Pricing, plainly.
One price for the whole journey, a monthly option if you'd rather, and the first verse free forever so you can hear it work before anyone pays anything.
Verse 1 — free, forever
Every student's first verse is free: hear the cantor chant it, chant it back, and get the full word-by-word score on melody and Hebrew. No time limit, no card, no trial that expires. Verse 1 is the try-before-buy.
Full Prep — $129, one payment
$129, once. Every verse of your exact Torah portion and your haftarah, per-word scoring, the practice plan paced to your date, ranks and candy — everything, all the way to the bima. One payment, nothing to cancel, no renewals, ever.
For scale: private b'nai mitzvah tutoring typically runs $1,000–$3,000 over a year of preparation. Full Prep costs less than a single month of weekly lessons — and it doesn't replace your cantor or tutor, it makes the practice between those lessons actually happen.
Monthly — $24.99/month
Prefer not to pay once? $24.99 per month unlocks exactly the same thing. It auto-renews until you cancel, and you can cancel anytime in your App Store settings — if the big day is three months out, three months is all you pay for.
How billing works
- Purchases happen inside the app, through Apple's in-app purchase system (Google Play support is coming with the Android listing).
- Payment is charged to the family's Apple ID — a parent's approval gates every purchase on a child's device.
- Monthly renews automatically until canceled at least 24 hours before the period ends; manage or cancel in your Apple account settings.
- Refunds follow the App Store's standard policies.
What "everything" includes
- Your exact parsha — all verses, not samples — plus your haftarah.
- A professional cantor's recording of every verse, word by word.
- Instant scoring on two channels: Melody % (the trope tune) and Words % (Hebrew pronunciation), marked word by word. How the scoring works →
- A practice plan paced to your actual date, with the 85% mastery line that means "candy-throw ready."
Scores are a practice aid — your cantor, rabbi, or tutor always gives the final sign-off. RoboRebbe is a practice coach, not a religious authority.