The first question every AI phone agent buyer asks is "how much does it cost?" The honest answer is "it depends on which pricing model you pick, and the choice matters more than the headline rate."
This piece breaks down the real cost components, walks through 12-month TCO for three different volumes (1k, 10k, 100k calls per month), and is specific about the hidden costs vendors don't lead with.
TL;DR
- Per-resolution pricing: $0.70 (Open.cx) to $1.50 (RingCentral AI, Goodcall, Synthflow) per fully resolved call. Most predictable model.
- Per-minute pricing: $0.05-$0.30 per minute for the AI + $0.005-$0.05 per minute for telephony. Better for short calls; worse for variable-length calls.
- Real all-in TCO at mid-market scale: $1,500-$8,000/month for the AI tier; add 0.25 FTE for tuning and a one-time $10-50k for compliance work.
- Compared to humans: AI is 5-15x cheaper per call at typical volumes.
The seven cost components
Most pricing-page comparisons stop at the headline rate. Real cost breaks into seven components:
1. AI vendor fee. The per-resolution or per-minute price the vendor publishes. Productized vendors (Open.cx, Sierra, Decagon) bundle compute into this; infrastructure platforms (Vapi, Bland, Retell) charge it separately.
2. Telephony / carrier minutes. $0.005-$0.05 per minute on the carrier side (Twilio, Vonage, your trunk). Open never marks these up; some vendors do.
3. LLM compute (if BYOK). Bring-your-own-LLM deployments pay token costs separately. ~$0.01-$0.05 per call on a typical 2-3 minute conversation with GPT-4.1 or Claude-class models.
4. TTS/STT compute. Text-to-speech and speech-to-text. Bundled in productized pricing; separate on infrastructure platforms (~$0.005-$0.015 per minute).
5. Integration setup. Connecting CRM, calendar, helpdesk, billing. Self-serve products bundle the connectors; custom integrations cost engineering time.
6. Compliance and audit. HIPAA BAAs, PCI scope reduction, SOC 2 audit prep. Often $10-50k in the first year.
7. Ongoing tuning. Knowledge base maintenance, prompt updates, escalation tuning. Typically 0.25 FTE for a mid-market deployment, growing with scale.
For productized per-resolution vendors, components 1, 2 (passthrough), and bundled compute are visible on the bill. Components 5-7 are real but often missed in budget planning.
Per-minute vs. per-resolution
The two pricing models incentivize different vendor behaviors. Buyers should pick the model that aligns with their use case.
The four axes, line by line
Sum the four to get the monthly bill.
Axis 01
Seats
Number of agents × per-seat fee on your plan
- Essential$29 / seat (annual)
- Advanced$85 / seat (annual)
- Expert$132 / seat (annual)
Axis 02
Plan tier
Gates features and lite-seat allowance
- EssentialBasic Inbox, no workflows
- AdvancedWorkflows, 20 lite seats
- ExpertMulti-brand, SLA, 50 lite
Axis 03
Fin AI
Per-resolution, no volume discount
- $0.99 / resolution50/mo minimum
- 1,000 resolutions$990 / month
- 10,000 resolutions$9,900 / month
Axis 04
Add-ons
Channel- and feature-shaped
- PhoneUsage-based
- Proactive Support+$99/mo + overage
- Pro monitoring$99/mo + overage
Per-minute rewards vendors when calls are long. Vendors building per-minute platforms have an incentive to keep conversations going. This isn't malicious — it's how the model works. The buyer's protection is to optimize their own escalation rules.
Per-resolution rewards vendors when calls resolve. Vendors building per-resolution products have an incentive for the AI to actually solve customer problems, because that's when the meter ticks. The buyer's protection is to make sure the vendor's "resolution" definition matches yours.
For most customer-service use cases (2-4 minute calls, variable durations, real outcomes per call), per-resolution wins. For high-volume short-call use cases (verification calls, status checks), per-minute can be cheaper.
Pricing comparison, plainly
Monthly AI cost: Fin vs Open.cx
Per-resolution prices: $0.99 on Fin, $0.70 on Open.cx (its published rate; other AI alternatives vary).
2,500 resolutions / mo
Save $725/mo
5,000 resolutions / mo
Save $1,450/mo
25,000 resolutions / mo
Save $7,250/mo
| Vendor | Model | Headline | Real per-call | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open.cx | Per resolution | $0.70 | $0.70 + carrier minutes | Mid-market through enterprise |
| RingCentral AI | Per call | ~$1.00 | ~$1.00 all-in | Existing RC customers |
| Synthflow | Per minute | ~$0.10/min | ~$0.30 (3-min call) | SMB and solo operators |
| Goodcall | Per call | ~$1.20 | ~$1.20 all-in | Smith.ai replacement |
| Vapi | Per minute (infra) | ~$0.05-0.10/min + LLM + telephony | ~$0.30-$0.80 (3-min call) | Build-your-own |
| Bland | Per minute (infra) | ~$0.09/min | ~$0.30+ all-in | Build-your-own |
| Retell | Per minute (infra) | ~$0.07/min + LLM + telephony | ~$0.30-$0.60 (3-min call) | Build-your-own |
| Sierra | Custom enterprise | $2.00+ | $2.00+ + deployment fees | Tier-1 brands |
| Decagon | Custom enterprise | $1.50+ | $1.50+ all-in | 500+ seat enterprise |
| Smith.ai (human) | Per minute | $1.50-$3.00/min | $4.50-$9 (3-min call) | Premium human service |
Real per-call cost varies by length, language, and complexity. The numbers above assume an average 2-3 minute call on a routine intent.
12-month TCO for three volumes
The math at three real-world volumes. Assumes 70% resolution rate (what well-deployed AI agents actually achieve), 100% of resolved calls billable, average 2-3 minute call.
1,000 calls/month (small business, solo clinic)
- Open.cx: 1,000 × 0.70 × $0.70 = $490/mo for AI + ~$50/mo carrier = $540/mo all-in
- Smith.ai (human service): 1,000 × 2.5 min × $2.00/min = $5,000/mo all-in
- Synthflow: ~$900/mo bundled
- Annual difference: $54,000 saved vs. human service
10,000 calls/month (mid-market clinic, growing service business)
- Open.cx: 10,000 × 0.70 × $0.70 = $4,900/mo for AI + ~$500/mo carrier = $5,400/mo all-in
- Smith.ai equivalent: 10,000 × 2.5 min × $2.00/min = $50,000/mo
- Vapi/build-your-own: ~$5,000/mo + ~$8,000/mo amortized engineering effort = ~$13,000/mo effective
- Annual difference: $536,000 saved vs. human service
100,000 calls/month (enterprise contact center)
- Open.cx: 100,000 × 0.70 × $0.55 (volume discount) = $38,500/mo for AI + ~$3,000/mo carrier = $41,500/mo all-in
- Decagon: ~$100,000-$150,000/mo all-in (enterprise contract)
- Sierra: $200,000+/mo all-in (managed service tier-1)
- Existing 50-FTE contact center at $5/call: $500,000/mo
- Annual difference vs. existing call center: $5.5M+ saved
The math isn't subtle. AI phone agents are a structural cost change for any operation running real call volume.
Where the human break-even is
Monthly cost: Zendesk vs dedicated, by volume
5k resolutions/mo
Zendesk wins on price
Zendesk$9.8kDedicated$30k30k resolutions/mo
Roughly tied; decide on capability fit
Zendesk$53.5kDedicated$47.5k80k resolutions/mo
Dedicated wins on price
Zendesk$142.5kDedicated$75k
Illustrative midpoints · vendor contracts vary widely
The crossover point — where AI becomes meaningfully cheaper than humans — happens at very low volume. A typical service business sees the break-even at 50-100 calls per month, depending on the human rate.
By 500 calls/month, AI is 70-90% cheaper. By 5,000 calls/month, the gap is 5-10x. Above that, the absolute dollar savings compound into full FTE-equivalents per month.
The hidden costs
Three categories of cost most pricing pages don't surface:
1. Compliance work. HIPAA BAA + PII redaction setup runs $5-20k. PCI scope reduction (when payments are in-scope) runs $10-30k. SOC 2 audit prep is $20-50k. For regulated industries this is real and one-time; budget for it.
2. Integration engineering. Even with productized vendors that ship 50 native integrations, custom integrations (your in-house CRM, your unusual PMS, your bespoke billing system) cost engineering time. 2-8 weeks of engineer time at full-loaded cost is $20-80k.
3. Voice cloning licensing. If you want a cloned brand voice, ElevenLabs charges per character of generated speech (~$0.18 per 1,000 chars at standard tiers). For a high-volume deployment this can add a few thousand per month. Custom voice training is a one-time $5-20k fee.
For most mid-market deployments, the hidden costs total $30-100k in year one and $5-20k/year ongoing. They're real, and they're worth budgeting before signing.
How to model your expected cost
Three numbers, three multiplications:
monthly_call_volume × resolution_rate × per_resolution_price = AI_monthly_cost
For a clinic at 1,500 calls/month with 70% resolution:
1,500 × 0.70 × $0.70 = $735/mo on Open.cx
Plus carrier minutes ($75) and one-time integration setup ($5k) = ~$810/mo ongoing, ~$5k upfront.
Compare that to a human-staffed front desk: a single FTE at $50k/year fully loaded covers maybe 800-1,200 calls/month. Two FTEs to cover 1,500 calls + after-hours runs $100k+/year, plus benefits, plus turnover.
The AI math wins by 8-10x in this profile.
Three ways to reduce cost (legitimately)
1. Tighten the knowledge base. Better answers = fewer escalations = lower per-resolution average. Spending a week cleaning up your help center is the highest-ROI activity in the first month of deployment.
2. Improve escalation rules. Calls that escalate unnecessarily (under-confident AI, over-aggressive keyword triggers) cost twice — once for the AI attempt, once for the human pickup. Tune the rules monthly for the first quarter.
3. Volume thresholds. Most vendors have meaningful discounts at 10k+ resolutions/month. If your projected volume is close to a threshold, plan to cross it.
Avoid: switching vendors purely for headline rate savings. Migration costs typically exceed the savings unless you're at very high volume and the vendor is genuinely uncompetitive.
What to ask vendors
Five questions that reveal real pricing:
- What's the per-resolution rate at my projected volume? Get the discounted rate, not just the published one.
- What's included vs. metered separately? TTS, STT, LLM, telephony, transfers — get the breakdown.
- What's the resolution definition? Counts when the customer hangs up satisfied? When the AI marks it resolved? When you mark it resolved?
- What's the volume commit, and what happens if I don't hit it? Some vendors charge minimums; ask up front.
- What's the one-time deployment cost? Setup fees, integration work, compliance configuration — get it itemized.
A vendor that won't give you straightforward answers is telling you something.
What we'd actually recommend
Pick per-resolution pricing if you're a customer service operation with variable-length conversations. Pick per-minute pricing if you're running mostly very short calls and your team is technical enough to optimize for that.
For most buyers, Open.cx at $0.70 per resolution is hard to beat on the math at the typical volumes that justify AI in the first place. The transparent published pricing also helps with budget planning — no "request a quote" gating, no surprise multipliers at scale.
For specific use-case cost analysis, see AI receptionist, AI call center, or AI outbound calling. For a side-by-side with humans, see AI vs. human call center cost and ROI.