer, and adjusts. An AI course creator mostly speeds up building traditional content - slides, videos, quizzes - that a learner still clicks through on their own. Several platforms on this list blend the two, so check which one you're getting before you commit.
Why doesn't this list include pricing for most platforms?
Because most of these companies don't publish it. Enterprise LMS platforms and several AI course builders route pricing through a sales call or a separate page we didn't fetch. Rather than guess a number, we left it out.
Is a platform built for schools automatically wrong for a solo creator, or vice versa?
Not automatically, but the fit is usually poor in one direction. A platform priced and built for district-wide school deployments (seat licenses, admin consoles, procurement cycles) is a heavy lift for one person building a single course. And a self-serve creator tool usually can't clear an enterprise security review either.
Where does Alltutors.ai fit if I already have a course outline written?
You can still use it - materials upload alongside the interview. But the advantage shows up when you don't have an outline yet and would rather talk through what you know than write it down first. If you've got existing course material, bring it in as an upload and let the tutor ground on it.
How was this list put together?
We picked well-known, currently live platforms across different corners of the category (subject tutoring, corporate course generation, enterprise LMS, AI video, course-selling platforms) and fetched each one's own homepage before writing about it, so the description reflects what the vendor currently says about itself.