Amanda Frances didn’t just introduce herself on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills as wealthy, she made sure viewers knew she’s a self-made multimillionaire. And according to her own business model, teaching other women how to achieve that level of success doesn’t come cheap.

Since her RHOBH debut, curiosity around Amanda’s money-making courses has exploded, with fans digging into exactly what she charges — and what people are supposedly getting in return. A look at her offerings reveals a pricing structure that ranges from eyebrow-raising to genuinely jaw-dropping.
At the very top of the pyramid is Amanda’s most exclusive option: a high-level mastermind experience that carries a $47,000 price tag. The centerpiece of that investment? One VIP day with Amanda — but only if you pay in full. Five figures, one day, and access to the mindset.
From there, the prices drop slightly — but not by much.
One of her most promoted offerings is the Money Mentality Makeover, priced at $2,999. According to Amanda’s own site, the course is allegedly worth over $26,000. That valuation includes prerecorded modules, peer support, workbooks, videos, and what she describes as “energy and frequency training.” The standout component is a system meant to heal your relationship with money — something she personally values at $15,000.
For those looking for ongoing access instead of a one-time hit, Amanda offers a monthly membership at $179.99, which comes out to more than $2,100 a year. In exchange, members receive several weekly audio messages from Amanda, along with behind-the-scenes updates on her life and real-time reflections on her journey. She promises “truth,” “wisdom,” and reminders of “who you get to be” — language that feels familiar to anyone who’s ever dipped a toe into the manifestation economy.
Her “entry-level” course — and that term is doing a lot of work here — is Best Year Ever, priced at $999. The program is structured around daily prompts and mindset exercises meant to help participants reset their energy, release the past, visualize the future, and “lock sh*t in.” It includes affirmations, journaling, and homework — because apparently homework is a bonus now.

If writing a book is your dream, Amanda also sells a self-publishing course for $1,999, which she values at over $12,000. The modules cover everything from cultivating “best-selling author energy” to finding “the big idea,” though concrete publishing logistics appear secondary to mindset work.
Several of her courses hover around the same $1,999 mark, including programs focused on visibility, sales, resilience, relationships, and turning adversity into abundance. Each comes with a mix of modules, journal prompts, meditations, and bonus materials — all individually assigned lofty dollar values that quickly inflate the “worth” of each offering into the tens of thousands.
Perhaps the most meta of all is her course-creation program, which teaches participants how to create and sell their own courses. Amanda even walks students through hypothetical revenue projections, suggesting that selling a course to 30 people at $497 would already put them close to $15,000 in sales. The implication is clear: this is how the cycle continues.
Then there’s the Money Mama course, also priced at $1,999, aimed at mothers trying to balance money, career, and family. Amanda positions it as a cost-saving alternative to hiring a high-end coach — claiming participants are essentially saving $10,000 by choosing her program instead.
And if you’re wondering whether this business model actually works, Amanda has been transparent about one thing: the revenue. According to her own website, she currently earns more than $400,000 per month from her offerings.
