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Comparison

EduGradUP vs Teachmint

Teachmint started as a teaching tool and has expanded into a school ERP, with strong adoption in India. EduGradUP is built ground-up for Bangladesh, Nepal and Singapore with native multi-language and local-payment focus.

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EduGradUP strengths

  • ✅ Native Bengali and Nepali UI
  • ✅ Local payment gateways (bKash, Nagad, eSewa, Khalti, PayNow) built-in
  • ✅ Madrasa and Qawmi/Aliya modules for Bangladesh
  • ✅ NEB and SEE result formats for Nepal
  • ✅ PDPA + Singapore data residency
  • ✅ Country-based onboarding teams

Teachmint strengths

  • • Strong teaching/classroom tools
  • • Large India installed base
  • • Good content marketplace

Feature-by-feature

DimensionEduGradUPTeachmint
Native Bengali / Nepali UI
Local payment gateways ✅ Built-in ⚠️ Limited
Madrasa modules (BD)
NEB/SEE templates (NP)
PDPA + Singapore residency
Country support teams ✅ BD/NP/SG ⚠️ India HQ

Our verdict

For schools whose primary need is country-specific compliance, language and payments, EduGradUP is the better fit. Teachmint suits schools who want a strong India-style classroom experience.

Background — what is Teachmint?

Teachmint is one of the more recent entrants in the school management space, founded in Bangalore in 2020. It launched in the middle of the pandemic-era surge in remote learning, and its first product was a lightweight live-class and teaching tool aimed at individual tutors and coaching institutes. From that beachhead it expanded upward into a full school ERP, layering admissions, fees, attendance, examinations and parent communication on top of the original classroom-delivery core.

The target market is primarily Indian K-12 schools and coaching centres, with a strong emphasis on tier-2 and tier-3 cities where the original teaching tool found early traction. Teachmint has built out a content marketplace, integrated assessment formats and digital classroom hardware partnerships that distinguish it from older ERPs whose roots are in administration rather than pedagogy.

Geographically, Teachmint's footprint is densest in India, with smaller installations elsewhere in South and Southeast Asia. The product roadmap remains visibly oriented around Indian curricula, Indian payment rails and Indian regulatory norms — not because it cannot be configured for other countries, but because that is where the centre of gravity sits. Schools outside India that adopt Teachmint typically do so for the classroom and content side of the platform rather than the local-fit side.

Strengths of Teachmint

Teachmint's most genuine strength is its classroom focus. Because the product was born as a teaching tool, the live-class, recording, assessment and content-delivery flows are unusually polished for an ERP. Teachers who would normally bounce between Zoom, WhatsApp and a separate marks register can stay inside one application for the bulk of their working day, and that consolidation is a real productivity gain.

The second strength is the content marketplace and the integrated assessment library. Teachmint has invested in pre-built question banks, lesson templates and digital boards aligned to popular Indian curricula, which lowers the lesson-preparation burden for newer teachers and gives heads of department a defensible content baseline. For schools whose biggest pain point is teacher productivity rather than back-office administration, this is genuinely valuable.

The third strength is brand momentum and a sizeable Indian installed base. Recruiting teachers who have already used Teachmint, finding training videos in Hindi and English, and identifying integration partners is straightforward inside India. EduGradUP acknowledges these as real strengths; the comparison is not whether Teachmint is good at what it does, but whether what it does best matches what your school needs most.

Where EduGradUP differs

The most consequential difference between EduGradUP and Teachmint is the country lens. EduGradUP's default assumption is that every school it onboards is in Bangladesh, Nepal or Singapore, and the entire product — interfaces, gateways, templates, support — is built around that assumption. Native Bengali and Nepali UIs, bKash and Nagad payment rails, eSewa and Khalti for Nepal, PayNow QR for Singapore and a PDPA-grade hosting posture in AWS Singapore are present out of the box rather than configured in.

A second difference is curricular and regulatory specificity. Madrasa boards in Bangladesh, NEB and SEE result formats in Nepal, and MOE-aligned reporting templates in Singapore are first-class flows in EduGradUP, complete with the right grade scales, marking schemes and report-card layouts. Configuring equivalent behaviour on a platform whose defaults are Indian curricula is technically possible but rarely as clean as starting from defaults that were already correct.

A third difference is how support and pricing are organised. EduGradUP runs in-country teams in Dhaka, Kathmandu and Singapore on local timezones and in local languages, with transparent per-student pricing quoted in BDT, NPR and SGD respectively. There are no FX surprises at renewal, no support tickets routed across timezones, and no language gap between the school and the helpdesk during a crisis on a Sunday morning.

Migrating from Teachmint to EduGradUP

Migrations from Teachmint to EduGradUP follow the same three-phase pattern we use across the platform: data migration, training and parallel run. In the data phase we extract students, parents, classes, fee structures and historical attendance and examination records from Teachmint exports, map them onto the EduGradUP schema and load them into a sandbox. The school reviews the sandbox against its existing Teachmint reports before any production cutover, so the team can verify totals and rosters before going live.

Because Teachmint is often used most heavily for classroom delivery, the training phase pays particular attention to teachers. Sessions cover how EduGradUP handles attendance and gradebook from inside the parent and teacher apps, how the lesson and homework flows substitute for the Teachmint equivalents, and how content from the Teachmint marketplace can be re-used or replaced. Training is delivered in Bengali, Nepali or English depending on the audience, and recorded for asynchronous review.

The parallel-run phase keeps both systems active for two to four weeks while the school issues fee receipts, marks attendance and publishes communications from EduGradUP, with reconciliation against the still-running Teachmint instance at the end of each week. Once two consecutive reconciliations match, Teachmint can be retired. Schools running a single campus typically complete the entire migration in two to three weeks; multi-campus groups usually plan for four to six weeks with a named onboarding manager throughout.

Frequently Asked Questions

5 questions

Can I migrate from Teachmint?

Yes – free data migration is included with onboarding. We extract students, parents, classes, fee structures and historical attendance and exam records, normalise them against the EduGradUP schema and load them into a sandbox tenant for sign-off before production cutover.

Is EduGradUP a teaching tool like Teachmint?

EduGradUP is a full school management ERP that includes lesson planning, homework, gradebook and parent communication, but it is not a live-class platform. Schools that need live classes integrate Zoom, Google Meet or Microsoft Teams alongside EduGradUP through one-click links inside the timetable.

Does EduGradUP have a content marketplace like Teachmint?

EduGradUP does not operate a paid content marketplace. We provide locale-aligned templates for Madrasa, NEB, SEE, O-Level and CBSE-style report cards, and schools can upload their own resources to share with classes for free.

Which is better for Bangladesh and Nepal schools – Teachmint or EduGradUP?

EduGradUP is purpose-built for Bangladesh, Nepal and Singapore with native Bengali and Nepali UIs, bKash, Nagad, eSewa, Khalti and PayNow rails, and country-based support teams. Teachmint can be configured for these markets but its defaults remain India-centric.

How long does Teachmint to EduGradUP migration take?

Two to three weeks for a single-campus school, four to six weeks for multi-campus groups, including data migration, training in the local language and a parallel-run reconciliation phase.

Ready to see EduGradUP in your school?

Book a free 30-minute demo in Bengali, Nepali or English. Free data migration. 14-day trial. No credit card.

  • ✓ 4-hour response SLA
  • ✓ PDPA & DPDPA aligned
  • ✓ bKash · eSewa · PayNow · UPI ready