---
title: "Best Customer Service Software in 2026: The Honest, Tested Shortlist"
description: "Most 'best customer service software' lists are written by a vendor that ranks itself first. This comparison defines seven operational criteria before scoring, runs a matrix across Richpanel, Zendesk, Gorgias, Freshdesk, Intercom Fin, Help Scout, and Gladly, names where each one beats Richpanel, and routes the reader by company size with a decision tree instead of a verdict."
url: https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-customer-service-software-2026
datePublished: 2026-06-04
dateModified: 2026-06-04
author: "Amit RG"
source: richpanel.com
---

# Most "best customer service software" lists rank their own author first. *This one routes you by what you actually need.*

Search "best customer service software" and the top results are written by a vendor that ranks itself number one, or an affiliate scoring on feature checklists that stopped mattering in 2026. The real question is narrower: which platform actually resolves the repeat work autonomously, lets people own the exceptions, and does not quietly double your bill with a per-resolution meter. This guide defines seven operational criteria before scoring anyone, runs a matrix across seven platforms including Richpanel, names where each rival is the better call, and routes you by company size with a decision tree instead of a verdict.

> **Amit RG** is the founder of Richpanel, an AI-native customer service platform serving 2,000+ brands. He sits in vendor bake-offs against most of the platforms compared here, and the criteria below are the ones his own team uses when prospects ask "how are you different." Source data: 69 recorded buyer demos (April to May 2026) and production telemetry from live Richpanel deployments; competitor pricing verified against each vendor's own pages as of June 2026. On X: [@realamitrg](https://x.com/realamitrg).

#### The short answer

**There is no single best customer service software. There is a best one for your size, your ticket mix, and how you want to pay for AI.** As of June 2026: pick **Zendesk** for the broadest enterprise platform standardized across many departments. Pick **Gorgias** for the widest native Shopify and ecommerce app marketplace. Pick **Freshdesk** for the lowest-cost entry into a full suite. Pick **Intercom Fin** if you already run Intercom for in-app messaging. Pick **Help Scout** for the simplest shared inbox for a small team. Pick **Gladly** for high-touch, voice-heavy premium service. Pick **Richpanel** if you want the repeat work resolved autonomously on one bill, around $0.30 per conversation, with no per-resolution double-meter and a 50% resolution guarantee in 30 days or your money back. Richpanel does not host native voice (it integrates with Aircall, Dialpad, and JustCall) and is younger than Zendesk and Intercom, so if "most-established vendor" is your top criterion, that is a fair reason to look elsewhere.

The full reasoning, the seven criteria, the matrix, and a decision tree by company size are below.

## The author always wins. *That is the tell.*

Most of the highest-ranking "best customer service software" pages share one of two flaws: they are written by a vendor that appears in its own ranking, or by an affiliate that scores on a feature checklist and links the highest-paying tool first. In both cases the scorer has a stake in the result.

The pattern is consistent enough to be almost a law. [Fin (Intercom) ranks Fin number one](https://fin.ai/learn/best-ai-chatbots-customer-support) on its own "best" page with the highest resolution claims.[1] [Gorgias publishes a Gorgias-versus-Richpanel comparison](https://www.gorgias.com/comparison/richpanel) in which Gorgias wins.[2] Affiliate roundups have the opposite bias: they score on a long feature matrix where the tool with the most checkmarks and the best affiliate payout floats to the top, regardless of whether those features change a single resolution. Neither tells you which platform will actually resolve your tickets.

None of this is dishonest, exactly. The products are real and often good. But a ranking where the scorer is also a contestant is not a ranking. It is a pitch with a comparison table bolted on, and the criteria are almost always chosen after the conclusion so the home team wins every column. The giveaway is an asymmetric scorecard: when one vendor leads on all seven axes, either the author did not pick a stiff enough competitor, or the criteria were reverse-engineered from the desired result.

**So here is the deal for this article.** Richpanel is one of the seven platforms below, and I am not going to pretend otherwise or claim we win everything. We do not. I will name a specific situation where each of the other six is the better choice, define every criterion before the matrix appears, and link each vendor's own product page so you can check my reading. If a cell is wrong, the correction address is at the bottom and we will update it in public.

## Does it resolve the ticket, *and what does the AI cost on top?*

In 2026, two fault lines split this category, and applying them reorders every published ranking. The first is resolution versus deflection. The second is whether AI is metered on top of the platform you already pay for.

**Fault line one: resolution, not deflection.** Deflection counts a ticket as handled when the customer stops asking. That includes the customer getting a useful answer. It also includes the customer giving up, rage-quitting to a competitor, or re-opening the same issue angrier two days later. Resolution counts a ticket as handled only when the customer's actual problem is solved, validated, and confirmed. A platform that "deflects" 80% of tickets can be operationally worse than one that resolves 60% and escalates the rest cleanly, because the deflected-but-unresolved volume is your most expensive customers: the ones who churn quietly or escalate loudly. A true AI agent resolves end to end: it retrieves the right facts, takes the action the resolution requires (a refund, a cancellation, an address change), validates that action against policy, and escalates cleanly when it cannot. We wrote the full breakdown in [AI chatbot vs. AI agent](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/ai-chatbot-vs-ai-agent).

**Fault line two: the AI double-meter.** Most platforms in this category were built as 2010s ticketing systems, then had AI bolted on as a separately-priced layer. The result is that you pay for the seat or the ticket, and then pay *again* per AI resolution. As of June 2026, that second meter runs roughly $0.90 per AI resolution on Gorgias, $0.99 per resolution on Intercom Fin (on top of seats), about $49 per 100 sessions on Freshdesk's Freddy, and about $0.75 per resolution on Help Scout.[3] At volume, the AI line can equal or exceed the platform line. An AI-native platform charges once: Richpanel works out to roughly $0.30 per conversation with a model and token budget you choose, with no second AI meter.

This is why the published lists feel interchangeable and your shortlist should not. Rank these vendors on feature count and deflection, and they blur together. Rank them on confirmed resolution, action execution, and total metered cost, and the field separates fast.

## Seven criteria, defined so *two evaluators score the same.*

These are operational, not vibes. Each is defined so two people scoring the same vendor would land in the same place. The weights reflect a broad evaluation: a CX or support leader, often burned by an incumbent AI or facing a renewal, who wants a list to trust rather than a sales page.

### 01. AI resolution model (weight: high)

Does the platform resolve end to end autonomously, draft replies for a human to approve, or only deflect to help-center content? Operational test: of 100 inbound tickets, how many are closed with no human touch and a confirmed outcome, not just "the customer stopped replying"?

### 02. Action execution depth (weight: high)

Can it execute real operations (refunds, cancellations, order or address edits, subscription changes) as validated, policy-bounded tool calls, or does it only generate text? This is the line between a reply and an actual resolution. Count the write-actions a vendor can prove, not the ones the marketing page implies.

### 03. Total cost and metering (weight: high)

Per-seat, per-ticket, per-resolution, per-conversation, or flat? The question is not "cheapest" but "do the vendor's incentives match mine, and is AI a second meter?" Flag the double-meter: a separate per-resolution AI charge added on top of the seat or ticket price. Model your real monthly volume against each model before deciding.

### 04. Time to value (weight: medium)

How long from signature to the AI resolving real tickets? Look for proof during the evaluation (an agent built live on your data) and a deployment measured in weeks, not a multi-quarter services engagement. Anchor against published numbers: Decagon cites roughly six weeks, Sierra four to ten weeks.

### 05. Eval and QA governance (weight: medium)

Will the vendor run the AI against a sample of your historical tickets and show per-response accuracy before go-live? And once live, who reviews quality: a sampled QA process, or every conversation? A demo on the vendor's curated example proves nothing about your catalog and your policies. We cover the failure-mode side of this in [AI hallucination defense](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/ai-hallucination-defense).

### 06. Channel coverage and voice (weight: medium)

Email, chat, social, SMS, and voice in one inbox with shared context, or a chat widget with bolt-ons? Note whether voice is native or integrated: several platforms here, including Richpanel, integrate voice through Aircall, Dialpad, or JustCall rather than hosting it. If voice must be a single native pane, that narrows the field hard.

### 07. Best-fit company size (weight: medium)

A platform built for a 200-seat enterprise standardizing across departments is the wrong tool for a five-person team, and vice versa. The right answer changes with your size, your governance needs, and your ticket mix. The decision tree near the end of this guide routes by exactly this.

Criteria 1 through 3 carry the most weight because they separate a resolving platform from a dressed-up ticketing system with a feature checklist. Criteria 4 through 7 decide fit and economics once a platform can actually resolve. Two criteria (eval and QA governance, and best-fit size) do not tabulate cleanly into a one-line cell, so the matrix below shows the five most comparable axes and the per-vendor notes and the decision tree carry the rest.

## Seven platforms, *five comparable axes.*

Cells reflect each vendor's public product and pricing pages as of June 2026. Each platform name links to the page used to source its row. Pricing is volatile in this category, so verify the cells that decide your choice directly with the vendor. Where a capability is real but not separately documented, the cell says so rather than guessing.

| Platform | AI resolution model | Action execution | AI metering | Channels and voice | Best-fit size |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **[Richpanel](https://www.richpanel.com/ai-agents)** | Autonomous resolution, or collaborative draft mode | Typed, policy-bounded actions (refunds, cancellations, order and subscription edits) | One bill, ~$0.30/conversation, no separate AI meter | Email, chat, social, SMS; voice via Aircall/Dialpad/JustCall | SMB to mid-market |
| [Zendesk](https://www.zendesk.com/) | Autonomous AI bundled into all plans, plus Copilot assist | Actions via triggers and integrations | Add-on stack ~$215/seat, plus per-resolution AI on top | Broadest platform; Talk voice is a resold Aircall partner | Enterprise, multi-department |
| [Gorgias](https://www.gorgias.com/) | AI Agent answers and some actions; ecom-tuned | Deep native Shopify and ecom app actions | Double-meter: ticket fee + ~$0.90/AI resolution | Email, chat, social with deep ecom app ecosystem | Shopify and DTC ecommerce |
| [Freshdesk](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/) | Bolt-on Freddy AI Agent over a full suite | Actions via the broader Freshworks suite | Freddy ~$49/100 sessions; AI stops when sessions exhaust | Email, chat, social; ITSM-adjacent breadth | Value buyers, suite-first |
| [Intercom Fin](https://www.intercom.com/fin) | Autonomous resolution over knowledge plus actions | Structured Actions and Workflows | $0.99/resolution on top of $29–132 seats | Chat, email, in-app strong; social via add-ons | In-app product messaging |
| [Help Scout](https://www.helpscout.com/) | AI drafts and answers; assist-leaning | Light; suited to email-style resolution | ~$0.75/AI resolution on top of plan | Shared inbox, email-first, chat | Small teams, simple inbox |
| [Gladly](https://www.gladly.com/) | People-centered model; AI assists agents | Actions via integrations; agent-led | Premium platform pricing; contact sales | Voice-heavy, channel-unified by person | High-touch premium brands |

Pricing and product facts verified against each vendor's own pages as of June 2026. If your reading of any cell differs from current reality, email [amit@richpanel.com](mailto:amit@richpanel.com) and we will update it. The goal is to be accurate, not to win a column we have not earned.

The honest read of this table: autonomous resolution and action execution have become table stakes, and almost every platform here can take some action and resolve some volume. The real separation is in the AI metering column and in the best-fit column. The platforms built as ticketing systems first tend to charge twice for AI; the AI-native cut charges once. And the right tool flips entirely with company size, which is why the decision tree, not the matrix, is the part to read twice.

## The strength I would actually *send a buyer toward.*

For each of the other six platforms, here is a specific situation where it is the better choice than Richpanel. If your situation matches, take it seriously.

### Zendesk

Zendesk is the broadest platform on this list, the established default since 2007, and the safe choice when a committee is managing career risk. **Choose Zendesk over Richpanel if** you are a large organization standardizing one vendor across many functions (CX, IT service, internal help desks) and you value that breadth and governance maturity over AI-native resolution depth. Autonomous AI is now bundled into all plans, so the old "Zendesk has no AI" jab is stale. The honest trade-off is cost: as of June 2026 the add-on stack runs roughly $215 per seat once you add Copilot and QA, plus per-resolution AI on top, which is the cost-fatigue story we hear most from Zendesk switchers. If you are on Zendesk, our [Zendesk alternatives comparison](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-zendesk-alternatives) breaks down the add-on stack and migration.

### Gorgias

Gorgias has the widest ecommerce app marketplace of anyone here, built specifically for DTC operations. **Choose Gorgias over Richpanel if** you want the maximum number of native Shopify-ecosystem integrations in one place and you are comfortable with AI that leans toward assist today. The flip side, and the reason it shows up so often in our switch conversations, is the AI maturity plus the double-meter: across our 69 demos, Gorgias was the single most-cited incumbent prospects were leaving, usually citing AI answer quality and a ticket-fee-plus-$0.90-per-AI-resolution bill (as of June 2026). On raw ecom app-marketplace breadth, though, it is the leader. If Gorgias is your incumbent, see our [Gorgias alternatives comparison](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-gorgias-alternatives) and the Shopify-specific cut in [best AI customer service software for Shopify](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-ai-customer-service-shopify).

### Freshdesk

Freshdesk offers the lowest per-seat entry into a full, ITSM-adjacent suite, which matters if support is one of several functions you are tooling at once. **Choose Freshdesk over Richpanel if** you want a low-cost, broad help-desk suite and AI is a nice-to-have rather than the point. The catch to model before you sign: as of June 2026 the Freddy AI Agent meters at about $49 per 100 sessions, and the AI stops responding when sessions are exhausted, so the cheap headline plan and the actual cost of AI coverage are two different numbers.

### Intercom Fin

Fin has one of the largest install bases of any agent on this list and inherits Intercom's enterprise credibility and in-app messaging strength. **Choose Intercom Fin over Richpanel if** you already run Intercom for chat and product messaging. Adding Fin is then the lowest-friction path to autonomous resolution, with no platform switch and a team that already knows the UI. If your buying committee includes a CTO who wants the most-deployed, analyst-recognized option (a real concern we have lost deals to), Fin's maturity is a legitimate advantage. The cost to weigh: Fin is $0.99 per resolution on top of $29 to $132 seats (as of June 2026). For the switch-off cut, see [best Intercom Fin alternatives](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-intercom-fin-alternatives).

### Help Scout

Help Scout is the simplest, most human-feeling shared inbox in this set, with the gentlest learning curve. **Choose Help Scout over Richpanel if** you are a small team that mostly needs a clean, well-designed inbox and you are not yet trying to automate the bulk of your volume. It is a genuinely pleasant tool to live in day to day. Its AI is assist-leaning and metered at about $0.75 per resolution on top of the plan (as of June 2026), so the moment autonomous resolution becomes the goal rather than inbox tidiness, the comparison shifts.

### Gladly

Gladly is built around the person rather than the ticket, with strong native voice and a premium, high-touch service model. **Choose Gladly over Richpanel if** you are a premium brand whose differentiator is white-glove, voice-heavy human service and you want AI to assist agents rather than resolve autonomously. For a brand where a human relationship is the product, that model fits and Richpanel's resolve-first, voice-via-integration approach does not. If native single-pane voice is a hard requirement, Gladly clears a bar Richpanel does not.

### Richpanel

For completeness, here is where we are the right answer, stated as plainly as the others. **Choose Richpanel if** you want the repeat work resolved autonomously on one bill, flat per-conversation economics (around $0.30 per conversation) instead of seats plus a per-resolution meter, the AI built live on your own data and proven before go-live, multi-brand support in one workspace, and a 50% resolution guarantee in 30 days with your money back if it misses. The CX leader keeps their team and scales output without scaling headcount; the AI absorbs the boring volume. In production, that has looked like [a wellness brand whose AI sends 60% of every customer message at a higher CSAT than its human team](https://www.richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness) (4.43 versus 4.25).[6] Where we are weaker than the field: we do not host native voice (we integrate with Aircall, Dialpad, and JustCall), and we are younger than Zendesk and Intercom, so if "most-established vendor" or "single native voice pane" is your top criterion, that is a fair reason to look elsewhere.

## Match your size and goal to the *shortlist.*

There is no single best customer service software. There is a best one for your size, your ticket mix, your goal, and how you want to pay for AI. Map yourself to a line below.

- **Small team, just need a clean shared inbox, not ready to automate:** Help Scout, then Freshdesk for the value-suite comparison.
- **Small but growing, want the repeat volume resolved without a separate AI meter:** Richpanel, then Gorgias if you are pure Shopify.
- **Shopify or DTC ecommerce, want the widest native ecom app marketplace, comfortable with assist-leaning AI:** Gorgias, then Richpanel if AI resolution and one-bill economics matter more than app-store breadth.
- **Mid-market, replacing an incumbent AI that underdelivered, want proof on your own data and a guarantee:** Richpanel, then Intercom Fin as the comparison.
- **Already deep in Intercom for in-app messaging, lowest-friction add:** Intercom Fin.
- **Enterprise standardizing one platform across many departments, breadth and governance over AI depth:** Zendesk.
- **Premium brand, high-touch, native single-pane voice is non-negotiable:** Gladly.

Notice that the right answer flips on facts about you, not on which vendor wrote the article. That is what a real comparison is supposed to do. If a single name appeared on every line, you would be reading marketing again.

## Six tests that cut through the *pitch.*

Whichever shortlist you land on, these six tests separate platforms that resolve from platforms that demo well. For the full version, see our [40-question vendor RFP template](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/ai-customer-service-vendor-rfp-template).

### 1. Run the AI on 100 of my historical tickets.

Ask for per-response accuracy and a walk-through of the failures. A vendor that will not do this is selling a demo, not production.

### 2. Is your headline rate deflection or confirmed resolution?

If they conflate the two, or cannot define the difference, the number is marketing.

### 3. Show me the total bill at my real volume, AI included.

Make them add the per-resolution AI meter to the seat or ticket price. The second meter is where the quoted plan and the actual cost diverge.

### 4. Show me an action executed as a tool call, not free text.

Ask to see the typed parameters and the policy constraints on a refund or cancellation. Free-text "I'll refund you" with no validation layer is how a bot sells a car for one dollar.

### 5. Who reviews quality once it is live?

A sampled QA process, or every conversation? Ask how knowledge gaps and bad answers get caught and fed back into the AI.

### 6. Connect me with three customers my size, live within your timeframe.

Above roughly $30K a year, named references at your scale and audit reports (SOC 2, and HIPAA if you handle PHI) are a more reliable signal than any ranking, including this one.

## What this guide *cannot tell you.*

An honest comparison names its own blind spots. Three apply here.

- **It is written by a participant.** Richpanel is in the matrix, and no amount of even-handedness fully removes that. The mitigation is structural: criteria defined before scoring, a named competitor strength on every row, linked source pages, and a public correction address. Read it as a more useful starting point than a vendor listicle, not as a neutral analyst report.
- **Pricing moves faster than any page.** Every cell is a snapshot of public documentation and pricing as of June 2026. This category re-prices and re-bundles AI constantly. A per-resolution number quoted here may have changed by the time you read it, so verify the cells that decide your choice directly with the vendor.
- **The matrix omits valid platforms.** Kustomer, Tidio's Lyro, Re:amaze, Salesforce Agentforce, and standalone agent layers like Decagon and Sierra are real options we did not score, chosen to keep a seven-row comparison legible rather than exhaustive. Their absence is editorial, not a judgment.

The claim this guide is willing to stand behind is narrow and defensible: in 2026 the deciding questions are whether a platform resolves rather than deflects, and what AI actually costs once the second meter is added. A vendor's willingness to prove accuracy on your own data before go-live, and to quote the all-in bill at your real volume, are the two most predictive signals you can test before signing.

## Choosing a platform, *in plain English.*

### What is the best customer service software for small business?

For a small team that mostly needs a clean shared inbox and is not yet ready to automate, Help Scout is the simplest place to start and has the gentlest learning curve. For a small but growing team already drowning in repeat tickets, the better question is which platform will resolve that repeat volume without a separate per-resolution meter on top of seats. The pick changes the moment automation, not inbox tidiness, becomes the goal. Score on resolution model and total metered cost, not feature count.

### What is the best customer service software for enterprise?

If your priority is one vendor standardized across many departments with mature governance and a vast app marketplace, Zendesk is the established default and the safe committee choice. If your priority is high-touch, voice-heavy premium service, Gladly is built for that. If your priority is resolving the repeat work autonomously on one bill without a per-resolution double-meter, an AI-native platform like Richpanel is the contrarian pick, with the honest caveat that it does not host native voice and integrates with Aircall, Dialpad, or JustCall instead. Enterprise buyers should weigh maturity signals (named references at their scale, SOC 2, uptime) before the feature eval.

### What is the AI double-meter, and how do I spot it on a pricing page?

A double-meter is when a helpdesk charges you for the seat or the ticket, and then charges again per AI resolution on top. As of June 2026, Gorgias adds roughly $0.90 per AI resolution, Intercom Fin adds $0.99 per resolution on top of seats, Freshdesk meters Freddy at about $49 per 100 sessions, and Help Scout adds about $0.75 per AI resolution. The tell on a pricing page is a separate AI line item priced per resolution or per session that is additive to the seat or ticket price. Richpanel charges once, roughly $0.30 per conversation with a model and token budget you choose, with no second AI meter.

### Should I pick AI-native customer service software or bolt AI onto my existing helpdesk?

Bolting AI onto an incumbent helpdesk is lower-friction and keeps your existing workflows, which is why most teams try it first. The trade-off is that bolt-on AI is usually constrained by the host platform's data model, leads with drafting and deflection rather than autonomous resolution, and is metered separately. AI-native platforms are built around the agent resolving end to end on one bill, but switching costs are real. The deciding factor is usually whether your incumbent's AI add-on has actually moved your resolution rate. In our 69 buyer demos, 25-plus prospects said their incumbent AI had not.

### Are "best customer service software" lists trustworthy?

Treat them as a starting list of names, not a ranking. Most are written by one of the vendors being ranked, or by an affiliate scoring on feature checklists that stopped mattering in 2026, and the home team almost always lands at number one. The useful part is the set of products surfaced. Re-score those names against criteria you define for your own business, on your own ticket data. A list where one vendor wins every column is reverse-engineered from the conclusion.

## Where the claims come from.

Inline citations [1]–[6] map to the entries below. Vendor product and pricing pages used to source matrix rows are linked inline in the table.

1. **Fin (Intercom), "I Reviewed the Best AI Chatbots for Customer Support in 2026."** Vendor-authored ranking placing Fin at number one. Cited as an example of the self-ranking pattern. [fin.ai/learn/best-ai-chatbots-customer-support](https://fin.ai/learn/best-ai-chatbots-customer-support)
2. **Gorgias, "Gorgias vs Richpanel."** Vendor-authored comparison in which Gorgias wins. Cited as an example of a competitor publishing its own scorecard. [gorgias.com/comparison/richpanel](https://www.gorgias.com/comparison/richpanel)
3. **Competitor AI pricing, verified June 2026.** Per-resolution and per-session AI charges referenced in the metering column and fault-line section: Gorgias ~$0.90/AI resolution on top of ticket fees ([gorgias.com/pricing](https://www.gorgias.com/pricing)); Intercom Fin $0.99/resolution on top of $29–132 seats ([intercom.com/fin](https://www.intercom.com/fin)); Freshdesk Freddy AI Agent ~$49/100 sessions ([freshworks.com/freshdesk](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/)); Help Scout ~$0.75/AI resolution ([helpscout.com](https://www.helpscout.com/)); Zendesk add-on stack ~$215/seat plus per-resolution AI ([zendesk.com/pricing](https://www.zendesk.com/pricing/)). Figures are point-in-time and change frequently.
4. **Time-to-value anchors.** Decagon publishes roughly six-week implementations; Sierra cites four-to-ten-week deployments in its own case studies. Used in the time-to-value criterion. [decagon.ai](https://decagon.ai/) / [sierra.ai](https://sierra.ai/)
5. **Richpanel buyer demo dataset (April to May 2026).** 69 recorded inbound demo calls. The "25-plus prospects said their incumbent AI did not work" and "Gorgias most-cited incumbent" observations are drawn from this dataset. Underlying call data is confidential; aggregate counts are publishable. Methodology available on request via [amit@richpanel.com](mailto:amit@richpanel.com).
6. **Richpanel production case study (wellness brand).** The brand's AI sends 60% of every customer message at a higher CSAT than its human team (4.43 versus 4.25), fully autonomous, with a median first response of 28 seconds. [richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness](https://www.richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness)

Version history, v1.0 (2026-06-04): initial publication. Matrix cells are a snapshot of public vendor documentation and pricing as of this date.
