Baremetrics pricing in 2026 starts at $75 per month for Launch, $255 per month for Growth, and $1,152 per month for Scale. If I bill yearly, Baremetrics says the rate drops by 35%, so the real cost changes fast once I leave the monthly headline behind.
That is why I never look at the sticker price alone. I also factor in add-ons, billing terms, and whether my team will outgrow the lower tier sooner than expected.
If you are comparing Baremetrics against other SaaS tools, the short answer is simple, the entry plan is manageable, but the bill can rise sharply once I add extras.
Table of contents
- Baremetrics pricing by plan in 2026
- What the plans mean in practice
- What can push the bill higher
- Realistic cost scenarios for different business sizes
- Conclusion
- FAQ
Baremetrics pricing by plan in 2026
Here is the cleanest way I model the current cost. Baremetrics ties pricing to ARR and plan level, so I treat the published rates as starting points, not a flat fee for every company.
A current pricing roundup on PulseSignal’s Baremetrics pricing page matches the same starting prices I see today.
| Plan | Monthly price | Annual price with 35% off | Best fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Launch | $75 | About $585 | Early-stage SaaS, light reporting, basic subscription metrics |
| Growth | $255 | About $1,989 | Teams that need deeper dashboards, segmentation, and reporting |
| Scale | $1,152 | About $8,998 | Heavier finance work, planning, and larger reporting needs |
My billing assumptions are simple:
- I use the published starting price for each plan.
- I assume monthly billing unless I want the annual discount.
- I leave taxes and optional add-ons out of the base number.
Older write-ups can be off because Baremetrics changed its pricing structure. A recent pricing change log on PricingSaaS shows why some older comparisons do not line up with 2026 numbers.
If you want my broader take on the product itself, I break that down in my Baremetrics analytics platform review.
What the plans mean in practice
Launch is the floor, not the finish line. I use it when I want a clean revenue view, a few core metrics, and a low monthly bill.
Growth is where the platform starts to feel more complete. That is usually the tier I look at when I want custom dashboards, better segmenting, and a reporting layer that more people can share.
Scale is for teams that need more room. I think of it as the plan for deeper planning work, heavier finance review, and situations where the dashboard starts to influence board prep.
When I compare those tiers, I also ask a different question, how much time will the tool save me each month? If the answer is only a few minutes, I usually stay lower. If it replaces manual reporting, the higher plan can make sense.
What can push the bill higher
Add-ons are the first place I watch for surprise cost. Baremetrics currently lists two of them, and both are priced at $129 per month.
| Add-on | Monthly cost | What it adds |
|---|---|---|
| Payment Recovery | $129 | More focus on failed payment recovery |
| Cancellation Insights | $129 | More detail around why customers leave |
Two add-ons add $258 per month before any annual discount math. That is enough to change the buying decision by itself.
The monthly number is only the floor. I still budget for add-ons, annual billing, and the time it takes to keep the data clean.
I also count setup time as a real cost. Clean billing data, clear segment rules, and sane metric definitions all take effort. When I tighten that layer, I lean on my tracking MRR and churn effectively notes so I do not build charts on messy inputs.
Another hidden cost is fit. If my ARR grows and Baremetrics places me into a higher tier, the final bill changes even if my headcount does not. That is why I keep an eye on plan fit instead of assuming the cheapest tier will hold forever.
Realistic cost scenarios for different business sizes
I think about Baremetrics pricing the same way I think about office space. The rent matters, but so does the room I need.
Here are the scenarios I would budget for in 2026.
| Business size | Likely plan mix | Monthly spend | Annual spend with 35% off | Why I would choose it |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solo founder or very small SaaS | Launch | $75 | About $585 | I only need basic subscription metrics and light reporting |
| Seed-stage team | Growth | $255 | About $1,989 | I want better dashboards, segmentation, and shared reporting |
| Series A finance or ops team | Scale | $1,152 | About $8,998 | I need planning tools, deeper oversight, and stronger reporting |
| Recovery-focused team | Launch plus both add-ons | $333 | About $2,597 | I care more about failed-payment recovery and cancellation insight than advanced dashboards |
If I add both add-ons to Growth, the monthly total becomes $513. That jump is why I never stop at the base plan when I budget.
For teams that live in board decks or investor updates, I also use building a Baremetrics dashboard as a check on whether the extra spend is buying real clarity.
Conclusion
Baremetrics is easy to price wrong if I only look at the entry number. The real 2026 floor is $75 a month, but that is only the starting line.
Once I add the 35% annual discount, add-ons, and the time needed to keep the billing data clean, the budget picture changes. That is the number I care about, not the headline price alone.
If I only need a simple subscription view, Launch can work. If I need more reporting depth, Growth or Scale may fit better, as long as the extra tools earn their keep.
FAQ
Does Baremetrics still start at $75 per month in 2026?
Yes. Launch starts at $75 per month before taxes and add-ons. That is the number I use as the floor when I budget.
How much does annual billing save?
Baremetrics lists a 35% annual discount. On the current starting prices, that brings Launch to about $585 a year, Growth to about $1,989, and Scale to about $8,998.
What add-ons should I budget for?
The main extras I see now are Payment Recovery and Cancellation Insights. Each one adds $129 per month, so two add-ons add $258 a month.
Why do older Baremetrics pricing posts look different?
Baremetrics changed its pricing structure, so older comparisons can reflect a previous setup. A recent pricing change log from PricingSaaS is a good reminder to check current rates before I plan a budget.
