Sunil Chaudhary Review: Is His Coach Training Worth Your Money?
A friend of mine messaged me last week asking, “Hey, have you heard of this Sunil Chaudhary guy? He’s got a ₹499 thing for coaches. Should I join?”
I hadn’t really looked into him before that. But I figured, why not actually dig in properly and find out, instead of just guessing? So that’s what I did. I went through his websites, his recent blog posts, his pricing pages, his checkout pages, and whatever independent reviews I could track down. This article is basically me telling you everything I found, the same way I told my friend.
I’m going to keep this simple. No big words, no confusing business jargon. Just a normal conversation about whether this is worth your money.
As you know that the internet is packed with people promising fast riches if you just buy their course. So when you hear about someone like Sunil Chaudhary, who calls himself a “Digital Coach Business Mentor,” it’s totally normal to feel a little unsure. Is this the real deal, or just another shiny promise with nothing solid behind it?
That’s exactly the question this review is going to answer. I am going to walk through who Sunil Chaudhary is, what his main membership programs actually include, what he’s been publishing lately, and what people outside of his own website have to say about him. I’ll keep the language simple and friendly, the way you’d explain it to a friend over lunch, not the way a lawyer writes a contract.
By the end, you’ll have a clear answer: should you trust this, or should you walk away?
Who Is Sunil Chaudhary ?

Sunil Chaudhary lives in Aligarh, a city in India. He’s been working in digital marketing since 2014. Digital marketing just means marketing that happens online, through things like websites, social media posts, emails, and ads. Over the years, he’s used a few different names for himself, including “Suniltams Guruji” and “Digital Coach Business Mentor.” The word “Guruji” is a respectful Indian term that basically means “respected teacher.”
He runs several businesses. The biggest one right now is called Career Building School. He also has older projects like TAMS Studies and JustBaazaar. His main focus today is helping coaches, trainers, consultants, and other experts turn their knowledge into an online business. Think of someone who is great at yoga, cooking, fitness, or business advice, but doesn’t know how to turn that skill into a steady stream of paying clients online. That’s exactly the kind of person Sunil Chaudhary says he helps.
Here’s something that actually stood out to me while researching: this man is everywhere online. He runs multiple YouTube channels, including one just about digital coaching and another that’s surprisingly about cars. He’s written and published several books, including one called “The One Niche,” which you can find listed on Amazon. He keeps separate websites for different parts of his business, his blog, his English-speaking coaching brand, his Hindi-speaking community work. That’s not something a fly-by-night seller usually bothers doing. Building all of that takes years, not weeks.
He talks the way you’d expect a motivational coach to talk. He mixes Hindi and English freely, calls his audience things like “action takers,” and isn’t afraid to be blunt. One of his actual video titles is “Tired of Being a Struggling Coach? Do This Instead!” Another is “My Honest Answer: How Many Coaches Have I Made Successful?” He’s clearly speaking to people who feel stuck, the kind of person who has taken ten courses, has a notebook full of half-finished plans, and still hasn’t launched anything. If that sounds like you, he’s talking directly to you, on purpose.
He also claims some really big numbers, like having trained over 25,000 students and helped more than 1,000 businesses. I want to be straight with you here: I can’t independently confirm a number like that. There’s no public scoreboard anywhere that counts it for us. So treat it the way you’d treat any big number a salesperson tells you. It could be true. It could be a little stretched. Either way, it’s not proof on its own.
One more thing worth knowing that Sunil also promotes and personally supports a marketing platform called Vednera. In a video walkthrough, he demos it as an all-in-one tool with its own CRM, sales funnels, email and SMS automation, course creation, and payment gateway setup, similar in spirit to other all-in-one marketing platforms like Systeme.io.
What Did I Find When I Looked Outside His Own Website?
This is where things get interesting, and where this review tries to be extra fair. Anyone can say nice things about themselves on their own website. The real test is what people say about you when you’re not in the room.
I’ve checked Trustpilot, which is a review website, where real customers leave honest reviews about companies, kind of like restaurant reviews, but for businesses and services. His training brand has a 4 out of 5 star rating, based on 33 reviews.
Most of the reviews we found were warm and genuinely positive. People said he explains things in a way that’s easy to follow, that he’s patient, and that he’s easy to reach when they have questions. That’s a good sign. A coach who vanishes after taking your money is a real and common problem in this industry, and that doesn’t seem to be happening here, based on what those reviewers said.
But let’s stay balanced. Twenty-eight reviews is a pretty small number for someone who claims to have taught 25,000 people. Imagine a school that says it has 25,000 graduates, but only 28 of them ever left a comment in the guestbook. That doesn’t mean the school is fake. But it does mean we’re seeing a tiny slice of the full picture, not the whole story.
I also searched for news articles, reports or formal complaints about him from sources that have nothing to do with his own websites. I didn’t find any major red flags, like scam warnings or legal trouble. That’s good news.
But I also didn’t find much independent reporting about him at all. Almost everything published about Sunil Chaudhary online was written by him or by people working with him. That’s not automatically a bad thing. Plenty of coaches, freelancers, and small business owners write their own content because they can’t afford a big PR team. But it does mean that most of what you’ll read about him is closer to an advertisement than to a news story, and it’s smart to read it with that in mind.
He’s also active on other platforms. He has an account on Udemy, the online course website, where his bio says he’s been teaching since 2014 and has trained more than 25,000 students. He has LinkedIn profiles, a YouTube channel, and social media accounts on Facebook and Instagram. So while the writing on his own site is heavily self-promotional, his overall online presence does look active, consistent, and has clearly been running for a long time, which counts for something. Scammers who disappear after a few months are a real pattern in this industry, and a person with over a decade of visible activity under a recognizable name is at least a different category from that.
What Do His Membership Programs Actually Offer?
Now let’s get into the main course of this review: his actual paid programs. He offers a few different memberships, and they’re set up like a staircase. Each step up costs more money and promises more personal support.
The ₹499 Starter Program
This is his entry point, sometimes called a 5-day or 10-day “challenge,” sometimes wrapped under names like “Build Your Digital Coaching Business System” or “Kick Start Digital Coaching Business Mission.” Don’t let the different names confuse you. It’s basically the same core idea repackaged a few different ways, which is a totally normal thing businesses do when testing what works.
For ₹499, you walk away with a working landing page, an email follow-up setup, and a WhatsApp automation system. Picture this like a beginner’s toolkit. You won’t become a six-figure coach overnight from it, but you do get real, usable pieces you can build on. The publicly shared roadmap for this looks like it follows a simple day-by-day structure: clarify your niche, build your offer, set up your landing page, build your lead magnet, set up email and WhatsApp, build a basic website, and launch. That’s a sensible order for a true beginner, and it mirrors how most real online business coaches teach this stuff, not just him.
.Gold Membership (Digital Momentum)
Momentum is built to stop you from buying a course and never finishing it, weekly action plans, check-ins, that sort of structure.
This is the middle tier, built around a big library of training videos, more than 40 of them, covering SEO, social media, email marketing, course creation, and personal branding. Think of it like a library card that unlocks a huge shelf of “how to build a business” videos all at once, that you keep access to long-term.
This is the middle step on the staircase. The idea behind Momentum is simple and honestly pretty smart: a lot of people buy courses and never actually finish them. They watch a video, feel excited for a day, and then life gets busy and the course gets forgotten. Momentum is built to fix exactly that problem.
Instead of just handing you more videos, Momentum adds structure around taking action. It includes weekly action plans, which are like a checklist of specific things to do each week. It also includes what the program calls an accountability system, meaning someone checks in to make sure you’re actually doing the work, not just watching it. On top of that, there’s community support and access to group workshops focused on building your offer, your funnel (the step-by-step path that turns a stranger into a paying customer), and your content strategy.
CBS Diamond Sudarshan
Diamond is the top tier, with direct one-on-one mentorship from Sunil himself, reviewing your offer, your funnel, and your content personally. This is the top of the staircase, the most expensive and most personal level.
Diamond includes everything found in both Gold and Momentum, plus direct mentorship with Sunil Chaudhary himself. That means one-on-one or small-group sessions where he personally reviews your business, your offer, your sales process, and your content, and gives feedback.
The page describes this level as being for “serious action takers” who don’t want to spend years figuring everything out completely on their own. If Starter program is the cookbook and Digital Momentum is the cooking class, Diamond is like hiring a private chef to come into your kitchen and coach you personally, one-on-one, while you cook.
Put simply, the overall idea behind the three levels is: Starter teaches you skills, Momentum pushes you to take action, and Diamond gives you close personal mentorship to speed everything up. This three-step structure isn’t unique to Sunil Chaudhary. Lots of online educators and coaches use a similar ladder, because it lets people start small and only pay more once they’re confident they want deeper support. That part of the business model makes logical sense.
What Real Evidence Did I Find About the Diamond Tier?
This next part is important, because it’s the most solid piece of evidence I found in this entire review, far better than the vague “trust me” claims on most of his pages.
On one of his blog pages, I found a detailed write-up of an actual mentorship session with a named client, a coach who teaches mindset and EFT tapping in the Telugu language, running a business called Telugu Mindset Lab. It reads less like an advertisement and more like real meeting notes: specific numbers (60+ community members, his top video getting over 100 views per hour), specific pricing decisions made during the call (a ₹99 starter offer, a ₹2,999 one-on-one consultation, membership tiers at ₹4,999 and ₹9,999, and a Diamond package at ₹69,999 for 30 sessions across a year), and specific technical steps, like connecting a payment system and building an email sequence.
This matters because it’s hard to fake this kind of boring, specific detail. Made-up success stories tend to stay vague and exciting, things like “she got amazing results!” Real coaching notes tend to be messier and more technical, full of small, unglamorous steps like setting up a payment gateway or deciding which day to post a video. This write-up reads far more like the second kind. It’s still published on his own website, so I can’t independently confirm every detail with the client himself, but it’s genuinely more convincing evidence than anything else I found about what happens inside his highest-priced mentorship tier.
What About the Testimonials I Found?
On another page describing his ₹499 starter offer, I found testimonials with real names and real job titles, not just generic praise: an English communication coach, a tarot life coach, a senior gynecologist who also works as a happiness coach, and a few others, each with a short quote about working with him.
This is a meaningful step up from a page that just says “thousands of happy students” with no names attached. Naming real people with real professions is a small but real form of accountability. It doesn’t fully prove the quotes are word-for-word accurate, since they’re still published on his own site rather than an independent platform, but it’s noticeably more specific and checkable than vague, faceless praise.
Pros & Cons
No coach or program is perfectly good or perfectly bad, the same way no single restaurant deserves either a perfect 10 or a flat zero. So let’s split this honestly into real strengths and real weaknesses, the way a fair teacher would grade a project.
Pros :
The structure of his programs makes sense for the problem he says he’s solving. Lots of coaches and consultants really do get stuck in exactly the way his pages describe: they have real knowledge and skill, but no clear plan for turning that into paying clients, no system for following up with interested people, and no website that actually attracts customers while they sleep. Breaking the solution into three steps, learn, take action, then get personal mentorship, is a smart way to meet people wherever they currently are in their journey.
The pricing ladder also seems thoughtful rather than aggressive. Instead of demanding a huge payment upfront, there’s a cheaper entry point first, like the low-cost five-day challenge I looked at earlier, and the bigger financial commitments come later, after someone has already gotten a taste of how he teaches. That’s a completely normal and fair way to run an online education business, as long as nobody feels pressured or tricked into the larger purchase before they’re ready.
The independent reviews I found, even though there weren’t many of them, were genuinely warm. Real people, outside of his own marketing pages, said he explains complicated topics clearly and responds when they reach out with questions. That detail matters a lot, because a coach who takes your money and then disappears is sadly a common story in the online coaching world. Based on everything we found, that does not appear to be the pattern here.
His business also has real staying power. He’s been visibly active online since at least 2014, across multiple platforms like Udemy, LinkedIn, Facebook, and his own websites. Short-lived scams usually don’t last over a decade under a consistent, recognizable name. That long track record is a point in his favor, even if it doesn’t prove every single claim he makes.
The detailed Diamond mentorship case study I found is genuinely the strongest point in his favor in this entire review. The level of specific, technical, slightly unglamorous detail in that write-up (exact pricing decisions, exact platform setup steps, exact posting schedules) is hard to fake convincingly, and it paints a picture of a mentor who actually gets into the weeds with a client’s business, rather than just sending motivational messages. The named testimonials with real job titles, found on a different page, add a smaller but similar kind of credibility.
Cons :
The biggest issue, without question, is proof. Big claims, like training 25,000 students or helping over 1,000 businesses grow, are not backed up by any independent source I could find and check ourselves. Picture a kid telling you he scored 50 goals last soccer season, but there’s no scoreboard, no coach, and no teammate anywhere to confirm it happened. Maybe it’s completely true. But right now, you’re trusting the storyteller, not a referee standing on the sidelines.
There’s also a noticeably large amount of self-promotional writing. Many recent articles use titles like “10 Reasons Why Sunil Chaudhary is the Top Digital Business Coach in India,” often written in the first person, almost as if he’s personally explaining to you why he deserves that title. A genuinely unbiased reader should notice that real expertise usually gets recognized by other people first, through outside articles, awards, or news coverage, not mainly through an expert repeating the praise about himself across dozens of his own blog posts.
Lastly, like nearly every coaching business that offers multiple membership tiers, there’s a clear sales funnel running underneath all of this. The cheap entry offer leads naturally toward the mid-priced Momentum tier, which leads naturally toward the expensive Diamond tier. This isn’t dishonest by itself. Plenty of completely legitimate businesses, including big well-known ones such as Siddharth Rajsekar, are built this way. But you should walk in expecting to be offered the next tier up at every stage, and it’s smart to decide ahead of time exactly how much you’re comfortable spending, so you don’t get swept along by the momentum of the upsell before you’ve had time to think it through.
My Honest Recommendation
I’d genuinely recommend trying his ₹499 starter program. Think about it this way: ₹499 is roughly what you’d spend on one medium pizza, delivered, eaten, and gone within twenty minutes, with nothing left to show for it afterward. This program, even if it underdelivers, still leaves you with a working landing page, an email setup, and a WhatsApp follow-up system you can keep using long after the five days are over.
Worst case, you’ve spent pizza money on a few useful templates and a clearer idea of what a real online funnel looks like. Best case, it becomes the actual first brick of your coaching business. That’s a small enough risk that I think it’s worth trying for yourself, the way you’d try a new restaurant that a friend half-recommended.
So if you’re on the fence about that ₹499 program specifically, go ahead and skip the pizza order one night, and see what you build instead.
However, If you’re considering the higher tiers, Momentum or especially Diamond Sudarshan, ask yourself honestly whether you’re truly ready to commit real time and real money. I would still suggest doing extra independent research, and reading checkout pages closely, before committing to his expensive tier programs.
FAQs
Is Sunil Chaudhary a Scam?
Based on everything I found, no, I don’t think so. I found no lawsuits, no scam warnings, and no angry complaint threads from independent sources. The reviews that do exist lean genuinely positive, and the detailed mentorship case study suggests real work happens behind the scenes. But “not a scam” and “definitely worth your money right now” are two separate questions. Only you can answer the second one, based on your own budget and what you actually need.
Why couldn’t you find more independent reviews?
This happens a lot with coaches and trainers who mostly work through word of mouth, WhatsApp groups, and direct messages rather than big public marketplaces. It doesn’t prove anything bad. It just means there’s a smaller public paper trail than you’d find for, say, a giant company that millions of strangers have reviewed. It’s simply something to be aware of as you make your decision.
What would make this review easier to trust completely?
Simple things, really. More detailed, named case studies like the Telugu Mindset Lab one we found, published consistently rather than just occasionally, would help a lot. So would more reviews on independent platforms, clearer and more consistent published pricing instead of the same offer appearing at different price points on different pages, and a more careful proofreading pass on pages before they go live, especially checkout pages. None of these are huge asks, and a business at this size could likely add them without much trouble.
