TOTAL: CompTIA A+ Core 1 (220-1201) Course + Practice Exam vs Magoosh GMAT Prep
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy (Total Seminars) · Test Prep
TOTAL: CompTIA A+ Core 1 (220-1201) Course + Practice Exam
Magoosh · Test Prep
Magoosh GMAT Prep
Per-criterion
TOTAL: CompTIA A+ Core 1 (220-1201) Course + Practice Exam
The course maps tightly to all 220-1201 exam objective domains — mobile devices, networking, hardware, virtualization, cloud computing, and troubleshooting — in a logical sequence that mirrors the exam blueprint. Mike Meyers' live demonstrations using real physical components (CPUs, RAM sticks, motherboards, storage drives, and expansion cards) are the standout differentiator: reviewers consistently cite them as providing comprehension depth unavailable from slide-based courses. Content accuracy is high and the course is updated to reflect the current 220-1201 objectives.
Mike Meyers is the author of the bestselling CompTIA A+ All-in-One Exam Guide and has taught IT certification to over 2 million learners across his Udemy courses and physical books. His signature blend of technical depth with irreverent humor — recurring character analogies, deliberately mispronounced terms corrected on screen, and self-deprecating asides — keeps learners engaged through 14+ hours of dense exam-prep content. Reviewers consistently describe him as one of the best IT instructors online, specifically praising his ability to explain how components work conceptually rather than drilling exam keywords.
At the typical Udemy sale price of $14–$20 for over 14 hours of video plus bundled practice exams, the course offers exceptional value relative to alternatives: Pluralsight ($45/month), CompTIA CertMaster ($199 per exam), or in-person bootcamps ($800–$2,500). The practice-exam bundle is frequently cited as worth the purchase price on its own for learners who do not yet hold a practice-exam subscription.
The course bundles a practice-exam component that reviewers find useful for familiarising themselves with question format and timing. The most consistent critical feedback, however, is that the practice-exam volume is insufficient as a sole preparation source. Multiple learners explicitly recommend pairing the course with Jason Dion's dedicated practice-exam packs or Professor Messer's free practice tests to achieve timed exam-day readiness and score confidence in the 85%+ range.
Multiple reviewers report passing the Core 1 exam on their first attempt after completing the course, with several noting they went from zero IT experience to passing within 60–90 days. A minority reported feeling underprepared — typically after relying solely on the course without supplementary practice tests. No official score-improvement guarantee is published, and outcomes depend substantially on a learner's prior IT exposure and how thoroughly they work through the practice-exam component.
Magoosh GMAT Prep
Magoosh GMAT Prep covers all three GMAT Focus Edition sections — Quantitative, Verbal, and Data Insights — across 340+ short on-demand video lessons, and the curriculum was rebuilt after the Focus Edition replaced the classic GMAT on February 1, 2024. The Quant content is the standout: GMAT Club reviewers (Aabhash777, BelronMajes, GMATking94) repeatedly praise it for teaching from the basics and deriving formulas "from root level" rather than asking students to memorise. The consistent content weakness is Verbal, which multiple reviewers call "old," in need of "refurbishment," and structurally confusing with no continuity. Data Insights coverage exists but several students wanted more practice volume there given how central DI now is to the Focus Edition. The slideshow-with-voiceover format is instructionally sound but, as Test Prep Insight notes, "lacks production value."
The lessons are anchored by long-time Magoosh GMAT expert Mike McGarry, whose Quant explanations are described as crisp, well-organised, and conceptually grounded. Reviewers on GMAT Club call the videos "clear, concise" and "easy to consume," and students specifically credit the instruction with teaching strategic shortcuts they would not have found alone ("their lessons were phenomenal and they greatly helped me figure out strategic shortcuts"). The format is voiceover-over-slides with no instructor on screen, which several reviewers find effective but visually flat compared to Manhattan Prep or TTP. The Verbal teaching draws the most criticism: GMATking94 said the "Verbal course seems very old and needs refurbishment," a recurring theme that pulls the instructor score below the Quant-only ceiling it would otherwise reach.
Value is Magoosh's single strongest dimension and the near-universal reason reviewers recommend it. Premium GMAT access runs roughly $199 for 6 months or $249 for 12 months — about one-third the price of Kaplan (~$1,000) and Princeton Review (~$800), and a fraction of premium platforms like TTP or e-GMAT. Payment plans start around $54. GMAT Club reviewers repeatedly use the exact phrase "bang for buck," and Test Prep Insight rated the course 9.1/10 calling it "the best bang for your buck in GMAT prep." A 12-month access window, a 4.5-rated mobile app, a free 7-day trial (30+ lessons, 30 questions), and a tiered score guarantee all reinforce that a low price does not signal a thin product. For budget-conscious or first-attempt test-takers, the value case is hard to beat.
The course includes 1,300+ practice questions, each paired with both a text and a video explanation — a genuinely distinctive feature, since most prep companies do not film an explanation for every single problem. A custom practice tool lets students build targeted quizzes by topic and difficulty. The limitations are real and frequently cited. There are only 2 full-length practice tests, and they are generated from the same question pool as the drills, so heavy users hit repeated questions (reviewer whatsarc flagged "repetitive practice questions"). Several students wanted "more questions in quant," more Data Insights items, and additional mocks. Some also found the Verbal questions diverge from real GMAT difficulty (BelronMajes: "Verbal questions differ significantly from actual test"). It is enough to learn on, but most reviewers pair it with the Official Guide and free official mocks.
Magoosh's own review page documents seven student entries with gains of +100 to +250 points, landing final scores of 700–730, with quotes like "over the last few months, Magoosh improved my score from 490 to 710." The company advertises an average improvement of roughly 90 points and backs a tiered guarantee: up to a 70-point increase for baseline scores below 630, 50 points for 640–690, and 10 points for 700+, or your money back. GMAT Club reviewers report concrete gains of +40 to +140 points and final scores from the high-500s (Focus scale) up to 760 (11Karan, +50). The caveat is honest: the strongest gains cluster around Quant, and a minority flagged the in-product score predictor as inaccurate, so the headline averages should be read as outcomes for committed self-studiers, not guarantees for everyone.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.