Subscription Commerce

Selling Subscriptions as an Independent: The Complete Guide

Why subscriptions change everything for independents

A coach who bills per session depends on every new client to maintain income. A consultant on day rates sees revenue drop to zero between engagements. A course creator who sells one-off courses starts from scratch every month.

The subscription model reverses this. Instead of starting from zero, each month begins with a base of already-secured revenue. Concretely, an independent with 50 subscribers at €49/month generates €2,450 in predictable revenue before any prospecting.

Three concrete advantages:

  • Financial predictability — you know what you’ll invoice next month. No more anxiety during gaps between engagements.
  • Natural retention — a subscribed client stays an average of 8–14 months, versus a one-off purchase with no follow-up.
  • Business valuation — a portfolio of recurring subscribers gives tangible value to your business, useful if you seek funding or want to sell.

The trend is global: according to the Zuora Subscription Economy Index, subscription businesses have grown 3.4 times faster than the S&P 500 over 12 years (CAGR of 16.5% vs 4.8%). In France, the number of freelancers surpassed 1.2 million in 2024 — and the pressure to stabilise income has never been greater.

The 3 recurring revenue models for independents

Not all subscriptions are equal. The right model depends on your profession, your audience, and the level of support you offer.

1. The support subscription

Your client pays a fixed amount each month for ongoing access to your services: regular coaching sessions, reserved consulting hours, or personalised follow-up. For example, a coach charges €150/month for two monthly sessions and access to a dedicated messaging channel.

This model works particularly well for coaches and consultants who maintain an ongoing relationship with their clients.

2. The content subscription (membership)

You provide access to a library of resources — videos, templates, webinars, community — for a monthly subscription. A course creator can offer access to all their online courses for €29/month instead of selling each course for €200.

This model is scalable: you create the content once and each new subscriber increases your revenue without proportionally increasing your workload.

3. The recurring retainer

Your client reserves a volume of services each month: 2 days of consulting, 5 hours of support, a monthly audit. This model is common among consultants who want to sell subscriptions while keeping a tailored service relationship.

In practice, these three models combine. A consultant can offer a monthly retainer with included access to their template library.

Coach: get paid recurring without technical tools

Coaching represents a market of €750–800 million in France in 2025, growing 12–15% annually. But the majority of coaches still bill per session, using inadequate tools: bank transfer, PayPal, or raw Stripe links.

The problem isn’t a lack of clients. It’s payment friction. A prospect interested in a 6-month programme hesitates when they have to pay €900 upfront. The same prospect more readily accepts €150/month over 6 months — provided the process is simple.

What you need:

  • A professional payment page, branded to you (not a generic Stripe page)
  • Automatic monthly billing — card via Stripe and SEPA direct debit via GoCardless. SEPA shows a failure rate of just 2.9% versus 10–15% for cards (GoCardless data across 85,000 businesses). Offering both maximises your collection rate.
  • Automatic invoicing at each billing cycle
  • Automatic retry (dunning) on failed payments — because up to 53% of subscription churn is involuntary (expired card, limit reached). A good dunning system recovers 50–70% of these payments without any action on your part.

A coach doesn’t need a full LMS. They need a recurring payment tool with an integrated sales page. That’s exactly what payment platforms for coaches offer.

For more on this topic, see our dedicated article: Coach: get paid recurring without technical tools.

Consultant: moving from day rates to predictable income

The dominant model for consulting remains the day rate: €400–800/day depending on speciality. The problem is structural — between engagements, revenue drops to zero. And prospecting starts over.

Moving to recurring revenue doesn’t mean abandoning traditional engagements. It means adding a layer of predictability:

  • Monthly retainer — your client reserves 2–4 days per month, billed automatically. You keep the flexibility of consulting with the predictability of a subscription.
  • Advisory subscription — access to a dedicated channel (email, Slack) for ad-hoc questions + a monthly call. Typical pricing: €500–1,500/month depending on scope.
  • Productised offering — you transform a recurring service (quarterly audit, monthly reporting) into a fixed-price product.

The technical challenge for a consultant is finding a tool that handles both recurring billing and automatic compliant invoicing. Without having to assemble 4 or 5 different tools — that’s the tool fragmentation trap.

For more: Consultant: moving from day rates to recurring revenue.

Course creator: selling courses without US platforms

The professional training market in France represents nearly €35 billion in 2025, of which €15.1 billion is managed by France Compétences. Independent course creators are capturing a growing share of this market through online sales.

But the common reflex is to turn to American platforms: Teachable, Kajabi, Podia. Concrete problems:

  • Dollar pricing — your European clients pay currency conversion fees, and you bear the exchange risk.
  • No SEPA direct debit — card payments fail in 10–15% of cases (expiry, limits, lost cards). SEPA direct debit, with only 2.9% failure across 52 million transactions, is significantly more reliable for recurring payments. Neither Teachable nor Kajabi offer it.
  • VAT not handled — European VAT obligations aren’t natively supported.
  • English-only support — when a payment issue arises, you’re on your own.

French alternatives exist. Systeme.io, LearnyBox, and Teachizy are full LMS platforms. But if your primary need is to sell your courses with clean recurring payments — without building complex sales funnels — a specialised payment platform is often a better fit.

Detailed comparisons are available: PayFacile vs Teachable, PayFacile vs Systeme.io, PayFacile vs Podia.

For more: Course creator: selling online courses without Teachable.

Choosing the right tool: what actually matters

When you’re independent, time spent configuring tools is unbilled time. Here are the criteria that actually matter when choosing a subscription selling platform:

CriterionWhy it matters
Automatic billing (card + SEPA)Cards fail in 10–15% of cases. SEPA: only 2.9%. Offering both maximises collections.
Automatic invoicingEach billing cycle generates a compliant invoice, with no manual intervention
Automatic retry (dunning)Recovers 50–70% of failed payments without action on your part. Recovered subscribers stay an average of 7 additional months.
Integrated sales pageNo need for a separate website — your client arrives, understands the offer, and pays
Euro pricingNo currency conversion, no surprises for your clients
Local language supportA real person when a payment is stuck, not an English-only chatbot

In practice, the question isn’t "what’s the best tool" but "what tool fits my specific need." A course creator who needs a full LMS doesn’t have the same needs as a coach who simply wants to collect a monthly subscription.

PayFacile sits precisely in this niche: recurring payments, automatic invoicing, and a sales page — without the complexity of an LMS or a sales funnel builder. See pricing.

Where to start: the 4 steps

Switching to subscriptions doesn’t happen overnight. Here’s a realistic action plan for an independent:

Step 1: Identify your recurring offer

Take your most in-demand service and transform it into a monthly offer. A coach selling sessions at €80 can offer a "2 sessions + messaging follow-up" package at €139/month. A consultant can turn a one-off audit into a quarterly follow-up.

Step 2: Set the right price

The monthly price should be lower than the perceived cost of the alternative (buying per session) while remaining profitable for you. Rule of thumb: the monthly price is 60–70% of the equivalent per-session rate.

Step 3: Set up recurring billing

Connect a payment processor (Stripe for cards, GoCardless for SEPA), create your payment page, and activate automatic invoicing. With a platform like PayFacile, this step takes less than 30 minutes. See how to set up a Stripe subscription.

Step 4: Convert your existing clients

Offer the subscription to your current clients first. They know you, they trust you. Offer an incentive (first month at 50% off, early access) to encourage the switch. If 20% of your existing clients move to a subscription, you already have a solid recurring base.

See how PayFacile can help

Frequently Asked Questions

How many clients do I need to live off a subscription model?

It depends on your pricing. With a subscription at €99/month, 30 clients generate €2,970 in recurring revenue. At €199/month, 20 clients are enough to reach €3,980. A realistic target for a starting independent is to convert 10–15 clients in the first 3 months.

Do I need to abandon one-off billing to switch to subscriptions?

No. Most independents combine both models. The subscription forms a base of predictable revenue, and one-off services (engagements, individual courses) supplement the total. The goal is for recurring revenue to cover your fixed costs.

What payment method should I choose for subscriptions in Europe?

Card is the standard, but SEPA direct debit is particularly well-suited in Europe: fewer payment failures (no card expiry), and often lower transaction fees. The ideal is to offer both options.

How do I handle failed payments in a subscription?

Failed payments represent up to 53% of subscription churn. Most are involuntary: expired card, insufficient funds. Automatic retry (dunning) — email reminders, rebilling attempts, card update prompts — recovers 50–70% of these payments. According to Stripe, a recovered subscriber stays an average of 7 additional months.

Do I need a website to sell subscriptions?

Not necessarily. A dedicated payment page is enough to start. You share the link via email, social media, or in your signature. If you want to go further, platforms like PayFacile include a page builder that lets you create a mini-site without coding.

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