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RevisionSuccess hits 10,000 Thai users after update

RevisionSuccess hits 10,000 Thai users after update

Thu, 21st May 2026 (Today)
Mark Tarre
MARK TARRE News Chief

RevisionSuccess has passed 10,000 users in Thailand, reaching the milestone 132 days after a major product update.

The Bangkok-based education technology startup recorded the total after releasing its Glow Up Update, which reshaped the platform around personalised study plans, lessons and analytics. It described the pace of growth as one of the fastest early-stage trajectories in Thai EdTech.

Founded by students, RevisionSuccess is seeking to build a stronger position in a market long dominated by tutoring centres and printed revision materials. The platform is aimed at students preparing for exams and other academic milestones, with a focus on adapting study content to individual needs.

Students from every region of Thailand have joined since the update launched. Based on the company's figures, that amounts to an average of about 76 new users a day over the period.

Growth accelerated as RevisionSuccess expanded its institutional links. Partnerships with Bangkok's public school system, Sripatum University and other organisations helped it move beyond early adopters in urban areas and into classrooms across the country.

Expansion push

The startup also pointed to word-of-mouth referrals as a driver of user growth. Learners who saw improvements in their results introduced classmates, friends and siblings to the platform.

RevisionSuccess is part of Singapore Management University's BIG incubator programme. It said funding milestones and broader recognition had helped build trust with students, parents and educators, who often assess education products in different ways.

The company's pitch centres on personalised learning in a market where standardised teaching methods remain common. It argues that Thai students are willing to use AI-based study tools if they are directly relevant to local exams and classroom needs.

That reflects a wider debate in Southeast Asia over whether education software built outside the region can meet the needs of local learners. RevisionSuccess says its founders' own experience of Thailand's education system gives it a better understanding of exam preparation, university admissions and student study habits.

One of its main areas of focus is TuaTueng, a part of the platform designed for high school students preparing for Thai university entrance exams. Those tests are a major gateway for students and a key driver of spending on tutoring and revision support.

Founder comments

The milestone also served to underline the company's broader ambitions in Thailand's startup sector.

"I want to create inspiration and opportunities for every Thai student, because I know Thai students are as talented as any in the world," said Phuwadit Sutthaporn, co-founder and COO of RevisionSuccess.

"This milestone is not about us. It is about every student who decided to trust a different way of learning," Sutthaporn said.

His fellow founder set out a more direct commercial goal.

"We will become Thailand's next unicorn," said Phonlawat Sirajindapirom, co-founder and CEO of RevisionSuccess.

The next stage of development will include further work on AI models and feedback systems, alongside broader access for students in rural and lower-income communities. RevisionSuccess also plans to deepen ties with schools and universities as it seeks to expand across Thailand and into the wider ASEAN region.

Thailand's education market has seen growing interest in digital learning products, but many startups still face the challenge of persuading families and schools to move away from established forms of tutoring. In that context, rapid user growth matters because it offers an early signal that students are willing to try alternatives.

RevisionSuccess said each new user reflects an active choice by a student to adopt a more tailored approach to study rather than a standardised one. For a startup founded by students and built around the local exam system, reaching 10,000 users is an early test of whether that model can gain traction at national scale.