Verdict (TL;DR)
Verified 2026-05-23Education LMS (K12 districts and higher-ed institutions for course delivery, assignments, grading, parent/student portals) is a distinct category from corporate L&D LMS (see our [Top 10 LMS Software](/top-10-lms-software) for Cornerstone, Docebo, etc.). The 2026 picture: Canvas (Instructure) is the adoption leader in US higher-ed and a strong K12 contender, taken private by Thoma Bravo in July 2024 for ~$4.8B with the usual PE renewal-cycle pricing pressure expected on 2025-2027 cohorts. Google Classroom (free with Google Workspace for Education) is the K12 budget killer for paid LMS at all but the largest US districts and most of EMEA. Schoology (PowerSchool-owned) remains a K12 staple. Blackboard Learn (merged with Anthology in 2021) continues to lose new-evaluation share against Canvas and D2L in higher-ed. Moodle is the global OSS university default, free software with real implementation cost at scale; Moodle Workplace is the commercial path. D2L Brightspace leads higher-ed in Canada and Australia. Microsoft Teams for Education is bundled with M365 Education and increasingly used as a de facto LMS layer. itslearning holds Nordic and German K12. PowerSchool combines K12 SIS with LMS via the Schoology acquisition (PowerSchool itself taken private by Bain for $5.6B in 2024). Open edX rounds out the open-source higher-ed alternative.
Best for your specific use case
- US higher-ed adoption leader: Canvas (Instructure) Largest US higher-ed installed base; strong K12 footprint. Default modern evaluation winner since ~2018. Thoma Bravo PE pricing risk on 2025-2027 renewals.
- K12 free / Google Workspace for Education districts: Google Classroom Free with Workspace for Education. The K12 budget killer for paid LMS at all but the largest districts.
- US K12 paid LMS: Schoology Learning PowerSchool-owned. Strong K12 gradebook + parent portal + SIS bundle for districts wanting more than Google Classroom.
- Legacy higher-ed enterprise (incumbent): Blackboard Learn (Anthology) Large incumbent higher-ed installed base. New evaluations rarely favor Anthology in 2026; renewal-only story.
- Self-hosted university / global OSS: Moodle Most-deployed LMS globally, dominant in European and Indian universities. Free software, real implementation cost at scale.
- Higher-ed in Canada, Australia, parts of EU: D2L Brightspace Canadian-built (NASDAQ:DTOL). Higher-ed leader in Canada and Australia; strong UK and Singapore footprint.
- M365 Education-anchored schools: Microsoft Teams for Education Bundled with M365 A1/A3/A5. De facto LMS layer for Microsoft-anchored districts and universities.
- Nordic and German K12: itslearning Norwegian-built. Strong adoption in Norway, Sweden, Germany, Netherlands K12.
- K12 SIS + LMS bundle: PowerSchool Learning PowerSchool owns Schoology and a K12 SIS used by ~50M+ students. Single-vendor SIS + LMS story for US districts.
- Open-source higher-ed MOOC-style: Open edX Open-source platform behind edX. Used by universities for self-hosted MOOC-style course delivery, especially MIT, Harvard ecosystems and corporate adaptations.
Education LMS software is the operational platform for K12 districts and higher-ed institutions delivering coursework, managing assignments, grading, running parent/student portals, and integrating with the student information system (SIS). This is a different category from corporate L&D LMS, which is covered in our Top 10 LMS Software ranking (Cornerstone OnDemand, Docebo, TalentLMS, etc., focused on enterprise compliance training and employee development). The two categories share the LMS label but the workflows diverge sharply: education LMS centers on gradebooks, parent portals, SIS integration (Skyward, Infinite Campus, PowerSchool SIS, Banner, PeopleSoft), LTI 1.3 tool interoperability, and FERPA/COPPA compliance; corporate LMS centers on SCORM compliance content, HRIS integration, and skills graphs.
We evaluated the K12 + higher-ed slice. The 2026 lineup reflects three structural realities: (1) Canvas (Instructure) has been the modern evaluation winner in US higher-ed since ~2018, accelerated by Blackboard Learn migrations; Thoma Bravo's $4.8B take-private in July 2024 introduces renewal-cycle pricing pressure starting 2025-2027. (2) Google Classroom, free with Google Workspace for Education and bundled with Chromebooks, has displaced paid LMS at most US K12 districts under ~10,000 students and across much of EMEA K12. (3) Moodle remains the global OSS default, especially in European, Latin American, and Indian universities, though "free" understates real implementation and hosting cost at university scale. Companion rankings: Top 10 LMS Software for corporate L&D, and HR-adjacent stack pieces.
Quick comparison
| Product | Best for | Starts at | 10-emp/mo* | Pricing | G2 | Geo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Canvas (Instructure) | K12 districts and higher-ed institutions | $0 | $0 | 4.4 | Strongest in US; significant footprint in UK, Australia, Nordics, Latin America | |
| 2 Google Classroom | K12 districts of any size; some higher-ed | $0 | $0 | 4.6 | Global; particularly dominant in US K12, Latin America, parts of EMEA | |
| 3 Schoology Learning | US K12 districts | $0 | $0 | 4.2 | Strongest in US K12; some international K12 | |
| 4 Blackboard Learn (Anthology) | Higher-ed institutions, government training | Quote | - | 3.7 | Global; strongest in US higher-ed legacy installed base, UK, Middle East | |
| 5 Moodle | Universities, schools, corporate (via Moodle Workplace) | $0 | $0 | 4.1 | Global; dominant in EU, Latin America, India, Africa higher-ed | |
| 6 D2L Brightspace | Higher-ed institutions, especially Canada, Australia, UK | Quote | - | 4.1 | Strongest in Canada, Australia, UK, Singapore; meaningful US footprint | |
| 7 Microsoft Teams for Education | K12 districts and higher-ed institutions on M365 Education | $0 | $0 | 4.3 | Global; particularly strong in US K12 with Microsoft device fleets, UK education sector, parts of EMEA | |
| 8 itslearning | European K12 districts and schools | Quote | - | 4.0 | Strongest in Norway, Sweden, Germany, Netherlands; growing in France, US | |
| 9 PowerSchool Learning (Unified Classroom) | US K12 districts | Quote | - | 3.8 | Dominant in US K12; some Canada and international K12 | |
| 10 Open edX | Universities, governments, large corporations | $0 | $0 | 4.0 | Global; MIT/Harvard origin; substantial deployments in EU, Latin America, India, Africa |
*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.
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| From ↓ / To → | Canvas (Instructure) | Google Classroom | Schoology Learning | Blackboard Learn (Anthology) | Moodle | D2L Brightspace | Microsoft Teams for Education | itslearning | PowerSchool Learning (Unified Classroom) | Open edX |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canvas (Instructure) | - | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 |
| Google Classroom | Medium 5 | - | Medium 5 | Hard 7 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 |
| Schoology Learning | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | - | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 |
| Blackboard Learn (Anthology) | OK 4 | Hard 7 | OK 4 | - | Hard 7 | OK 4 | Hard 7 | OK 4 | OK 4 | Medium 5 |
| Moodle | Medium 5 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Hard 7 | - | Medium 5 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 |
| D2L Brightspace | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | - | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 |
| Microsoft Teams for Education | Medium 5 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Hard 7 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | - | Medium 5 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 |
| itslearning | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | - | Medium 6 | Hard 7 |
| PowerSchool Learning (Unified Classroom) | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | OK 4 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | - | Hard 7 |
| Open edX | Hard 7 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 | Medium 5 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 | Medium 6 | Hard 7 | Hard 7 | - |
All 10, ranked and reviewed
Each product gets the same scrutiny: who it’s actually best for, where it falls short, what it really costs, and how it scores across six dimensions.
Canvas (Instructure)
US higher-ed adoption leader and modern K12 contender.
Canvas is the LMS from Instructure, founded 2008 in Salt Lake City. The product is the modern evaluation winner in US higher-ed since approximately 2018, taking material share from Blackboard Learn. Instructure listed publicly (NYSE:INST) in 2021 and was taken private by Thoma Bravo for ~$4.8B in July 2024. Canvas covers K12 and higher-ed with gradebook, assignments, SpeedGrader, Studio (video), New Quizzes, Outcomes, and a mature LTI 1.3 ecosystem. Best fit: US higher-ed institutions and mid-to-large K12 districts wanting a modern cloud LMS. Trade-offs: post-Thoma Bravo renewal-cycle pricing pressure is the standard PE playbook (existing 2-3 year district contracts protected through term; new and renewing cohorts in 2025-2027 should expect material increases); product velocity in 2024-2025 has been described by educators as steady-but-not-accelerating.
US higher-ed institutions of any size and mid-to-large K12 districts (10,000+ students) wanting modern cloud LMS with strong LTI ecosystem and a well-documented grading workflow.
Small K12 districts where Google Classroom is free and sufficient; institutions with hard caps on PE-owned vendors; OSS-mandated public universities in EU.
Strengths
- Largest US higher-ed installed base by institution count
- Modern, well-documented LTI 1.3 ecosystem
- SpeedGrader and inline grading workflow widely preferred over Blackboard
- Canvas Commons open content sharing across institutions
- Mature mobile apps (Teacher, Student, Parent)
Weaknesses
- Thoma Bravo PE ownership creates 2025-2027 renewal pricing risk
- Pricing opaque and district-negotiated
- New Quizzes migration from Classic Quizzes has been prolonged and contentious
Pricing tiers
opaque- Canvas Free-for-TeacherFree individual instructor tier, no institutional features$0 /mo
- Canvas K12District-negotiated annual; varies by enrollmentQuote
- Canvas Higher EducationInstitution-negotiated annual; varies by FTE enrollmentQuote
- · Implementation services often via certified Instructure Partners
- · Studio (video) and Catalog add-ons priced separately
- · Annual renewal increases expected to step up under Thoma Bravo
Key features
- +Gradebook + SpeedGrader
- +Assignments, Discussions, Quizzes (Classic and New Quizzes)
- +Canvas Studio (video)
- +Canvas Commons (content sharing)
- +Outcomes and rubrics
- +LTI 1.3 + LTI Advantage
- +Mobile apps (Teacher, Student, Parent)
Google Classroom
Free LMS bundled with Google Workspace for Education.
Google Classroom launched 2014 as the LMS layer of Google Workspace for Education. It is free in the Education Fundamentals tier (the default for most K12 districts) and bundled with Education Standard, Teaching and Learning Upgrade, and Education Plus. Combined with Chromebook ubiquity in US K12, this bundle has displaced paid LMS at most K12 districts under ~10,000 students. Best fit: K12 districts and any institution already standardized on Google Workspace. Trade-offs: Classroom is intentionally lightweight (assignments, basic grading, Drive integration) and lacks the gradebook depth, parent portal sophistication, and standards-based grading workflows that paid K12 LMS (Schoology, Canvas K12) offer. SIS integration is functional but shallow compared with PowerSchool SIS + Schoology.
K12 districts standardized on Google Workspace for Education and Chromebooks, especially under ~10,000 students where paid LMS is hard to justify.
Higher-ed institutions needing LTI ecosystem + Outcomes (Canvas/D2L better), K12 districts with sophisticated gradebook/standards-based reporting needs (Schoology better), Microsoft-anchored districts (Teams for Education better).
Strengths
- Free in Education Fundamentals tier
- Tight Google Workspace + Chromebook integration
- Trivial onboarding for Google-standardized districts
- Constantly improved with no migration cost
- Strongest assignment + Drive workflow in category
Weaknesses
- Gradebook depth and standards-based grading are limited vs Schoology/Canvas K12
- Parent communication features added late and remain thin
- SIS integration shallower than purpose-built K12 LMS
- Few options for districts that need policy-level audit and granular role permissions
Pricing tiers
public- Education FundamentalsFree for qualified institutions; includes Classroom$0 /mo
- Education StandardAdds security + analytics; per-FTE student pricingQuote
- Teaching and Learning UpgradeAdds advanced Meet + Classroom add-ons; per-licensed-teacherQuote
- Education PlusFull suite; per-FTE student pricingQuote
- · Education Standard/Plus require negotiated FTE pricing
- · Chromebook hardware refresh cycles (not vendor cost but commonly bundled in district decisions)
Key features
- +Assignments + Google Docs/Slides/Sheets integration
- +Basic gradebook
- +Stream + announcements
- +Rubrics
- +Originality reports (limited)
- +Practice sets (Teaching and Learning Upgrade)
- +Mobile apps (iOS, Android)
Schoology Learning
PowerSchool-owned K12 LMS with strong gradebook and SIS pairing.
Schoology launched 2009 as a K12-focused LMS and was acquired by PowerSchool in 2019. PowerSchool itself was taken private by Bain Capital for ~$5.6B in late 2024. The Schoology + PowerSchool SIS pairing is the most natural single-vendor SIS + LMS story for US K12 districts. Strengths: deep K12 gradebook with standards-based grading, mature parent portal, strong SIS rostering, district-level analytics. Best fit: US K12 districts wanting more than Google Classroom, especially districts already on PowerSchool SIS. Trade-offs: outside K12, Schoology is a poor fit; product velocity since the PowerSchool acquisition has been described as conservative; Bain take-private adds 2025-2027 pricing-pressure risk consistent with PE playbook.
US K12 districts of any size wanting a paid LMS with strong K12 gradebook, parent portal, and SIS integration, especially districts already on PowerSchool SIS.
Higher-ed institutions (Canvas, D2L, Moodle, Blackboard better); districts where Google Classroom is free and sufficient; Microsoft-anchored districts.
Strengths
- Mature K12 gradebook with standards-based grading
- Strong parent portal and communication features
- Tight pairing with PowerSchool SIS (single-vendor story)
- Mature LTI tool ecosystem for K12 publishers
- District-level analytics and reporting
Weaknesses
- Outside K12 (higher-ed, corporate) Schoology is a poor fit
- Product velocity since 2019 PowerSchool acquisition described as conservative
- Bain Capital 2024 take-private adds 2025-2027 renewal pricing risk
Pricing tiers
opaque- Schoology Basic (free for individual teachers)Free tier for individual teachers, no district features$0 /mo
- Schoology Enterprise (district)District-negotiated; varies by enrollmentQuote
- · Implementation and PD services priced separately
- · SIS integration setup commonly bundled with PowerSchool SIS deal
Key features
- +K12 gradebook with standards-based grading
- +Parent and student portals
- +Assignments and assessments
- +Discussion forums
- +Course materials and folders
- +LTI 1.3 support
- +District-level analytics
Blackboard Learn (Anthology)
Legacy higher-ed enterprise incumbent; renewal-only story in 2026.
Blackboard Learn (founded 1997) merged with Anthology in 2021 to form Anthology Inc., combining Blackboard's LMS with Anthology's SIS, CRM, and analytics suite. The merged company is owned by Veritas Capital and Leeds Equity. Blackboard Learn Ultra is the modern UI on the rewritten platform; Blackboard Learn Original remains in use at many institutions. The product retains a large higher-ed installed base, especially in legacy enterprise institutions and government / military programs. Trade-offs: two complex enterprise platforms merged in 2021; integration roadmap remains unclear through 2026; incumbent contracts continue but new RFP evaluations rarely favor Anthology against Canvas or D2L; the Ultra-vs-Original migration has dragged longer than initially projected. Best fit: existing Blackboard institutions whose migration math does not favor switching.
Existing Blackboard institutions whose switching cost calculation does not favor migration; government, military, and federal training programs with deep Blackboard integration.
New higher-ed evaluations (Canvas or D2L typically win), K12 districts (Schoology, Canvas K12, Google Classroom better), institutions wanting fast-moving product roadmap.
Strengths
- Large incumbent higher-ed installed base
- Strong government, military, federal training presence
- Blackboard Ally accessibility tooling is genuinely strong
- Anthology suite offers SIS + CRM + LMS single-vendor option
- Mature enterprise hosting and support contracts
Weaknesses
- New evaluations rarely favor Anthology in 2026
- Ultra-vs-Original migration prolonged and contentious
- 2021 Anthology merger integration roadmap remains unclear
- Product velocity below Canvas and D2L
Pricing tiers
opaque- Blackboard Learn (SaaS)Institution-negotiated; varies by FTE enrollmentQuote
- Blackboard Learn (Self/Managed Hosted)Self or managed hosting; declining optionQuote
- Anthology Reach / EncompassSIS + CRM add-ons priced separatelyQuote
- · Ultra migration services priced separately
- · Anthology Ally and add-on modules priced separately
Key features
- +Gradebook (Ultra and Original)
- +Assignments, Discussions, Tests
- +Blackboard Ally (accessibility)
- +Blackboard Collaborate (web conferencing)
- +LTI 1.3 support
- +Anthology suite tie-ins (SIS, CRM)
Moodle
Global open-source LMS default; dominant in non-US higher-ed.
Moodle, founded 2002 by Martin Dougiamas, is the most-deployed LMS globally with hundreds of millions of learners across over 100,000 sites. The core platform is open-source under GPL and freely self-hostable; Moodle Pty Ltd. (the commercial steward) sells MoodleCloud (managed hosting), Moodle Workplace (the corporate-focused fork covered in our Top 10 LMS Software ranking), and works through a global network of Moodle Partners for institutional implementations. Moodle dominates European, Latin American, Indian, and African higher-ed. Strengths: open-source flexibility, no vendor lock-in, largest plugin ecosystem in any LMS, data sovereignty for self-hosters. Trade-offs: "free" understates real cost at university scale (hosting, sysadmin, plugin maintenance, security patching, accessibility audits); UI is functional but dated compared with Canvas; partner-quality varies widely. The honest message: Moodle is free software with real implementation cost at scale.
Universities and educational institutions globally that want open-source flexibility and data sovereignty, especially in EU, Latin America, India, Africa where Moodle is the default higher-ed LMS.
Small K12 districts (overkill, Google Classroom or Schoology better), institutions without dedicated LMS sysadmin resources, buyers wanting polished commercial product with single-vendor SLA.
Strengths
- Open-source GPL with no vendor lock-in
- Largest plugin ecosystem in any LMS
- Self-hostable for data sovereignty
- Dominant in European, Latin American, Indian, African higher-ed
- Lowest license-cost ceiling for large-scale deployments
- Strong LTI 1.3 + standards support
Weaknesses
- "Free" understates real hosting + sysadmin + plugin maintenance cost at scale
- UI is functional but dated vs Canvas
- Moodle Partner implementation quality varies widely
- No central commercial support unless via paid partner
Pricing tiers
partial- Moodle (self-hosted)GPL open-source; self-hosting infra and ops costs apply$0 /mo
- MoodleCloud (managed)Managed hosting; tiers from Starter to Premium based on user count$110 /mo
- Moodle Partner deploymentImplementation + hosting + support via Moodle Partner networkQuote
- · Self-hosting infrastructure costs (AWS/Azure/on-prem)
- · Plugin maintenance and security patching
- · Customization development
- · Accessibility audits for WCAG compliance
Key features
- +Open-source core LMS
- +Largest plugin marketplace in any LMS
- +Gradebook with multiple grading scales
- +Assignments, Quizzes, Forums, Workshops
- +LTI 1.3 + Caliper support
- +Mobile app (official Moodle App)
- +Multi-language (100+)
- +BigBlueButton web conferencing native plugin
D2L Brightspace
Higher-ed leader in Canada and Australia; strong K12 and corporate adjacencies.
D2L Brightspace is the LMS from D2L Corporation, founded 1999 in Kitchener, Ontario. D2L listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 2021 (TSX:DTOL). The product is the higher-ed LMS leader in Canada and Australia, with strong footprints in the UK, Singapore, and parts of the US (especially competency-based education programs). Strengths: strong accessibility track record, mature competency-based education support, public-company financial transparency, native HTML5 quizzing, and Brightspace Insights analytics. Trade-offs: outside Canada and Australia the brand has thinner installed base; new US RFP evaluations split between Canvas and D2L with Canvas typically winning on perceived modernity; pricing opaque and institution-negotiated.
Higher-ed institutions in Canada, Australia, UK, Singapore; US competency-based education programs; institutions prioritizing accessibility compliance and public-vendor stability.
K12 districts where Schoology/Canvas K12/Google Classroom dominate; institutions wanting the largest plugin ecosystem (Moodle/Canvas have more).
Strengths
- Higher-ed leader in Canada and Australia
- Strong competency-based education (CBE) support
- Mature accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA, robust VPAT)
- Public company financial transparency (TSX:DTOL)
- Brightspace Insights analytics is strong
Weaknesses
- Outside Canada/Australia the installed base is thinner
- New US RFPs typically favor Canvas on perceived modernity
- Pricing opaque and institution-negotiated
- Smaller LTI ecosystem than Canvas
Pricing tiers
opaque- Brightspace CoreInstitution-negotiated; varies by FTE enrollmentQuote
- Brightspace + Creator+ (advanced authoring)Adds Creator+ for content authoringQuote
- Brightspace + Performance+ (analytics)Adds advanced analytics moduleQuote
- · Implementation services priced separately
- · Add-on modules priced separately
- · Migration services from Blackboard/Canvas priced separately
Key features
- +Gradebook with rubrics
- +Assignments, Quizzes, Discussions
- +Brightspace Insights (analytics)
- +Competency-based education support
- +LTI 1.3 + LTI Advantage
- +Mobile app (Pulse)
- +Accessibility tooling
Microsoft Teams for Education
Bundled with M365 Education; de facto LMS layer for Microsoft-anchored schools.
Microsoft Teams for Education is the education tier of Microsoft Teams, bundled with Microsoft 365 Education (A1, A3, A5). Microsoft positions Teams for Education alongside the Class Notebook (OneNote-based) and the Assignments + Grades apps within Teams as a de facto LMS layer. Strengths: bundled with M365 Education (free A1 tier for qualified institutions), tight Office app integration, strong web conferencing, Microsoft Reflect for SEL. Trade-offs: not a full LMS in the traditional sense (gradebook, standards-based grading, parent portal, course catalog are thinner than Schoology or Canvas K12); SIS integration is functional but shallower than purpose-built K12 LMS; many districts run Teams for Education alongside (not instead of) a paid LMS.
K12 districts and higher-ed institutions standardized on Microsoft 365 Education, especially where Teams + OneNote Class Notebook already structures the learning workflow.
Districts needing deep standards-based gradebook (Schoology better), parent portal-heavy K12 districts, institutions on Google Workspace stack.
Strengths
- Bundled free in M365 A1 Education tier
- Tight Word/Excel/PowerPoint integration via Assignments
- Strong web conferencing for live classes
- Microsoft Reflect for social-emotional learning
- OneNote Class Notebook is a strong differentiator
Weaknesses
- Not a full LMS by traditional definition
- Gradebook is basic compared with Schoology/Canvas K12
- Parent portal is thin
- SIS integration shallower than purpose-built K12 LMS
Pricing tiers
public- M365 Education A1Free for qualified institutions; includes Teams for Education$0 /mo
- M365 Education A3Per-FTE; adds device management and advanced featuresQuote
- M365 Education A5Per-FTE; adds Power BI, advanced analytics, securityQuote
- · A3/A5 per-FTE pricing varies by institution size
- · Surface device commonly bundled in district decisions (not vendor cost)
Key features
- +Assignments + Grades within Teams
- +OneNote Class Notebook
- +Teams Meetings (live class)
- +Microsoft Reflect (SEL)
- +Insights analytics
- +Education-specific app templates
- +Speaker Coach + Reading Coach
itslearning
Nordic and German K12 LMS leader.
itslearning is a Norwegian-built K12 LMS, founded 1999 in Bergen and owned by Sanoma Learning (Dutch educational publisher). The product holds strong K12 positions in Norway, Sweden, Germany, and the Netherlands, with growing French and US footprints. Strengths: deep integration with European curricula and education ministries, mature parent portal localized per country, strong standards-based grading per European frameworks, native LTI 1.3 support. Trade-offs: outside European K12 the installed base is thin; English-language community and resources are smaller than Canvas/Moodle; product velocity is steady but not category-leading.
K12 districts and schools in Norway, Sweden, Germany, Netherlands, France wanting a European-built K12 LMS with strong local-curriculum alignment.
Higher-ed institutions (Canvas, Moodle, D2L better), US K12 districts (Schoology, Canvas K12, Google Classroom better), institutions wanting the largest LTI ecosystem.
Strengths
- Strong Norwegian, Swedish, German, Dutch K12 installed base
- Deep European curriculum integration
- Localized parent portal per country
- Standards-based grading per European frameworks
- European data residency (GDPR-aligned)
Weaknesses
- Outside European K12 the installed base is thin
- English-language community smaller than Canvas/Moodle
- Product velocity steady but not category-leading
Pricing tiers
opaque- itslearning K12District/school-negotiated; varies by enrollment and countryQuote
- itslearning Higher EducationInstitution-negotiatedQuote
- · Implementation services priced separately
- · Country-specific localization may be in-scope or add-on
Key features
- +Gradebook with European standards-based grading
- +Parent portal localized per country
- +Assignments and assessments
- +Course planner aligned to national curricula
- +LTI 1.3 support
- +Mobile apps
PowerSchool Learning (Unified Classroom)
K12 SIS + LMS single-vendor bundle for US districts.
PowerSchool is the dominant K12 student information system (SIS) in the US, used by tens of thousands of districts. PowerSchool's LMS story sits inside the Unified Classroom suite, combining the legacy PowerSchool Learning LMS (formerly Haiku Learning, acquired 2016) with the larger Schoology Learning acquisition (2019, ranked separately above as the flagship LMS). PowerSchool itself was taken private by Bain Capital for ~$5.6B in late 2024. The proposition: single-vendor SIS + LMS + gradebook + assessment + analytics. Trade-offs: PowerSchool's January 2025 customer data breach affecting student and educator records damaged trust across the customer base; Bain take-private adds 2025-2027 renewal pricing risk; the legacy PowerSchool Learning module specifically is in maintenance mode with Schoology positioned as the strategic LMS.
US K12 districts already on PowerSchool SIS wanting a single-vendor SIS + LMS bundle, primarily via Schoology Learning as the LMS layer.
Higher-ed institutions (PowerSchool is K12-only), non-US K12, districts that prioritize avoiding single-vendor concentration risk after the 2025 breach.
Strengths
- Largest US K12 SIS installed base for single-vendor bundles
- Unified gradebook between SIS and Schoology
- District-level analytics across SIS + LMS data
- PowerSchool SIS is sticky and incumbent at most US districts
Weaknesses
- January 2025 customer data breach damaged trust materially
- Bain Capital 2024 take-private adds 2025-2027 renewal pricing risk
- Legacy PowerSchool Learning module in maintenance; Schoology is the strategic LMS
- Single-vendor concentration risk after the data breach
Pricing tiers
opaque- PowerSchool SIS + Schoology Learning bundleDistrict-negotiated; varies by enrollmentQuote
- PowerSchool Unified Classroom (full suite)Adds assessment, analytics, special programs modulesQuote
- · Implementation and PD services priced separately
- · Add-on modules (assessment, analytics, special programs) priced separately
Key features
- +SIS + LMS unified gradebook
- +Standards-based grading
- +Parent portal
- +District-level analytics
- +Assessment (PowerSchool Assessment)
- +Special programs (IEP, 504, ELL) module
Open edX
Open-source higher-ed and MOOC-style course platform.
Open edX is the open-source platform originally built by MIT and Harvard for edX, the consumer MOOC platform. After 2U's acquisition of edX in 2021 and 2U's subsequent bankruptcy in 2024, stewardship of Open edX moved through tCRIL to Axim Collaborative, the non-profit that now coordinates the project. Open edX is used by universities, governments, and corporations for self-hosted MOOC-style course delivery, with substantial deployments at IBM, the World Bank, and multiple national education ministries. Strengths: open-source AGPL, MOOC-style course structure (long-form video + assessments + discussion), strong support for scale (millions of concurrent learners), commercial hosting via Open edX Partners (Edly, Raccoon Gang, eduNEXT, OpenCraft). Trade-offs: not designed for traditional K12 gradebook + parent portal workflows; implementation requires dedicated DevOps; the 2U bankruptcy and platform transition introduced governance uncertainty that is settling but worth noting.
Universities, governments, and large corporations running self-hosted MOOC-style course delivery at scale, especially where open-source AGPL governance is required.
Traditional K12 districts (Schoology/Canvas K12/Google Classroom better fit), small institutions without DevOps capacity, buyers wanting single-vendor commercial SLA.
Strengths
- Open-source AGPL platform behind edX
- MOOC-style course structure for scale
- Strong support for millions of concurrent learners
- Commercial hosting via Open edX Partner network
- Used by IBM, World Bank, national education ministries
Weaknesses
- Not designed for traditional K12 gradebook + parent portal workflows
- Implementation requires dedicated DevOps capacity
- 2U bankruptcy in 2024 introduced governance uncertainty (now stabilizing under Axim)
- Documentation quality varies across components
Pricing tiers
partial- Open edX (self-hosted)AGPL open-source; self-hosting infra and ops costs apply$0 /mo
- Open edX via Partner (managed)Implementation + hosting via Edly, eduNEXT, Raccoon Gang, OpenCraft etc.Quote
- · Self-hosting infrastructure
- · DevOps capacity
- · Customization development
- · Partner implementation fees
Key features
- +MOOC-style course structure
- +Long-form video + interactive assessments
- +Discussion forums
- +Gradebook (course-level)
- +LTI 1.3 support
- +Open Response Assessments
- +XBlock extension framework
6 steps to pick the right education lms software
- 1 1. Decide K12 vs higher-ed first
The two markets share vendors but the buying motion and product fit diverge. K12 districts prioritize gradebook + parent portal + SIS rostering + Chromebook/M365 fleet alignment. Higher-ed institutions prioritize LTI ecosystem + accessibility + faculty workflow + Banner/PeopleSoft/Workday Student integration. Do not bring a higher-ed RFP framework into a K12 district decision or vice versa.
- 2 2. Audit your existing SIS and device fleet
On PowerSchool SIS? Schoology is the natural LMS pairing. On Banner or PeopleSoft Campus Solutions? Canvas, Blackboard, and D2L are all mature integrations. Chromebook-dominant K12 district? Google Classroom is essentially free and may be sufficient. Microsoft device fleet? Teams for Education + OneNote Class Notebook is the bundled answer. SIS and device-fleet decisions usually constrain LMS choice more than feature checklists.
- 3 3. Test the gradebook with real teacher workflow
Vendor demos use polished sample courses. Run a 30-60 day pilot with 5-15 real teachers using their actual gradebook, standards-based grading, late-work policies, and parent communication needs. Gradebook workflow is the highest-friction part of any LMS migration and the most common source of post-deployment regret.
- 4 4. Verify FERPA + COPPA + state-law compliance documentation
Request the vendor's standard Data Processing Addendum (DPA), sub-processor list, breach notification commitments, and state-law compliance documentation (SOPIPA in California, NY Education Law 2-d, etc.). Cross-check against district legal and privacy office requirements. PowerSchool's January 2025 breach is a reminder that ed-tech vendor security posture matters materially.
- 5 5. Plan for LTI 1.3 tool migrations
Existing LTI 1.1 tool connections (publisher content, Turnitin, Zoom) should be migrated to LTI 1.3 as part of any new LMS deployment. Verify each critical tool publisher has a documented LTI 1.3 integration with the new LMS. Catch missing integrations during evaluation, not after rollout.
- 6 6. Negotiate carefully around PE-ownership renewal risk
Canvas (Thoma Bravo, July 2024), PowerSchool/Schoology (Bain, October 2024), and Blackboard/Anthology (Veritas + Leeds) are all PE-owned. Negotiate multi-year contracts with caps on annual price increases (typically 4-7% cap is achievable for mid-to-large districts), explicit termination-for-convenience or non-renewal-notice terms, and DPA + breach-notification commitments. Avoid auto-renewal clauses without explicit price-cap language.
Frequently asked questions
The questions buyers actually ask before they sign a education lms software contract.
How is education LMS different from corporate L&D LMS?
What does Thoma Bravo's 2024 take-private of Instructure mean for Canvas customers?
Has Google Classroom really displaced paid LMS at K12 districts?
Moodle self-hosted vs Moodle Workplace, which is which?
How deep does SIS integration actually go across these LMSs?
What does FERPA + COPPA compliance actually require from an LMS in 2026?
Are LTI 1.3 and Caliper actually adopted, or still emerging?
Why does this ranking call out vendor data breaches so prominently?
Glossary
- SIS
- Student Information System. The system of record for student demographics, enrollment, grades, and transcripts. In US K12: PowerSchool, Skyward, Infinite Campus dominate. In US higher-ed: Banner, PeopleSoft Campus Solutions, Workday Student.
- LTI 1.3
- Learning Tools Interoperability v1.3 (IMS Global). The current standard for connecting third-party tools (Turnitin, Zoom, publisher content) into an LMS with single sign-on, deep linking, and grade passback. Adopted by all major education LMS.
- OneRoster
- IMS Global standard for exchanging roster and gradebook data between SIS and LMS. Commonly used in US K12 for nightly roster syncs. Clever and ClassLink are the dominant brokers.
- FERPA
- Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (US). Governs access to and disclosure of student education records. LMS vendors operate as "school officials" with a legitimate educational interest under signed district DPAs.
- COPPA
- Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (US). Governs collection of personal information from children under 13. For school-issued accounts, the district typically provides consent on behalf of parents.
- Standards-based grading
- Grading approach that reports student proficiency against specific learning standards rather than (or in addition to) traditional letter grades. Common in US K12 and certain CBE programs in higher-ed. Schoology and D2L Brightspace are strong here.
Final word
See the full intelligence profile for any product on this page, including verified pricing, vendor trust scores, and review patterns. Browse the Education LMS Software category page →
Last updated 2026-05-23. Pricing data is reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.