Coursera and Udemy are joining forces in an all-stock deal that values the combined company at about $2.5 billion, a clear sign that the post-pandemic online education boom is giving way to consolidation.
Under the deal, Udemy shareholders will receive 0.8 Coursera shares for every Udemy share they own, valuing Udemy at roughly $930 million. Markets liked the news: Coursera shares jumped about 6% in premarket trading, while Udemy surged close to 18%.
The merger brings together two different models of online learning at a moment when growth has slowed. Coursera works closely with universities and institutions to offer degrees and professional certificates, while Udemy runs a marketplace where independent instructors sell courses to individuals and businesses. Together, they’re betting that scale matters more than ever.
Both companies say the real prize is enterprise learning. As companies rush to retrain workers in AI, data science and software development, Coursera and Udemy believe a combined platform will be better positioned to win long-term corporate contracts and steadier subscription revenue, rather than relying on one-off consumer course purchases.
Still, the deal comes against a cautious backdrop. Online education stocks have struggled as investors question pricing power, competition and whether AI-focused courses will translate into sustainable profits. Udemy shares are down about 35% this year, Coursera about 7%, and both are trading far below their post-IPO highs. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of next year, pending regulatory and shareholder approval.







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