Individual CEU modules priced under ten dollars apiece is a number that tells you who CEUniverse is built for: working behavior analysts who need to clear a recertification cycle without bleeding money on every credit. CEUniverse, run by FoxyLearning LLC, is an online continuing education provider approved by the BACB under ACE Provider number OP-10-2021, aimed squarely at Board Certified Behavior Analysts and Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analysts who have to keep their credentials current. The catalog runs to more than sixty modules spread across the three areas the certifying board cares about: general content, ethics, and supervision.
The format mix at CEUniverse is more varied than a bare credit mill usually offers, and that is worth saying plainly because the field has plenty of those. Content arrives as multimedia tutorials, interactive videos, article quizzes, and grouped focus packs, so someone who learns better by watching has a different path than someone who would rather read an article and answer questions on it. Everything is self-paced and fully online, with no expiration date attached. A clinician whose week falls apart without warning can pick up a module whenever a gap appears. Finish one and the certificate downloads immediately, no waiting on an email or a manual review.
Where CEUniverse gets a little more interesting is how it packages credits. Beyond buying single modules, there are four pre-built bundles named Galactic, Cosmic, Celestial, and Supernova, each lined up against a specific set of recertification requirements. So instead of counting your own ethics and supervision hours and hoping you bought the right combination, you can pick the tier that matches the renewal you face. For people who want more control, a custom bundle builder lets you assemble your own selection, and ABA organizations can buy group or clinic licenses to cover a whole staff. That last option makes clear that the platform knows its actual customers are often not individuals at all but practices managing a dozen credentialed employees.
CEUniverse also runs a loyalty layer called Star Points, where usage earns points redeemable for free CEUs, plus a thirty-day money-back guarantee. Loyalty schemes on professional-education sites can be a way to lock people into a single vendor, but a refund window of that length gives a first-time buyer room to test a module before putting money into a full bundle. The space theme running through all the naming is consistent enough to read as a deliberate brand choice and not random whimsy.
One detail of the history is worth flagging for anyone who knew the predecessor. The CEU catalog at CEUniverse was migrated from FoxyLearning.com on the first of January 2024, so this is not a brand-new operation with no track record. It is an established offering under a fresh storefront, which explains why the same company name sits behind both. If you used FoxyLearning for credits in the past, CEUniverse is essentially the same outfit in newer packaging.
The reputation picture outside the site
CEUniverse hosts its own reviews at ceuniverse.com/reviews, with a count of 2,308 reviews, and the homepage trims that down to a claim of more than 1,500 five-star reviews. For a niche product serving a relatively small professional population, that would be impressive if every number checked out. The trouble is that all of it lives on the company's own servers. Self-hosted testimonials are not worthless, but they are curated by definition, and a buyer has no way to see what was filtered out before publication.
Searching for outside corroboration turned up almost nothing. No Google reviews, no Trustpilot, no Yelp, no BBB profile surfaced in the results. The one third-party directory entry that did appear, on botw.org, shows a flat 0.0 out of 5.0 with no reviews behind it, which is the absence of a rating rather than a bad one. So the gap is sharp: thousands of glowing reviews that CEUniverse controls entirely, and essentially zero independent voices anywhere a skeptic would naturally look. That does not prove the on-site reviews are inflated. It does mean nobody outside the company has put a stake in the ground confirming them, and for a professional spending money to protect a license, that is a real blind spot.
To be fair about why the external silence might exist: BCBAs are a specialized group, and specialized buyers tend not to leave Yelp reviews for their CEU vendor the way diners review a restaurant. A limited public footprint is partly a function of the audience. Still, CEUniverse itself is the one trumpeting a four-figure review count, and once a company advertises that volume, the absence of any independent echo becomes a fair thing for a cautious buyer to weigh.
On the contact side, the setup is functional but spare. There is a contact form at ceuniverse.com/contact and a separate helpdesk portal at help.ceuniverse.com, and the homepage mentions support response times. What the landing page does not provide is a phone number or a street address. Support runs through email and the helpdesk system. For a fully online product that is a defensible arrangement, and the helpdesk route is arguably more honest than a phone line nobody answers, but it does mean that if something goes wrong with a certificate the night before a deadline, you are filing a ticket and waiting.
Weighing it all, CEUniverse looks like a competent, purpose-built option for behavior analysts who want flexible, low-cost credits with no expiry and instant certificates, backed by genuine BACB approval that anyone can verify against the provider number. The format variety and the bundle-to-requirement matching are practical touches that show the people behind it understand the recertification grind. The per-module pricing is genuinely competitive for this market.
The piece that keeps pulling attention back is the reputation evidence, because in continuing education that is not a side issue. A clinician is trusting CEUniverse with credits that the BACB will accept or reject, and the only large body of feedback available comes from the provider's own pages while every neutral platform sits empty or blank. The BACB approval covers whether the credits count. It says nothing about whether the courses are any good, and on that question CEUniverse is asking you to take the word of reviews it hosts and counts itself. Until some independent verdict exists somewhere a buyer can actually find it, the quiet outside the walls is the doubt that reasonable caution cannot set aside.