
Hey, Drew here. Welcome to my Entre Institute review for 2026.
I've spent the last few weeks digging into Jeff Lerner's program — going through the sales funnel, reading hundreds of student reviews across Trustpilot, BBB, Reddit, and YouTube, examining the current refund policy, and comparing what's actually being taught today versus what most online reviews still claim.
Here's the problem with nearly every Entre Institute review you'll find: most were written in 2022 or 2023. They quote old prices. They describe an old course structure. They miss what's changed in the last 18 months. So if you're trying to figure out whether to drop $39 (or $3.95, or $4,000) on Jeff Lerner's program in 2026, you need updated info.
That's what I'm giving you here.
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Or grab my free AI Side Hustle Starter Kit if you want to see how I think about AI businesses before spending a dollar.
⭐ Entre Institute Rating: 2.5/5
I give Entre Institute a 2.5 out of 5. Jeff Lerner is a real entrepreneur with real experience, and the mindset content has value for absolute beginners. But the actual business training is locked behind expensive upsells, the affiliate model creates a huge volume of biased positive reviews, and the 15-day refund window on high-ticket products has trapped a lot of buyers.
It's not a scam, but it's not worth what most people end up spending on it either.
👉Quick verdict box
Best for: Complete beginners who need motivation, mindset training, and community more than tactical how-to content — and who can afford to spend $39 to $4,000+ without expecting a return.
Skip if: You want actionable, step-by-step training to build an online business in 2026, you're on a budget, or you've already done personal development work.
Price: $39 entry (sometimes $3.95 via affiliate links). Full ecosystem reaches $47,000+ with coaching upsells.
Refund: 30 days on intro products. Only 15 days on Accelerators, coaching, and events.
What is Entre Institute?
Entre Institute is an online entrepreneurship education platform founded in 2019 by Jeff Lerner and Adam Whiting. It teaches a mix of mindset content and three "modern" business models that the company now brands as Referral, Services, and Legacy businesses (these used to be called affiliate marketing, digital agency, and course creation).

The Entre Institute ecosystem includes the flagship $39 Entre Blueprint course, six Foundations mini-courses (Success, Lifestyle, Money, Business, Wealth, and Sales Secrets), three Business Accelerator programs, one-on-one coaching, group masterminds, in-person live events, and the EntreSoft CRM software.
One thing worth mentioning right away: in 2025, the company quietly rebranded its student platform to "Design Your Life" (you log in at m.designyourlife.com), and Jeff Lerner now calls the company "ENTRE: The Life Design Company" in his X bio. The public-facing site is still entreinstitute.com with full Entre branding, but the student-facing platform has been restructured. That matters because most existing reviews describe a product version that doesn't fully exist anymore.
The tagline they push is "Where ENTREpreneurs Grow." The marketing positions Entre as a complete ecosystem rather than just a course — and that's accurate, both for better and worse. It's not just one product. It's a tiered funnel of products.
Who is Jeff Lerner?
Jeff Lerner is the co-founder and Chief Visionary Officer of Entre Institute, a serial entrepreneur, and a former jazz pianist who claims to have generated over $100 million in lifetime online sales. He's been in the affiliate marketing and online education space since 2008.

Now, the backstory is genuinely interesting. Jeff was born in Houston in 1979 with Waardenburg Syndrome — a genetic condition that gave him wide-set eyes and other distinctive features that led to him being bullied in school. He dropped out, taught himself piano, and eventually earned a music degree from the University of Houston.
By 29 he'd attempted 10 different businesses, all failed. Then the 2008 recession hit him hard — a failed restaurant franchise, two lawsuits, a broken wrist that ended his piano gigs, and $495,000 in debt. His first wife left him and he lived in his ex-in-laws' spare bedroom.
That's when he discovered affiliate marketing. He grinded 14–15 hours a day for a year and clawed his way out. Within a decade he was on the Inc. 5000 list, claiming eight-figure income, and running multiple businesses including the digital agency Xurli (2013–2018) and the real estate company 2:20 Investment Group.
But here's where it gets complicated. Before launching Entre Institute, Jeff promoted several programs that have since gone defunct or been shut down:
- Wealth Masters International — declared a pyramid scheme in Norway
- Carbon Copy Pro — defunct
- MOBE (My Online Business Education) — shut down by the FTC, founder ordered to pay $17 million in restitution
- Digital Altitude — also FTC-targeted
To be clear, Jeff was an affiliate of these programs, not the operator. He hasn't personally been sued by the FTC. But the structural similarities between those "coaching investment schemes" and how Entre Institute is set up (low-ticket entry → escalating upsells → high-ticket coaching) are the reason critics on Reddit have flagged him alongside coaches like Tai Lopez and Mike Crestini as candidates for FTC scrutiny.
His net worth is estimated at around $5 million — far less than the $100M+ in "sales" he often references in ads. Sales aren't profit, and a $100M sales claim with thousands of affiliates and a complex cost structure looks very different on a net worth statement.
How much does Entre Institute cost in 2026?
Entre Institute starts at $39 for the Entre Blueprint, but the full ecosystem can cost you anywhere from $47,381 to $72,000+ if you accept every upsell. That's the big thing most reviews bury.
Here's the breakdown of what you'll actually be offered as you move through the funnel:
| Product | Price |
|---|---|
| Entre Blueprint (Success Path Masterclass) | $39 (or $3.95 via affiliate link) |
| Entre Nation Elite membership | $29/month or $175 lifetime |
| Millionaire Productivity Secrets | $47–$197 |
| Entre Foundations | $297 |
| Business Accelerators (Affiliate, Agency, Knowledge) | $1,997 each ($4,997 bundled) |
| EntreSoft CRM software | $1,600 |
| Entre Results Coaching (3 months) | $15,000+ |
| Entre Inner Circle | $29,997–$39,997/year |
| Entre Elite | Up to $72,000+ |
If you go through Jeff's entire funnel, you'll spend at least $47,381 before earning a dollar back. And that's not theoretical. Reddit user teasingtyme reported spending $35,000 in the program before walking away. L.A. Morris in an eBizFacts review described being offered packages from $36,000 to $72,000 for 12 months of coaching plus events.
The $3.95 discount is worth flagging too. Entre Institute affiliates can give you a link that drops the Blueprint to $3.95 instead of $39. The catch? Once you're inside at $3.95, the same upsell sequence kicks in. The discount makes the entry cheaper. It doesn't make the actual program cheaper.

What do you get inside Entre Institute?
Inside Entre Institute you get a tiered ecosystem of courses, coaching, software, and community access — but the bulk of the actionable training is locked behind the $1,997+ Business Accelerator upsells. What you get for $39 is mostly mindset content.
Let me break down each tier.
The Entre Blueprint / Success Path Masterclass
This is your $39 entry point. You'll get six video modules covering:
- Strengthening your physical, personal, and professional life (mindset, morning routines, time chunking)
- Building community, knowledge, and strategy
- Jeff's "whole-life strategy" framework
- An introduction to affiliate marketing
- An introduction to digital agencies
- An introduction to digital course creation
Here's the issue: the videos are 30 minutes to 3 hours long, and you can't skip through them. Multiple reviewers (Niall Doherty at eBizFacts, Kurt Frulla, and others) reported being forced to watch over 5 hours of mostly mindset content before being allowed to progress. The "training" is largely Jeff explaining philosophy and selling you on his lifestyle, with each module ending in a pitch for the next-level upsell.
If you're new to affiliate marketing entirely, my what is affiliate marketing guide explains the basics for free in about 10 minutes. You don't need to pay $39 and sit through five hours to understand what affiliate marketing is.
Entre Foundations
A $297 video series with six mini-courses: Success Secrets, Lifestyle Secrets, Money Secrets, Business Secrets, Wealth Secrets, and Sales Secrets. Each one is mindset-heavy with branded "secrets" framing. Decent material if you've never read a personal development book, but if you have, most of it will feel like recycled content from authors like Tony Robbins, Tim Ferriss, and Stephen Covey.
Business Accelerators
This is where the actual tactical training lives. There are three:
- Affiliate Business Accelerator — modules on niche research, YouTube marketing, sales funnels, email marketing, and blogging
- Agency Business Accelerator — client acquisition, Facebook ads, automation, scaling
- Knowledge Business Accelerator — course creation, marketing, and launches
Each Accelerator runs $1,997 individually, or you can bundle all three for around $4,997. They're 8-week training sprints with 40–60 video modules each. The content is comprehensive on paper, though several student reviews note the material gets outdated quickly (especially the Facebook ads content, since Meta changes their platform constantly).
Coaching, masterminds, and Inner Circle
This is where the prices get serious. Entre Results Coaching starts at $15,000. The Inner Circle mastermind runs $29,997–$39,997/year. The top-tier Elite program reportedly reaches $72,000. At those prices, you're not buying training — you're buying access to Jeff and his team.
EntreSoft and Entre Explorer
EntreSoft is Entre's branded CRM software at $1,600 (some students report it's a white-labeled version of GoHighLevel). Entre Explorer is a subscription product that bundles ongoing access to additional training and live sessions.
What is Entre Nation, and how does the Entre Institute affiliate program work?
Entre Nation is the private Facebook community for paying Entre students, and the Entre Institute affiliate program is how students earn commissions by promoting the same courses they just bought. This is the structural piece that creates most of the bias in online Entre reviews.
Here's how it works. After completing the Entre Blueprint, students are introduced to Entre's affiliate program. You become an affiliate of Entre itself. You promote the Blueprint to your audience. You earn commissions when they buy. And because the Blueprint funnels into $4,000+ upsells, your commissions can be substantial if you actually move volume.
This is why the vast majority of positive Entre Institute reviews on YouTube and across review sites are written by people earning affiliate commissions from those reviews. It's not a coincidence that almost every "honest review" of Entre Institute has an affiliate link in the description.
Entre Nation itself, the community, is genuinely active. Tens of thousands of members. Daily posts. Live events. But here's what's notable when you actually scroll through: most posts are new members introducing themselves or sharing motivational content. You'd expect a community of this size to be full of student earnings screenshots and success stories — and they're surprisingly hard to find.
Are Entre Institute students actually making money?
Most Entre Institute students are not making meaningful money from the training. This is the conclusion nearly every independent reviewer (meaning, reviewers without affiliate links) reaches after digging into the actual results.
The most prominently featured testimonial on Entre's sales page is Jessi Smith, a California restaurant operations director who landed three clients in two weeks for "$4,500/month recurring revenue." That's a real result. But for a company claiming "350,000+ students," you'd expect the testimonials page to be overflowing with documented earnings screenshots. It isn't.
When Niall Doherty's team at eBizFacts went through the program, they specifically searched for student earnings proof and came up mostly empty. Kurt Frulla, a student who paid the $39, did the math: if Entre's claim of 200,000+ students at $39 each is real, that's $7.8 million in revenue just from the intro product. Where are all the corresponding success stories?
For an honest look at why most affiliate marketers don't succeed regardless of which course they take, you can check my affiliate marketing statistics breakdown. Spoiler: 58% of affiliate marketers earn under $10K per year, and the average successful affiliate has 3+ years of experience plus a website pulling 56,000+ monthly visitors. Jeff Lerner's program doesn't change those underlying realities. No course does.
What does the Entre Institute refund policy actually say?
Entre Institute offers a 30-day refund window on intro products and only a 15-day window on Business Accelerators, coaching, events, EntreSoft, and Entre Explorer. That short 15-day cliff on high-ticket products is the single biggest financial trap in the program.
Here's exactly what the current refund policy (revised October 29, 2024) covers:
30-day refund window: Success DNA, Success Path Masterclass (the Blueprint), Productivity Secrets, and Entre Foundations.
15-day refund window only: Business Accelerators, Entre Explorer, EntreSoft, Coaching, Live Events.
If you default on a payment plan, the funds you've already paid become a non-refundable credit that expires in six months. You also have to submit refund requests through a specific Google Form — emails or phone calls don't count.
The 15-day window is the part that's bitten people. L.A. Morris in an eBizFacts review described buying the $3,997 Entre Digital Bundle on September 5, 2023, going through the two-week mandatory "bootcamp" (which is structured to eat most of the refund window), and then requesting a refund on September 21 — 15 days and 17 hours after purchase. Refund denied. She only got her money back after filing a BBB complaint.
This is a pattern. The Better Business Bureau complaints page for Entre Institute is full of similar stories — students who tried to refund just after the 15-day cliff, were denied, and had to escalate to BBB to get resolution. Some succeeded. Some didn't.

What are the biggest red flags with Entre Institute?
The biggest red flags with Entre Institute are the structural similarity to FTC-shutdown programs, the aggressive upsell funnel, the affiliate-driven review bias, the heavy focus on mindset over tactics, and the punishingly short refund window on expensive products. None of these individually makes Entre a scam. Together they make it a program that's very easy to overspend on.
Let me break down each red flag.
1. The MOBE / Carbon Copy Pro structural parallels. Jeff Lerner was previously an affiliate of MOBE, which the FTC shut down in 2018 after concluding it had taken $125 million from customers. The MOBE model was low-ticket entry → coaching upsells → six-figure mastermind. Entre Institute is structured similarly. To be clear: a similar structure doesn't make it the same program. Entre actually delivers a product, which MOBE was found not to. But the parallels are why critics watch Jeff closely.
2. Aggressive upselling baked into the experience. Every layer of the funnel sells the next layer. The $39 Blueprint videos point you to a $3,997 Business Accelerator. The Accelerator points you to $15,000 coaching. The coaching points you to $30,000+ inner circle programs. Multiple reviewers describe their "advisor call" as essentially a sales call disguised as a strategy session.
3. Affiliate-driven review bias. I covered this above, but it's worth repeating: the affiliate program structurally creates an army of biased reviewers. Anyone who completes the Blueprint can earn commissions promoting it, which makes most positive reviews suspect by default.
4. Mindset content over tactical training. This is the most consistent critique across both positive and negative reviews. Even fans of Entre admit that the bulk of what you get at the $39 and $297 price points is mindset content — morning routines, identity work, goal-setting. Real tactical training requires the $1,997+ Accelerators.
5. The 15-day refund window combined with the mandatory bootcamp. When you buy a $3,997 Accelerator, you're immediately funneled into a two-week implementation bootcamp. That bootcamp is structured to eat 14 of your 15 refund days. If you decide it's not for you, you have roughly 24 hours to file the refund request through the correct form.
What do Entre Institute complaints look like in 2026?
The most common Entre Institute complaints across BBB, Trustpilot, and Reddit focus on aggressive upsells, refund denials after the 15-day window, unprofessional coaching, and a mismatch between marketing promises and actual training content. The complaints follow a clear pattern.
On the Better Business Bureau, Entre carries a B- rating with seven formal complaints on record. The complaints describe stories like: paying $3,997 for a Digital Bundle in 2023, being placed with an implementation coach who didn't actually use the marketing software Entre teaches, requesting a refund after coaching quality issues, and being told the request fell outside the refund window.
On Trustpilot, Entre's overall score is 4.4 based on over 1000 reviews, but this needs context. A 2024 Reddit-style audit found that approximately 96% of one-star Trustpilot reviews focus on the same complaints (upsell pressure, refund denials, coach unprofessionalism), while five-star reviews skew toward affiliate-style enthusiasm.

On Reddit, the sentiment is sharply negative. The most upvoted post about Entre — a software engineer who went $40,000 into debt taking the program — calls it a scam in the title. Top comments draw parallels to MOBE and Tai Lopez. Other Reddit threads describe coaches who showed up late or canceled at the last minute, technical training that students felt they could have gotten free from Wordstream or for $19 on Udemy, and inner circle events that were "talk shows full of cross-promotion without tactics."
The pattern across all three platforms is consistent: the people most disappointed in Entre paid the most for it. The cheap entry product gets mixed reviews. The high-ticket coaching gets brutal ones.
Is Entre Institute legit? Is it a scam?
Entre Institute is legit but heavily overpriced for what most students get. It's not a scam in the legal sense — you pay money, you receive a product, the refund policy exists (even if it's restrictive), and Jeff Lerner is a real entrepreneur with a real track record. But "not a scam" is not the same as "worth your money."
Here's how I'd frame it. A scam is when you pay and receive nothing of value, or when the operator misrepresents what you're buying so severely that no reasonable person would have bought it. Entre fails neither test. You get videos. You get community access. You get access to coaching if you pay. Jeff isn't disappearing with the money.
But here's the bar that matters for a course review: does paying for this course give you a realistic shot at earning back what you spent? And for most students who go beyond the $39 entry, the answer is no — not because Jeff is a fraud, but because the business models he teaches (affiliate marketing, digital agencies, course creation) are hard, take years to master, and have brutal failure rates regardless of which course teaches them.
The honest summary: legit business, real founder, real product, but the value-to-cost ratio is bad once you go past the $39 entry tier.
Is there an Entre Institute lawsuit?
There is no active lawsuit against Entre Institute as of 2026. This needs to be said clearly because the keyword "entre institute lawsuit" generates real search volume, and people searching it should get an accurate answer.
Entre Institute itself has publicly stated in responses to BBB complaints that "there is no current lawsuit against us." There's no FTC action against Entre. There's no class action. There's no court case pending.
What there IS, and what fuels the lawsuit search interest, is:
- The FTC parallels with MOBE, Wealth Masters International, and Digital Altitude — all programs Jeff Lerner was previously associated with as an affiliate
- Several Reddit users who have publicly named Jeff Lerner as a coach who "should be" investigated for FTC violations
- Active BBB complaints that occasionally mention threats of legal escalation
- The general pattern of high-ticket coaching programs in this space being targeted by the FTC over time (MOBE, Digital Altitude, IM Academy, etc.)
But none of that constitutes an actual lawsuit. As of June 2026, Entre Institute is operating legally and has not been the subject of any successful legal action.
What about Entre Institute's BBB rating?
Entre Institute holds a B- rating with the Better Business Bureau and has seven complaints on file. Some have been resolved successfully through the BBB process. Others were closed with the customer dissatisfied with the response.
The B- rating is interesting context. It's not an A, which would indicate a clean record. It's not an F, which would indicate severe issues. It's middle-of-the-pack — a company that has complaints but generally responds to them.
If you read through the complaints individually (they're public), most center on refund disputes around the 15-day window. Entre typically responds with detailed explanations of when the customer enrolled, what outreach was attempted, and why the refund request fell outside policy. Some customers accept the response. Some don't.
What are the pros and cons of Entre Institute?
Let me put both sides clearly so you can weigh them.

Pros
Jeff Lerner has real entrepreneurial experience. He's not a guru who built his entire reputation on coaching. He has actually built businesses outside Entre.
The community is active. Entre Nation has tens of thousands of members and consistent daily engagement, even if most posts are intros rather than success stories.
The 30-day refund on the Blueprint is reasonable. If you only buy the $39 entry product and decide it's not for you, you can get your money back.
Mindset content has value for absolute beginners. If you've never done personal development work, the Foundations material covers fundamentals that are useful — even if experienced entrepreneurs will find them basic.
The Accelerators are comprehensive. When you finally hit the $1,997 tactical training, there's a lot of content there. It's not thin.
Live events and coaching are high-touch. If you pay for them, you get real access to coaches and live sessions. This is structurally better than pre-recorded courses with zero support.
Cons
The funnel is aggressive and expensive. Total cost can reach $47,000+ before generating revenue.
The 15-day refund window on high-ticket products is short. Combined with the mandatory two-week bootcamp, it's structured to make refunds difficult.
Most positive reviews are from affiliates. The Entre affiliate program creates structural bias in nearly all positive reviews online.
Mindset content dominates the cheap tiers. Real tactical training is behind the upsells.
Jeff Lerner's past MLM associations are a flag. Not disqualifying, but worth knowing.
Documented student success stories are scarce relative to the claimed 350,000+ student count.
Can't skip the long intro videos. Multiple students report being annoyed at being forced to watch 5+ hours of mindset content sequentially.
What are the best alternatives to Entre Institute?
The best alternatives to Entre Institute depend on what you're actually trying to do — if you want to build an AI-powered online business in 2026 without spending $4,000+ on a course, my own program is the cleanest fit. If you want a broader survey of affiliate marketing courses across price points, check the roundup link below.
The AI Approach: 2026 AI Business Blueprint ($37 with discount, normally $47)
Entre Institute teaches you three business models (affiliate, agency, courses) the old way — manual product research, manual ad copy, manual customer service, manual fulfillment. In 2026, AI compresses all of that.
My 2026 AI Business Blueprint is a one-time $47 course (currently $37 with code AISTART2026 — a $10 discount) that covers five modern business models: AI Affiliate Marketing, Faceless YouTube, AI E-Commerce, AI Freelance, and Digital Products. You get three bonuses too — the Faceless Social Pack, AI Tools Stack, and Anti-AI Detector Framework. No upsells. No advisor calls. No 15-day refund traps. No coaching pitches.

The math is straightforward: $37 versus $47,381 if you go through Entre's full funnel. And the training is built for how online businesses actually work today, not how they worked when Entre's Accelerator content was first recorded.
You can read my full breakdown of how to make money online with AI across 5 proven business models for the educational version of the same approach — that article will give you a good sense of what you'd learn before you decide.
Other affiliate marketing courses worth a look
If affiliate marketing specifically is what you want to learn, and the AI angle isn't what you're after, I maintain a full roundup of the best affiliate marketing courses sorted by value, content depth, and refund policies. Most are dramatically better value than Entre.
Is Entre Institute worth it in 2026?
Entre Institute is worth it in 2026 only if you (a) genuinely value mindset and community content, (b) can afford to spend without expecting financial return, and (c) only buy the $39 entry product to test it. For everyone else, the math doesn't work.
Here's the honest cost-benefit framing.
The $39 Blueprint is low-risk because of the 30-day refund. You'll spend a few hours, get some motivational content, and either decide it's for you or not. Worst case: you waste five hours.
The $1,997+ Accelerators are high-risk because of the 15-day refund window plus mandatory bootcamp that eats most of that window. If you decide they're not for you, you've got a tight window to act.
The $15,000+ coaching tier is borderline irresponsible for most buyers. Not because Entre is a scam, but because spending $15K on coaching before you've validated whether you can build any kind of online business is putting the cart way before the horse. Most successful online entrepreneurs I've talked to didn't pay for high-ticket coaching until they were already making money on their own.
For a beginner with a tight budget who wants to learn online business, the honest answer is that there are dramatically cheaper, more tactical, more current alternatives. The $47 my own course costs (or $37 with the current coupon) gets you a similar breadth of business models with modern AI-powered execution and zero upsell pressure.
Final thoughts and Verdict
Entre Institute isn't a scam, and Jeff Lerner isn't a fraud. He's a real entrepreneur with a real track record and a real product. The community is active, the coaches are real people, and some students do see results.
But this is fundamentally a high-ticket coaching funnel dressed as an entrepreneurship education platform. The cheap entry product is a marketing tool for the expensive coaching at the top. If you go in eyes-open, only buy what you can afford, and stay disciplined about the upsells, the $39 Blueprint can be a low-risk way to test the waters.
If you go in expecting comprehensive tactical training for a low price, you'll be disappointed. If you go in expecting documented student earnings to match the marketing promises, you'll come up short. And if you fall for the upsell sequence without doing the math, you can easily end up $30,000+ in for a result that thousands of other students didn't get either.
My honest recommendation: grab the $39 Blueprint if you're curious, and refund it within 30 days if it's not for you. Don't touch the Accelerators or coaching. Or skip Entre entirely and start somewhere with better value-per-dollar.
💡 Ready to start an online business in 2026 the AI-powered way?
Skip the funnel. Skip the upsells. The 2026 AI Business Blueprint is $47 one-time (currently $37 with code AISTART2026) and covers five AI-powered business models with step-by-step training, no advisor calls, and no upsell pressure. Or download my free AI Side Hustle Starter Kit to preview the approach for free.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Entre Institute a scam?
No, Entre Institute is not a scam. You pay money and you receive products: video courses, community access, coaching if you upgrade, and software access if you subscribe to EntreSoft. The refund policy exists even if it's restrictive. Jeff Lerner is a real entrepreneur. The issue isn't legitimacy — it's value. The cost-to-result ratio is poor for most students who go beyond the $39 entry tier.
Is Jeff Lerner legit?
Yes, Jeff Lerner is a legitimate entrepreneur with documented business history since 2008. He's appeared on the Inc. 5000 list and is a Forbes Business Council member. His estimated net worth is around $5 million. However, he was previously affiliated with several programs (MOBE, Wealth Masters International, Carbon Copy Pro) that have been shut down or labeled pyramid schemes — which is why critics watch his current programs closely.
Is there an Entre Institute lawsuit in 2026?
No, there is no active lawsuit against Entre Institute as of June 2026. The company has confirmed this in BBB responses. There is no FTC action, no class action, and no pending court case. Search interest in "Entre Institute lawsuit" is largely driven by the FTC parallels with programs Jeff Lerner previously promoted as an affiliate, not by any current legal action against Entre itself.
How much does Entre Institute cost in 2026?
Entre Institute costs $39 for the entry-level Entre Blueprint course (sometimes $3.95 via affiliate links). However, the full ecosystem with Business Accelerators ($1,997 each), EntreSoft ($1,600), and coaching ($15,000+) can reach $47,381 or more. Top-tier coaching programs like Entre Elite have been reported at $72,000+.
Can you get a refund from Entre Institute?
Yes, but the refund windows are restrictive. The Entre Blueprint, Foundations, Success DNA, Success Path Masterclass, and Productivity Secrets all have a 30-day refund window. All other products — including Business Accelerators ($1,997+), EntreSoft, Entre Explorer, Coaching, and Live Events — have only a 15-day refund window. Refund requests must be submitted through a specific Google Form.
What is Entre Institute's BBB rating?
Entre Institute holds a B- rating with the Better Business Bureau. The company has seven formal complaints on file, most centered on refund disputes around the 15-day window. Entre typically responds to BBB complaints with detailed explanations, though resolution rates are mixed.
What is the Entre Institute affiliate program?
The Entre Institute affiliate program lets students earn commissions by promoting Entre's products to others. After completing the Entre Blueprint, students are introduced to the affiliate program and given marketing materials. This structurally creates significant bias in online Entre reviews — most positive reviews on YouTube and review sites are written by people who earn commissions from those reviews.
Is Entre Institute worth it in 2026?
Entre Institute is worth it only for buyers who genuinely value mindset and community content, can afford to spend without expecting financial return, and limit themselves to the $39 Blueprint. For tactical online business training in 2026, lower-priced alternatives with modern AI workflows offer dramatically better value-per-dollar.
Did Entre Institute change its platform?
Yes, in 2025 Entre Institute rebranded its student-facing platform to "Design Your Life" (accessed at m.designyourlife.com), and Jeff Lerner now refers to the company as "ENTRE: The Life Design Company." However, the public-facing marketing site is still entreinstitute.com, and the underlying ENTRE entity (copyright 2017–2026) remains the operating company.
What is Jeff Lerner's net worth?
Jeff Lerner's net worth is estimated at around $5 million. He often references "$100 million" in his ads, but that figure represents lifetime online sales, not personal net worth. Sales figures don't account for affiliate commissions paid out, operating costs, team salaries, or taxes.
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