Google Classroom hooked schools during 2020 by being free, being connected to Docs, and being easier to spin up than any traditional LMS. Six years later, the same teachers who signed up for the simplicity are asking for a real gradebook, native rubrics, SCORM support, and something that talks to their student information system. Google Classroom does not do those things. Here are seven Google Classroom alternatives that teachers reach for on their desktops in 2026.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planStarting priceStandout feature
CanvasHigher ed and modern K-12Free for Teacher~$5/user/yr institutionSpeed grader and rubric depth
MoodleSelf-hosted independenceYesFree (hosting extra)Open source and infinitely customizable
SchoologyK-12 districts wanting more than ClassroomBasic FreeBundled with PowerSchoolMaster gradebook and SIS integration
Blackboard LearnTraditional higher edTrialInstitutional pricingAdvanced analytics and outcomes
Teams for EducationMicrosoft-first schoolsFree with EDU 365Included in A1Bundled with Office and OneNote
D2L BrightspaceCompetency-based learningTrialInstitutional pricingAdaptive learning paths
SeesawElementary school portfoliosYes$15/teacher/moParent-facing student journals

Why teachers leave Google Classroom

The gradebook. Classroom’s gradebook is a spreadsheet with points. There is no weighted category grading, no rubric-driven grading beyond a light overlay, no gradebook policies for excused or missing work, and no way to run standards-based grading. Any K-12 or higher-ed setting that reports on outcomes needs a different tool.

The communication. Classroom’s stream is a thin bulletin board. There is no group messaging, no threaded discussion boards for a specific assignment, no parent-facing view of student work outside of the once-a-week summary email. Compared to Schoology or Canvas, it feels ten years behind.

The assessment story. Classroom lets you attach Google Forms and treat them as quizzes. No question banks, no timed lockdown, no proctoring, no branching, no automatic partial credit. Any real assessment moves to a separate tool, which defeats the point of a learning management system.

The SIS integration. Classroom syncs roster data via Google Workspace, which is fine if your entire school runs on Google. It does not talk to Skyward, PowerSchool, Infinite Campus, or the dozens of other student information systems most districts run. Every roster change becomes a manual sync.

1. Canvas LMS — Best for higher ed and modern K-12

Canvas is the LMS higher-ed institutions moved to when Blackboard’s UI got too old. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux via any modern browser. SpeedGrader (the mobile-first grading interface) is genuinely fast, the rubric system is comprehensive, and outcomes-based grading works out of the box.

Where it falls short: Institutional pricing keeps small schools out. Individual teacher accounts exist but lack full institutional features.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: Canvas has an official Google Classroom import tool that pulls in course structure and assignments. Student submissions do not transfer; you archive those separately.

Download: instructure.com/canvas

Bottom line: Pick Canvas when the institution can pay and needs a real LMS. Skip it for solo teachers with no district budget.

2. Moodle — Best for self-hosted independence

Moodle is the open-source LMS that has been running universities since 2002. Any school with an IT team can install it on their own servers, own their data completely, and customize the code. Runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux (server + admin panel via browser, desktop apps for offline work).

Where it falls short: Requires actual server infrastructure. The default UI is dated compared to Canvas and Schoology. Plugins can extend it, but plugin management adds ops overhead.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: No native importer. Third-party tools like OneRoster CSV export from Classroom and import into Moodle. Rebuild is often faster than migration.

Download: moodle.org

Bottom line: Pick Moodle if data sovereignty matters or the school hires a systems admin. Skip it if IT capacity is limited.

3. Schoology — Best K-12 district platform

Schoology is PowerSchool’s K-12 LMS. It integrates directly with PowerSchool SIS, has a full mastery gradebook, native standards-based grading, and parent portals that are actually useful. Runs in any desktop browser.

Where it falls short: No self-hosted option. Pricing is bundled with PowerSchool, which locks you into PowerSchool as your SIS.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: Schoology imports Classroom courses via the API. Assignments and materials transfer; student work archives separately.

Download: schoology.com

Bottom line: Pick Schoology in a K-12 district already on PowerSchool. Skip it in higher-ed or non-PowerSchool districts.

4. Blackboard Learn — Best for traditional higher ed

Blackboard Learn (now under the Anthology brand) is the incumbent higher-ed LMS. The 2024 Ultra experience finally caught up on UX, and the outcomes analytics remain best-in-class for institutions that report to accreditors. Runs on any desktop browser.

Where it falls short: Pricing is opaque and high. Migration off Blackboard is famously painful, which means committing to it feels like a lock-in bet.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: Blackboard’s course package import (via IMS Common Cartridge) accepts Classroom exports. Some manual mapping required.

Download: blackboard.com/teaching-learning/learning-management/blackboard-learn

Bottom line: Pick Blackboard for a traditional university with a Blackboard-experienced faculty. Skip it in K-12 or startup schools.

5. Microsoft Teams for Education — Best for Microsoft-first schools

Microsoft Teams for Education ships free with Microsoft 365 Education A1 licenses. It combines chat, video calls, class notebooks (OneNote), assignments, and grading into one Teams client. Desktop apps for Windows, macOS, and Linux.

Where it falls short: Teams is a chat app first and LMS second. Assignments and grading are decent, but discussions and outcomes reporting lag Canvas and Schoology.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: Microsoft’s School Data Sync imports rosters. Course content requires manual transfer.

Download: microsoft.com/en-us/education/products/teams

Bottom line: Pick Teams for Education in a Microsoft-committed school. Skip it if Google Workspace is already the primary suite.

6. D2L Brightspace — Best for competency-based learning

D2L Brightspace is the LMS behind adaptive learning platforms in higher ed and forward-looking K-12 districts. Its release conditions engine lets teachers gate content on prior mastery, which competency-based programs rely on. Runs on any desktop browser.

Where it falls short: Institutional pricing, aimed at whole schools not individual teachers. Interface has a learning curve.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: Brightspace imports Common Cartridge, which Classroom can export. Manual cleanup for the adaptive rules.

Download: d2l.com/products/brightspace

Bottom line: Pick Brightspace for competency-based programs. Skip it for simple content-delivery courses.

7. Seesaw — Best for elementary school portfolios

Seesaw is the elementary-school platform where students post their work (photos of drawings, short videos, voice recordings) and parents see them in a family-friendly feed. Runs in any desktop browser; kids typically use tablets.

Where it falls short: Not a traditional LMS. No sophisticated gradebook, no calendar, no discussion boards. Above 4th or 5th grade it starts to feel thin.

Pricing:

Migrating from Google Classroom: No importer. Seesaw is portfolio-first; the workflow does not overlap.

Download: web.seesaw.com

Bottom line: Pick Seesaw for grades K-5. Skip it above that.

How to choose

Pick Canvas if the school can pay and wants the strongest LMS overall.

Pick Moodle if data sovereignty, budget, or customization matters more than convenience.

Pick Schoology for K-12 districts already using PowerSchool.

Pick Blackboard Learn for traditional universities with existing Blackboard investment.

Pick Microsoft Teams for Education in Microsoft-first schools.

Pick D2L Brightspace for competency-based programs and adaptive learning.

Pick Seesaw for elementary grades where portfolios matter more than a gradebook.

Stay on Google Classroom for simple content delivery in a Google-first school, especially K-2 where the light gradebook is actually a feature. Once assessment gets serious, plan the move.

FAQ

Is there a free Google Classroom alternative? Yes. Moodle is fully free open-source. Canvas offers a Free for Teacher tier. Seesaw and Schoology have free tiers for individual teachers. Microsoft Teams for Education is free with Microsoft 365 Education A1.

Which LMS is best for K-12? Schoology and Canvas both fit K-12 well. Schoology integrates natively with PowerSchool SIS. Canvas is stronger on gradebook and rubrics. Seesaw is best for K-5 specifically.

Can I import my Google Classroom into Canvas? Yes. Canvas has an official Google Classroom import tool that pulls course structure, assignments, and materials. Student submissions are not transferred and should be archived separately.

What is the best free LMS for teachers? Moodle for institutional self-hosted use. Canvas Free for Teacher for personal use. Google Classroom itself remains the easiest onboarding for solo teachers who accept its limitations.

Which alternative works offline? Almost none in a full sense. LMS platforms are web-first. Moodle self-hosted can be run on a local server for offline classrooms, and Microsoft Teams caches recent content on desktop, but true offline LMS use is a compromise.