Pricing breakdown

Zendesk pricing in 2026: what you will actually pay

The sticker price and the invoice are rarely the same number. Here is every Zendesk Suite tier, every AI add-on, and the per-resolution meter that bills on top of your seats, so you can build a real budget before a sales call.

Updated June 29, 2026 ~14 min read By Amit RG, Founder
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The short version

Five numbers that decide your Zendesk cost.

This guide breaks down the Zendesk pricing plans, the AI add ons, the hidden costs, and real-world cost by team size, then shows how to compare that total against any alternative. Every figure is sourced below. Vendor pricing changes, so verify the live numbers with Zendesk before you sign.

Structure

How Zendesk pricing is structured.

Zendesk supports more than 100,000 companies as a mature ticketing system and omnichannel support platform. Understanding what you will pay means separating four things that all sit under the word "Zendesk pricing."

Two product lines. Zendesk Support is the ticketing-only line: email and social media tickets, macros, basic automation. The Zendesk Suite is the full omnichannel workspace: messaging, live chat support, phone support, help centers, and AI. You cannot mix Support and Suite for the same users in one instance, and Zendesk steers almost every new customer toward Suite plans.

A separate Suite for employee service. The customer-facing Suite and the internal IT and HR "employee service" Suite are sold separately. Companies that want both customer support and an internal help desk usually pay for two instances, which quietly doubles some add-on spend.

Per agent, per month, annual by default. Every plan is priced per agent. The per-agent prices Zendesk lists are annual-billing rates. Monthly billing runs higher per agent, so the listed number assumes a year of commitment. Most plan tiers start at a minimum of one agent for online purchases, though negotiated enterprise deals often carry higher seat minimums.

Add ons on top of everything. The tools a growing support team expects, like AI resolution volume, quality assurance, workforce management, and voice, are billed as separate per-agent or usage-based fees layered on the base seat. This is the part that makes Zendesk cost hard to predict, and it is where most of the budget actually goes.

Plan tiers

Zendesk pricing plans, tier by tier.

There are two ladders. Support plans are the cheapest way in but cover only ticketing. Suite plans add the omnichannel workspace and AI that most teams end up needing. All prices below are per agent per month on annual billing.

Support plans (ticketing only)

The Support plans live inside Zendesk Support. They are the entry point for small teams handling email, but they lack live chat support, native voice support, and the full AI workspace.

Treat Support plans as an interim option. Most teams that grow past basic email move to the Zendesk Suite within months.

Zendesk Suite plans (omnichannel plus AI)

The Suite is what Zendesk pushes most customers toward, because it bundles the modern workspace, messaging, and AI agents. Suite plans add live chat, web and mobile messaging, and phone support on top of the ticketing system.

A note on tiers: an older "Suite Growth plan" sat between Team and Professional. It is no longer a named tier on Zendesk's current public pricing page, though the Growth label still appears in some documentation for brand limits. If a quote lists a suite growth plan, confirm whether it is a current SKU or a legacy contract.

PlanLinePer agent / month
Support TeamTicketing only~$19
Support ProfessionalTicketing only~$55
Support EnterpriseTicketing only~$115
Suite TeamOmnichannel + AI$55
Suite ProfessionalOmnichannel + AI$115
Suite EnterpriseOmnichannel + AI~$169+

Annual billing, US list pricing as of mid-2026 [1]. Monthly billing runs higher. Suite Enterprise is sold through sales.

AI add ons

AI agents and the meter that changed in 2026.

AI is now central to Zendesk pricing, and the model shifted twice in the last year. Read this section closely, because it is where a Zendesk quote and a Zendesk invoice diverge the most.

What is included now

As of a May 2026 change, autonomous AI agent capabilities are included in every Suite and Support plan. The previous "Advanced AI Agents" add-on was eliminated, so you no longer pay a flat per-agent fee to unlock automated resolutions. On its face that reads like Zendesk made AI cheaper.

What is metered

Each plan includes only a small allotment of automated resolutions, on the order of 5 to 15 per agent month depending on tier. Past that allotment, every automated resolution is billed per resolution on top of your seats. Zendesk does not publish these overage rates. Third-party analyses in 2026 report roughly $1.50 per automated resolution on committed volume and about $2.00 pay as you go, declining toward $1.00 at very high volume [2]. A January 2026 billing change began auto-charging resolution overages above committed volume, and the meter is uncapped.

The counterintuitive result: the more successful your AI is, the more your monthly line items grow. For a high-volume operation resolving a few thousand conversations beyond the included tier, the overage alone can run into the thousands of dollars per month.

Copilot is still a separate add on

Copilot, the human-agent assist that suggests replies, summarizes, and triages, remains a separate add-on at $50 per agent month, on top of the base plan, regardless of tier. For a 10-agent team, turning on Copilot adds $500 a month before anything else. Some contracts do not let you assign Copilot to a subset of agents, which limits how finely you can control the spend.

Ask before you sign: "At our current ticket volume and target automation rate, how many billable automated resolutions will we generate per month, and what is the projected overage in dollars?" Do not accept a single blended number. Get the resolution math in writing.

The advertised rate versus the real one

Zendesk markets 50 to 80 percent autonomous resolution. The number that matters is what teams actually achieve. In our buyer demo data and in third-party reviews, real-world Zendesk AI resolution typically lands near 10 to 20 percent [3]. The mechanism is the same story reviewers tell: the native AI answers from the knowledge base and deflects, but it does not resolve, and it cannot take actions like processing a refund or modifying an order without custom API development. That gap matters for budgeting, because you can end up paying a per-resolution meter for outcomes that customers still escalate to a human.

More add ons

Quality Assurance, Workforce Management, voice, and privacy.

Base Suite seats do not include the workforce and governance tools that mid-size and enterprise support teams expect. Each is a separate per-agent line.

Add onPer agent / monthWhen it earns its place
Quality Assurance (formerly Klaus)~$3515 to 20+ agents needing automated conversation scoring and coaching
Workforce Management~$2520 to 30+ agents with multi-shift scheduling and forecasting
Workforce Engagement bundle (QA + WFM)~$50Teams buying both, slightly cheaper than separately
Advanced Data Privacy and Protection~$50Regulated industries, data residency requirements
Contact Center (voice, Amazon Connect)~$83Teams needing built-in phone support, IVR, and call routing

Zendesk Quality Assurance can score 100 percent of interactions, which is a genuine strength, but it is a separate SKU and a separate per-agent cost. Zendesk Workforce Management handles scheduling and forecasting on the same model. On voice, Zendesk Talk bills per minute of usage, and the Enterprise Contact Center add-on built on Amazon Connect runs about $83 per agent month [1]. Aircall is also an official resold partner billed through Zendesk, so the friction is per-minute Talk versus predictable per-seat voice, not the absence of voice.

The stack math

Here is the figure that surprises most buyers. Take Suite Professional and add the two things a serious team almost always turns on:

LinePer agent / month
Suite Professional (base seat)$115
Copilot$50
Workforce Engagement bundle (QA + WFM)$50
Fully loaded seat, before AI overage~$215

That is roughly 87 percent above the base plan, and it still excludes the per-resolution AI meter, voice, advanced data privacy, and implementation. When teams say their Zendesk bill doubled, this is the math they mean.

Hidden costs

The costs that are not on the pricing page.

The line items above are public. These are the ones that show up later, and they are the most common reason users complain about bill shock after a rollout.

A practical rule: build a 20 to 30 percent contingency into your first-year Zendesk budget. You will almost certainly use it.

Real-world cost

What Zendesk actually costs by team size.

These scenarios show fully loaded cost once you layer on the add ons teams of each size typically enable. They are directional, but they illustrate why per agent pricing should always be evaluated on the loaded number, not the base sticker.

Small business, about 5 agents on Suite Team

Base: 5 x $55 = $275 per month. Add Copilot ($250) and you are at $525 per month, roughly $6,300 a year. Typical for small businesses with basic omnichannel needs. At this size you are mostly paying for the platform, not the add-on stack.

Growing team, about 25 agents on Suite Professional

Base: 25 x $115 = $2,875 per month. Add Copilot ($1,250), Quality Assurance ($875), and Workforce Management ($625) and you reach about $5,625 per month before any AI resolution overage or voice. That is roughly $67,500 a year, and the AI meter sits on top.

Enterprise, about 100 agents on Suite Enterprise

Base: 100 x $169 = $16,900 per month. Add advanced AI resolution volume, voice, Workforce Management, Quality Assurance, and advanced data privacy, and a fully loaded deployment pushes toward $25,000 to $33,000 per month, or roughly $300,000 to $400,000 a year. This is where per agent pricing at scale demands hard negotiation on seat minimums and resolution overage rates.

Estimate your own: start with full-time agents plus peak concurrent users, multiply by your chosen base plan, then add separate line estimates for AI overage, Copilot, QA, WFM, and voice. Request a line-item quote that breaks out each add-on and the AI usage assumption. Never accept one blended figure.

The honest read

Is Zendesk worth the price?

This is a budgeting guide, not a takedown, so here is the even-handed answer. Zendesk earns its price in specific situations and overcharges in others.

Where Zendesk is genuinely worth it

Zendesk is a mature, reliable platform with deep omnichannel support, strong reporting, a large app ecosystem, and serious governance in the higher plan tiers. For complex global operations spanning many channels and multiple departments, it does things newer tools cannot. Its multi brand support at Enterprise scales to hundreds of brands. Its Quality Assurance can review 100 percent of conversations. And for a large, risk-averse buyer, Zendesk's age is an asset: it reads as the safe, proven choice, which is exactly why some enterprise evaluations choose it even against a cheaper or more capable challenger [4].

Where it is hard to justify

Very small teams under about 5 agents, and low-volume B2B desks, routinely pay for advanced features they never use, and there is no free version to grow into. Teams chasing high automation get punished twice: the per-resolution meter scales with success, while the real-world resolution rate often falls short of the marketing. And every capability beyond the base inbox, AI volume, QA, WFM, and voice, is another per-agent line. If you only use Zendesk as a customer-support inbox, you are paying for surface area you do not touch.

Comparing the total

How to compare Zendesk's price to anything else.

The mistake almost every buyer makes is comparing sticker prices. The right comparison is total cost per agent and cost per resolved conversation, with every add-on and the AI meter included. Once you normalize that way, the market sorts into three pricing models.

Richpanel is in that third group, and it is the model we built, so treat this as a labeled comparison rather than a neutral one. Richpanel is a team of AI agents that runs customer service end to end, alongside the helpdesk your people work in, on one bill. The two line items are a $100 per seat helpdesk and the AI itself, metered per conversation at about $0.20 each because you choose the model and the token budget. There is no second per-resolution meter stacked on the seat, which is the whole point against the seat-plus-meter model above. At maturity the AI resolves 70 to 80 percent of conversations autonomously, and a 50 percent resolution in 30 days money-back guarantee makes the ramp a probation period rather than a leap of faith. For switchers, a one-click Zendesk import moves historical conversations, macros, and tags in an afternoon, and we will buy out up to 100 percent of your remaining Zendesk term.

The honest limits, since this section would be useless without them: Richpanel has no native voice and integrates with Aircall, Dialpad, and JustCall instead of hosting phone itself. Its ecosystem is smaller than Zendesk's, and its integration depth is greatest on Shopify even though the platform is general-purpose. If you need a vast app marketplace or deep native telephony today, weigh that honestly. If your problem is a Zendesk bill that climbs with every seat, add-on, and resolution, a flat per-conversation model is the comparison worth running.

Before you sign

The five pricing questions to ask any vendor.

Whether you renew Zendesk or evaluate an alternative, get answers to these in writing before you commit. They convert a blended sales number into a budget you can defend.

  1. What is the fully loaded per-agent cost? Base seat plus every add-on you will actually enable: AI, QA, WFM, voice, and privacy. Ask for the line items, not one number.
  2. How is AI billed, and what is my projected overage? Per resolution, per session, per outcome, or flat? Get the projected monthly resolution volume and the dollar overage at your real ticket count.
  3. What is the real resolution rate on tickets like mine? Ask for a test on 100 of your own historical tickets, with per-response accuracy, not a marketing percentage.
  4. What does it cost to leave? Contract length, annual upfront billing, early-termination fees, and whether downgrades or seat reductions are allowed mid-term.
  5. What is the all-in cost per resolved conversation? The single number that lets you compare a seat-plus-meter platform, an outcome-based agent, and a flat per-conversation model on equal terms.

If you are weighing a switch, two companion guides go deeper: an honest, criteria-first comparison of Zendesk alternatives and a step-by-step migration playbook. For data handling and audits, see the trust and security hub.

Common questions

Zendesk pricing: common questions.

How much does Zendesk cost in 2026?

Zendesk pricing is per agent per month on annual billing. Support plans (ticketing only) run from about $19 to $115. The Zendesk Suite runs from $55 on Suite Team to $115 on Suite Professional, with Suite Enterprise sold through sales and starting around $169. None of those is the real cost. Once you add Copilot at $50 per agent month, Quality Assurance and Workforce Management, and the per-resolution AI overage on top of seats, a fully loaded Suite Professional seat commonly lands above $200 per agent month before voice.

Why is Zendesk so expensive?

Because the seat is only the base. Zendesk sells the modern workspace as a per-agent Suite license, then sells the tools most teams expect, Copilot, Quality Assurance, Workforce Management, and voice, as separate per-agent add ons. Stacking Suite Professional at $115 plus Copilot at $50 plus the Workforce Engagement bundle at $50 reaches about $215 per agent month, roughly 87 percent above the base seat, and that is before the per-resolution AI meter.

Is Zendesk free, or is there a free plan?

There is no free plan for Zendesk Support or the Zendesk Suite. Zendesk offers a 14-day free trial, usually defaulting to Suite Professional, then requires a paid tier and a committed agent count. Use the trial to measure your real ticket volume, channel mix, and AI resolution rate so you can forecast a fully loaded zendesk cost before you sign.

Does Zendesk charge extra for AI?

Both yes and no. Since a May 2026 change, autonomous AI agents are included in every plan rather than sold as the old Advanced AI add-on. But each plan includes only a small allotment of automated resolutions per agent month, and resolutions past that are billed per resolution on top of seats. Third-party analyses report roughly $1.50 per resolution on committed volume and about $2.00 pay as you go. Copilot, the human-agent assist, is still a separate add on at $50 per agent month.

How much is Zendesk per agent per month?

On annual billing, Suite Team is $55, Suite Professional is $115, and Suite Enterprise starts around $169 through sales. The Support-only plans run about $19 to $115 but cover email and social ticketing without voice, live chat, or the full AI workspace. Monthly billing runs higher than these annual rates. The per-agent number is only the base; budget the add ons and the AI meter separately.

What is the best alternative to Zendesk?

It depends on what you use Zendesk for. If you run it across many functions beyond support, its breadth is hard to replace and staying is reasonable. If you use it as a customer-support inbox and the rising add-on and per-resolution costs are the problem, the alternatives worth pricing are AI-native platforms that fold AI, QA, and analytics into one bill and price by resolved conversation rather than per seat plus per resolution. We keep an honest, criteria-first comparison at best Zendesk alternatives.

Sources & references

Where the numbers come from.

Inline citations [1][4] map to the entries below. Vendor pricing changes; verify the live figures with Zendesk before signing.

  1. Zendesk public pricing and product add-ons (as of mid-2026). Suite and Support plan tiers, per-agent rates, the Copilot add-on at $50 per agent month, multi-brand limits, Zendesk Talk per-minute voice, and the Enterprise Contact Center add-on. Figures cited from Zendesk's published pricing and help documentation. zendesk.com/pricing
  2. Per-resolution AI billing (third-party reported, 2026). Zendesk does not publish automated-resolution overage rates. Independent 2026 pricing analyses report roughly $1.50 per resolution on committed volume and about $2.00 pay-as-you-go, plus the January 2026 change that auto-charges overage above committed volume. Cited as third-party estimates, not Zendesk-published figures. eesel.ai, voiceflow.com
  3. Real-world AI resolution rate. Zendesk markets 50 to 80 percent autonomous resolution; field outcomes in the Richpanel buyer demo dataset (2026) and in third-party reviews typically land near 10 to 20 percent, with the AI deflecting more than it resolves and unable to take actions without custom API work. Aggregate buyer-data observation; underlying call data is confidential, methodology available on request via amit@richpanel.com. eesel.ai resolution-rate analysis
  4. Richpanel internal win/loss review (2026 YTD). A roughly $150,000 enterprise opportunity recorded as lost with the stated reason that the buyer wanted a stable, proven platform like Zendesk and was hesitant to adopt a newer vendor. Brand anonymized; cited as an honest example of where Zendesk's maturity wins on price-insensitive enterprise deals.

v1.0 (2026-06-29): initial publication. Plan prices and add-on figures are a snapshot of public vendor documentation as of the publication date; per-resolution overage rates are third-party reported.

Stop modeling spreadsheets. Price it on your own tickets.

30 minutes. We connect Richpanel, run our pre-launch eval against 100 of your historical Zendesk tickets, and show you per-response accuracy and one flat per-conversation number. Then run the same test on every vendor on your shortlist. The total cost per resolved conversation is the only number that compares.

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