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Glossary · 4 min read

Skool 35 — Decoding the Search

When people search 'skool 35' they almost always mean a specific community whose name includes 35 — sometimes age-related, sometimes a product code. Skool itself does not have a tier, plan, or feature called 35.

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TL;DR

'Skool 35' is not a Skool product, plan, or feature. It is almost always a community name — for example, a community for people over 35, a 35-day program, a niche group with 35 in the title, or a hardware-related namespace like 'skool 35 ptz' (a CCTV camera model people sometimes confuse with the Skool platform). Whatever the case, you find it the same way: confirm the exact community URL on skool.com (something like skool.com/skool-35 or skool.com/over-35-club) and read the About page. Pricing, format, and admins are decided by the community owner, not Skool. The platform itself is the same shell every Skool group runs on: a feed, a classroom, a calendar, a leaderboard, and basic DMs. Once you know that, finding the right 'Skool 35' is a five-minute job.

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What 'Skool 35' usually refers to

Three plausible meanings. One: a Skool community for an age cohort (people over 35, women over 35, fitness over 35). These are common — age-segmented communities perform well on Skool because the niche keeps the feed coherent. Two: a 35-day program-style community (similar to 28-day or 75-hard variants). 'Skool 35' would then be the brand of a 35-day challenge, with daily videos and a daily check-in feed. Three: an unrelated product. The 'Skool 35 PTZ' search, for example, is sometimes a camera or AV product where 'skool' is part of a different brand entirely. If your search results show camera specs or hardware, that is not the Skool platform we are talking about. Always confirm the URL is on skool.com before assuming it is a community.

How to find the right community

Open Google and search 'skool.com 35' or 'site:skool.com 35'. The first results are usually About pages for communities matching the name. Click through and verify three things: the community is active (recent posts in the feed), the price is what you expected, and the admin's bio looks legit. Skool does not gatekeep names, so similar names exist; the URL is the source of truth. If you got a referral from someone, ask them for the exact URL, not the name. Once you find the right community, joining is the standard Skool flow: click Join, sign in with email or Google, and pay if it is a paid community. You can be a member of multiple Skool communities under one account.

What every Skool community shares (regardless of name)

Every community on Skool — whether it has '35' in the name or anything else — runs on the same product. You get a Community feed with text, image, video, and poll posts. A Classroom with optional drip-released course modules. A Calendar with timezone-aware events. A Members directory with a points-based leaderboard. Direct messages between you, the admin, and other members. Stripe billing if it is a paid community. The mobile app on iOS and Android covers all of this. Differences between communities are content and culture, not features. So whatever 'Skool 35' is, it has the same UI you would see in any other Skool group.

Notes for creators thinking of running a 'Skool 35' style community

If you are searching this term because you are thinking of building a community in this naming pattern (age 35+, 35-day challenge, etc.), the format is solid. The constraint is not the platform — Skool gives you everything you need to launch in a weekend. The constraint is operations once you cross 100 members: who DMs new joiners, who recovers churners, who reads the comments where the warmest leads hide, who tags members so broadcasts are targeted instead of spray. Skool does not ship those tools. Most operators bolt on tools4skool, which runs as a Chrome extension over the existing skool.com session and adds auto DM sequences with multi-condition triggers, image DMs, a 60-second Churn Saver flow, comment mining, member CSV export, scheduled posts with a Post-Now button, and a Kanban CRM pipeline. Free plan covers one sequence and 20 DMs/day; paid tiers start at $29/month. The platform is the canvas; the system around it is where revenue actually grows.

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Frequently asked

No. Skool runs one platform with one paid plan ($99/month for community owners) and a 14-day creator trial. There is no '35' tier, no '35' product, and no special pricing labelled with that number. If you saw 'Skool 35' as a price somewhere, it is the price of a specific community's membership, set by that community's owner — not by Skool itself.

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