Every course platform assumes you know nothing. So you sit through 40 minutes of "what is a variable" before they get to the thing you actually came for.
Or you already know the basics and have to scrub through a 6-hour YouTube video hunting for the 12 minutes that are actually relevant to you.
Both are a waste of your most valuable resource — time.
PrepPath skips the part you already know. You tell us your topic and your level, and our AI builds a course that starts exactly where you are — not where a stranger on the internet assumes you are.
Four steps from a topic in your head to a structured course in your hands.
Tell PrepPath what you want to learn and how much you already know. A topic, a level, a context — that's all we need. No lengthy onboarding, no skill tests.
Google's Gemini 2.5 Flash designs a structured curriculum in seconds — chapters sequenced in logical order, scoped to your exact level, with no fluff or repetition.
Each chapter gets rich, formatted content — explanations, code examples, key takeaways. Not scraped. Not templated. Written fresh for your course, every time.
Every chapter you complete, every course you generate — it's all tracked. Come back tomorrow, pick up exactly where you left off. Your learning history goes nowhere.
Not another course marketplace. Not another YouTube aggregator.
Beginner courses start from scratch. Intermediate courses skip the intro. Advanced courses go straight to the hard parts. You pick, the AI adapts.
Browse courses created by real users, or generate your own from scratch. Every course on PrepPath was built by someone who actually wanted to learn it — not a content team chasing SEO.
Good things take a moment. PrepPath generates your entire curriculum fresh — not pulled from a template. Grab a coffee, it'll be ready before you finish it.
"A junior dev asks his senior: 'How long will it take to learn React?'
The senior thinks for a moment and says: 'About two weeks.'
The junior is relieved. 'Oh great, that's not bad at all.'
The senior nods slowly. 'Yeah. Two weeks to learn it. The next three years are just to figure out when not to use it.'"
— Every senior engineer ever