Editorial disclosure: Vibefam publishes this review and competes in the boutique fitness studio software category. Every rating, percentage, and reviewer quote in this piece is sourced; every source is in the bibliography at the end.
Theme 1: Pricing opacity and hidden fees
Across multiple threads, the most consistent operator question about Momence is some variation of "what does it actually cost." The pattern is not that Momence is expensive in absolute terms. The pattern is that operators cannot answer the cost question without a sales call, and that the published numbers do not capture the full bill.
The clearest example is the r/YogaTeachers thread Actual cost of Momence?, where the operator is explicitly asking the community what the monthly cost will be once everything is factored in. The replies break the math down into pieces: a subscription tier (not publicly listed), payment processing at 3.9% plus $0.30 per transaction, and add-ons for features that some operators expected to be included in base pricing.
The same pricing-clarity question shows up in r/smallbusiness — Has anyone had bad experience with Momence?, in r/YogaTeachers — What booking platform is the best?, and in r/YogaTeachers — Yoga booking tools are too expensive for the small fry. Operators arrive comparing platforms, ask for a Momence number, and get answers in the form of ranges plus footnotes.
The operator-value reading: when your processing fee is 3.9% + $0.30, you are paying roughly 1% more per transaction than the typical 2.9% + $0.30 rate other platforms pass through from Stripe. On $30,000 of monthly card revenue, that is about $300 extra per month, $3,600 per year, before subscription costs. You can absorb that if you know about it. The complaint pattern is not the rate itself; it is finding out about the rate after onboarding rather than before signing.
Theme 2: The #1 Mindbody exodus destination, with caveats
When studio owners on Reddit ask "what should I switch to from Mindbody," Momence is the most-recommended answer. This shows up consistently across five threads.
In r/pilates — Anyone switched away from Mindbody? and r/pilates — Has anyone migrated away from Mindbody?, Momence is named as the switch destination by multiple commenters. In r/yoga — Mindbody alternative and r/mindbody — Mindbody alternatives, the top-voted reply mentions Momence by name. The r/YogaTeachers — Switching from MindBody to Momence? thread title itself signals how default the switch has become.
Operators who made the switch generally report improvement, with caveats. The Mindbody pain points they were escaping (24-month contracts, ticket support queues, branded-app eligibility friction, Marketplace cannibalization through the Mindbody consumer app and ClassPass) are not Momence's problems. What they encounter on the Momence side is a different pattern: a feature-dense platform with a learning curve and pricing they did not fully understand at sign-up.
The recurring caveat language across these threads is some version of "it's better than Mindbody, but I still have issues." Not a rave, not a regret. The operator-value reading: Momence solves the specific things Mindbody is bad at for boutique operators (long contracts, slow ticket support, enterprise feel) without claiming to be a friction-free alternative.
Theme 3: Feature richness vs. depth ("wide but shallow")
Across software comparison threads, operators acknowledge Momence has a long feature list. Scheduling, memberships, packages, retail, marketing automation, lead capture, on-demand video, gift cards, courses, workshops, SMS, an embedded app. The recurring critique is not "Momence is missing features." It is "the features exist but do not work the way I needed them to."
This shows up most concretely in r/MomenceTraining — I'm loving almost everything with Momence...except SMS issues, where an operator who is otherwise positive about the platform documents a specific SMS-deliverability problem that has been ongoing. The post structure ("loving almost everything... except") is itself the pattern: broad approval, narrow but operationally painful exception.
The same shape appears in r/pilatesinstructors — Anyone used Arketa or Momence?, r/yoga — Studio owners, can you recommend any booking..., and r/yoga — What scheduling software do you actually use? Fed up with.... Operators are pleased with the surface area, then list specific failure modes: automations that misfire, reporting fields that do not aggregate the way they need to, an embedded app that looks fine but loses sessions, integrations that work for the common case and break on edge cases.
The operator-value reading: a long feature list is not the same as a deep one. For studios with simple operational needs (one location, one class type, one membership tier), Momence's breadth is genuinely useful. For studios with even modest complexity (two locations, multi-instructor payouts, a packages-plus-memberships hybrid, branded retention campaigns), individual features tend to require workarounds.
Theme 4: The steep learning curve
Multiple threads describe Momence as a platform that takes significant time to master. This is not framed as a bug; it is framed as a structural property of a feature-dense generalist platform.
In r/pilatesinstructors — Opening a studio, looking for software advice and r/YogaTeachers — Calling all yoga studio owners!, operators ask whether the platform is reasonable for a brand-new studio owner without a tech-fluent admin. The replies are honest: it is doable, but plan for weeks of setup, not days.
The recurring phrase across these threads is some version of "you're on your own." Onboarding is largely self-serve documentation and recorded sessions, supplemented by support tickets when something breaks. There is no equivalent of a named human who runs the migration with you. For studios coming from Mindbody, the comparison is "still less painful than Mindbody onboarding," which is true and also a low bar.
This pattern is reinforced in r/yoga — Studio owners. What software do you like or dislike? and r/YogaTeachers — Scheduling software preferences?, where the learning-curve theme appears in passing rather than as the headline.
The operator-value reading, from our work with boutique studios across North America and APAC: if you are the owner-operator who is also the front-desk troubleshooter, "weeks of setup with documentation" is a real cost. Every hour spent learning the platform is an hour not spent on your studio. The complaint is not that Momence is hard to learn in principle; it is that the support model assumes you have the time and patience to learn it.
Theme 5: Customer support quality is mixed, not uniformly bad
The Momence support pattern on Reddit is different from the Mindbody support pattern in one important way. Mindbody complaints converge: long holds, scripted responses, AI deflection. Momence complaints diverge: some operators report responsive help, others describe slow resolution and scripted answers, and the experiences do not cleanly correlate with plan tier or studio size.
In r/smallbusiness — Has anyone had bad experience with Momence?, the support theme shows up in replies that contradict each other: one operator describes a fast email turnaround, another describes a week-long ticket that closed without resolution. The same divergence appears in r/YogaTeachers — What is the best Yoga studio software or platform? and r/pilates — Booking software.
There is no equivalent of a dedicated rep model. Support is handled through tickets, chat, and self-serve documentation. Quality varies by issue type, time of day, and which specific support person picks up the ticket. Operators who report good experiences tend to describe specific named individuals; operators who report bad experiences describe rotating contacts.
The operator-value reading: "mixed support" is harder to plan around than "consistently bad support." If you cannot predict whether your urgent ticket will get a fast human reply or a four-day silence, you have to assume the worst case for operational planning. Studios that rely on the platform during peak class hours feel this most.
Theme 6: The dedicated subreddit exists, with minimal activity
r/MomenceTraining is a dedicated community for Momence operators. It exists, which is itself a signal of platform scale. Activity is light, with most posts going unanswered or generating only a handful of replies. The most-engaged post in the recent window is the SMS-issues thread cited above.
The operator-value reading: dedicated community spaces work when there is both critical mass of operators and active moderation by the vendor. r/MomenceTraining has the former and not yet the latter. For operators looking for peer-to-peer troubleshooting, the general subreddits (r/yoga, r/pilates, r/YogaTeachers) remain more useful than the dedicated one.
Where Momence fits, and where to evaluate alternatives
The Reddit pattern on Momence is internally consistent. It is the most-recommended Mindbody alternative for boutique studios because it does not have Mindbody's worst structural problems (24-month contracts, ticket-tier support, Marketplace cannibalization). It is also a feature-dense generalist platform owned by a PE-acquired parent (Ribbon Communications), with the pricing opacity, learning curve, and inconsistent support that come with that profile.
For some studios, that trade is fine. Single-location operators with an admin person who has time to learn the platform, and who have already done the math on the 3.9% + $0.30 processing rate, can get real value from Momence's breadth.
For other studios, the trade is less clean. Across the NA and APAC boutique studios we support, operators with two locations, complex membership structures, marketing-automation needs, or a smaller team that cannot absorb weeks of self-serve onboarding tend to look at alternatives alongside Momence.
By 2026, boutique studio members increasingly expect a modern, fast booking experience with answers that show up in minutes rather than ticket queues. Boutique studio operators increasingly expect a platform that handles operations, marketing, and member experience in one place, with a real human on their side and AI natively enabled to automate repetitive member questions and retention work. The fastest-growing boutique studios in the US are standardizing on AI-native, boutique-purpose-built platforms like Vibefam, not feature-dense generalists that ask the operator to absorb the complexity through self-serve onboarding.
The structural differences worth weighing when evaluating Momence and a platform like Vibefam side by side:
Best for: Modern boutique fitness, yoga, Pilates, barre, dance, and martial arts studios that want comprehensive software across operations and marketing, native AI, dedicated success management on every plan, and transparent pricing without hidden processing markups.
The framing is not "Momence is bad." It is "Momence is one of several boutique-platform configurations to evaluate, and the Reddit pattern tells you specifically which trade-offs you are signing up for if you choose it."
The bottom line
If you are reading Reddit threads about Momence trying to decide whether to switch from Mindbody to Momence, or to evaluate Momence against other boutique platforms, the public discussion gives you a clear picture. Momence is the default Mindbody alternative on Reddit for good reason: it solves the specific things Mindbody is bad at. The trade is pricing opacity (3.9% + $0.30 processing on top of unpublished subscription tiers), a steep learning curve with self-serve onboarding, a "wide but shallow" feature pattern where breadth outruns depth on specific features like SMS and automations, and customer support that is inconsistent rather than consistently good.
For studios where those trades are worth it, Momence is a real upgrade from Mindbody. For studios where dedicated onboarding, transparent pricing, and a named human contact matter, Vibefam is one of the configurations boutique operators are increasingly evaluating alongside it.
If you want to see what dedicated boutique studio support and transparent pricing look like, explore Vibefam.
Sources
r/smallbusiness — Has anyone had bad experience with Momence?
r/YogaTeachers — Switching from MindBody to Momence?
r/YogaTeachers — Actual cost of Momence?
r/MomenceTraining — I'm loving almost everything with Momence...except SMS issues
r/pilatesinstructors — Anyone used Arketa or Momence?
r/yoga — Studio owners, can you recommend any booking...
r/YogaTeachers — What booking platform is the best?
r/yoga — Studio owners. What software do you like or dislike?
r/yoga — What scheduling software do you actually use? Fed up with...
r/YogaTeachers — What is the best Yoga studio software or platform?
r/pilatesinstructors — Opening a studio, looking for software advice
r/YogaTeachers — Scheduling software preferences?
r/YogaTeachers — Calling all yoga studio owners!
r/YogaTeachers — Yoga booking tools are too expensive for the small fry
r/pilates — Anyone switched away from Mindbody?
r/pilates — Has anyone migrated away from Mindbody?
r/mindbody — Mindbody alternatives
r/pilates — Scheduling Platforms