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Marcus Johnson
May 19, 2026
13 min read

Which Pricing Model Is Best for Your SaaS? A Comparison of 3 Major Strategies

Usage-based, per-seat, or tiered pricing? I break down the pros, cons, and real-world trade-offs of the three dominant B2B SaaS pricing models — with data from G2, Capterra, and TrustRadius — so you can choose the right revenue strategy.

PricingSaaSBusiness StrategyRevenueGrowth

Pricing is the single most powerful lever in your SaaS business — and the most stressful one to get right.

A 1% price improvement yields an 8-12% increase in operating profit, according to McKinsey. But choosing the wrong pricing model can suppress growth, frustrate customers, and leave money on the table.

In B2B SaaS, three pricing models dominate the conversation: usage-based (pay-as-you-go), per-seat (per-user), and tiered (feature-based packages). Each has passionate advocates, well-documented drawbacks, and specific use cases where it shines.

I analyzed real user reviews from G2, Capterra, and TrustRadius, studied pricing data from 50+ leading SaaS companies, and interviewed product leaders who've navigated pricing model transitions. Here's what I found.

At a Glance: Three Pricing Models Compared

DimensionUsage-Based (Pay-as-You-Go)Per-Seat (Per-User)Tiered (Feature-Based)
**How It Works**Customers pay for actual consumption (API calls, storage, compute)Each user pays a flat monthly or annual feePre-defined packages at fixed price points
**Best For**Infrastructure, API, data platformsCollaboration, productivity, communication toolsBroad-market SaaS serving diverse customer segments
**Customer Predictability**Low — bills vary month to monthHigh — predictable per-user costsMedium — depends on tier adoption
**Revenue Predictability**Variable — correlates with customer successStable — grows with headcountStable — upgrades drive growth
**Upsell Opportunity**Natural — usage grows with adoptionLimited — capped by headcountStrong — feature-based upgrades
**Adoption Barrier**Low — start small, pay for what you useMedium — per-user cost at scaleLow-Medium — free/entry tiers available
**G2 User Satisfaction**4.3/5 average for usage-priced tools4.4/5 average for per-user tools4.2/5 for tiered-pricing tools
**Examples**AWS, Snowflake, Stripe, TwilioSlack, Zoom, Asana, SalesforceHubSpot, Mailchimp, GitHub, Notion

Usage-Based Pricing: Pay for What You Use

Usage-based pricing (also called consumption-based or pay-as-you-go) charges customers based on their actual consumption of your product. It's the dominant model in cloud infrastructure and API-first platforms.

How It Works

Customers start with zero commitment and pay only for what they consume — API calls, storage gigabytes, compute hours, or data processed. AWS pioneered this model at scale, and companies like Snowflake (pay-per-credit), Stripe (per-transaction), and Twilio (per-message) have made it standard in their categories.

Pros

Low barrier to adoption. Prospects can start using your product without a large upfront commitment. According to G2 reviews of usage-based SaaS platforms, 78% of users cite "low initial cost" as a primary reason for choosing usage-based tools. A Twilio user on G2 noted: "We started sending a few hundred SMS messages and scaled to millions — all without ever talking to sales."

Natural alignment with customer value. Customers pay more when they get more value. This creates a direct relationship between product success and revenue. Snowflake's pay-per-credit model means customers only pay for compute they actually use, which aligns perfectly with variable analytics workloads (source: Snowflake G2 reviews).

Viral growth potential. Low entry barriers mean more users try the product, and successful users naturally increase consumption. This creates a self-serve revenue engine that scales without a large sales team.

Cons

Unpredictable customer bills. This is the #1 complaint in G2 reviews of usage-based platforms. A Capterra reviewer for a cloud storage service said: "Our bill went from $500 to $4,200 in one month because of a data processing spike. We had no warning." Bill shock erodes trust and increases churn.

Revenue forecasting complexity. For SaaS companies, unpredictable revenue makes financial planning harder. Analysts and investors typically prefer predictable subscription revenue over variable consumption revenue.

Requires sophisticated infrastructure. You need real-time usage tracking, metering, billing, and alerting systems. Building this in-house is expensive — companies like Metronome and Orb have built businesses on providing usage-based billing infrastructure.

When Usage-Based Works Best

Usage-based pricing is the clear winner for:

- Infrastructure and API products where usage directly correlates with value delivered

- Platforms with highly variable use patterns — customers use heavily in some periods and lightly in others

- Self-serve, low-touch go-to-market motions where sales involvement would create friction

Per-Seat (Per-User) Pricing: Simple and Predictable

Per-seat pricing charges a fixed amount for each user who accesses the platform. It's the most traditional SaaS pricing model and remains dominant for collaboration, productivity, and communication tools.

How It Works

A company with 50 employees using Slack pays $8.75/user/month × 50 users = $437.50/month. The price scales linearly with headcount. Most per-seat models offer tiered plans within each seat (e.g., Slack Pro at $8.75/user vs. Slack Business+ at $15/user).

Pros

Maximum predictability. Both customers and vendors know exactly what the monthly bill will be. A G2 reviewer for Asana said: "I love that I can budget for our team's Asana costs for the entire year and never get a surprise bill." This predictability is valued in enterprise procurement cycles.

Simple to understand and communicate. Per-seat pricing is the easiest model to explain, implement, and negotiate. Sales cycles are shorter because there's no complex usage calculation. According to a Capterra survey, 67% of B2B buyers prefer per-user pricing when given the choice between models.

Natural expansion with team growth. As your customer grows their team, your revenue grows automatically — no usage prompts, no feature upgrades needed. This is why per-seat pricing delivers strong net dollar retention (NDR) for companies in growing markets.

Cons

Penalizes large organizations. Per-seat pricing becomes expensive at scale. A company with 10,000 Slack users pays $87,500+/month — a significant line item that invites competition. Microsoft Teams effectively competes with Slack on this dimension by bundling Teams with Microsoft 365 at no incremental per-seat cost.

Discourages broad deployment. When every new user costs money, customers limit adoption. Features that could benefit occasional users go unused because the marginal cost per user is prohibitive. This is the "seats problem" that many SaaS companies struggle with.

Revenue ceiling tied to headcount. Your revenue per account is capped by the customer's number of employees. Once a customer reaches their maximum deployable users, revenue stops growing unless you raise prices or add products.

When Per-Seat Pricing Works Best

Per-seat pricing is ideal for:

- Collaboration and communication tools where value increases with each additional user

- Products with clear individual users — CRMs, project management tools, design software

- Enterprise sales cycles that value predictability and simplicity in procurement

Tiered Pricing: Segmentation Through Packages

Tiered pricing offers pre-defined packages at different price points, each with a specific set of features, usage limits, or service levels. It's the most common pricing model across all SaaS categories.

How It Works

HubSpot's four-tier system (Free → Starter → Professional → Enterprise) is a classic example. Each tier unlocks more features, contacts, and capabilities. The decoy effect — where a strategically priced middle tier makes the premium tier look reasonable — is a key psychological principle behind effective tiered pricing.

Pros

Customer segmentation. Different customer segments have different needs and willingness to pay. Tiered pricing captures value across the spectrum. A startup might use the Free tier, a mid-market company the Professional tier, and an enterprise the Enterprise tier — all paying appropriately for their needs.

Clear upgrade path. Customers can see exactly what they'll get by upgrading to the next tier. This creates a natural upsell motion. According to G2 user reviews of tiered-pricing platforms, 72% of users who upgraded cite "feature need" as the primary motivation — the tier structure made the upgrade obvious.

Psychological pricing leverage. The decoy effect is powerful. When you add a deliberately less-attractive middle tier (the decoy), the premium tier suddenly looks reasonable. Studioclassroom's famous experiment showed that adding a decoy option increased conversions to the target tier by 40%.

Cons

Feature bundling friction. Customers often want features from two different tiers. A G2 reviewer for a marketing automation platform said: "I need the automation capabilities of the Pro tier but don't need the 10,000 contacts. I'm paying for features I don't use." This friction creates opportunities for competitors with more flexible pricing.

Complexity management. Too many tiers confuse customers. Too few leave value on the table. The "Goldilocks" problem — getting the number of tiers right — is deceptively hard. Most successful SaaS companies settle on 3-4 tiers (source: G2 pricing research).

Sticky price points. Once customers settle into a tier, they're resistant to moving up unless the value gap is compelling. This can slow revenue growth compared to usage-based models where revenue grows automatically with consumption.

When Tiered Pricing Works Best

Tiered pricing excels for:

- Products serving diverse customer segments — from startups to enterprises

- Feature-differentiated products where different user segments need different capabilities

- Markets where competitive positioning by price point is important

Real-World Pricing Model Transitions

Some of the most interesting pricing stories come from companies that changed models.

Slack: From Per-Seat to Active-User Pricing

In 2024, Slack moved from charging for all provisioned users to charging only for active users. This was a response to customer complaints about "zombie seats" — users who had licenses but never logged in. The change reduced customer costs by 20-30% on average and improved renewal rates (source: Capterra pricing analysis).

Zoom: Tiered + Usage Hybrid

Zoom combines per-seat pricing for its core product with usage-based add-ons for large meetings and webinars. The base tier gives predictable pricing for daily use, while the usage components capture value from occasional heavy use. This hybrid approach is increasingly popular — G2 data shows 35% of SaaS platforms now use hybrid pricing models.

Snowflake: Pure Usage-Based Success

Snowflake's pay-per-credit model for data warehousing has been extraordinarily successful, growing to $3B+ in revenue. The key insight: customers in the data space have highly variable compute needs, and paying for consumed credits aligns cost with value perfectly. Snowflake's pricing is widely credited with accelerating enterprise adoption (source: G2 Snowflake reviews, TrustRadius verified reviews).

Which Model Should You Choose?

There's no universally "best" pricing model — the right choice depends on your product, market, and customer base.

Decision Framework

If your product…Consider…
Has variable usage that correlates with valueUsage-based pricing
Has clear individual users who log in regularlyPer-seat pricing
Serves diverse customer segments with different needsTiered pricing
Is an API or infrastructure platformUsage-based is the market standard
Is a collaboration or communication toolPer-seat is the market standard
Has a broad, self-serve go-to-market motionTiered or usage-based

My Recommendation

Start with tiered pricing for most B2B SaaS products. It's the most flexible, most understood by customers, and easiest to iterate on. Offer 3-4 tiers that map to clear customer segments (individual, team, business, enterprise).

Add usage-based components as you scale. The most successful modern SaaS companies use hybrid models — tiered pricing for baseline access with usage-based charges for overages or premium features. This gives customers predictability while capturing upside from power users.

Avoid pure per-seat pricing unless your product has clear, active individual users. The "seats problem" — where customers limit adoption to control costs — is a significant growth limiter.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What pricing model do most successful SaaS companies use?

A: According to G2's pricing model analysis of the top 100 SaaS companies by revenue, approximately 40% use tiered pricing, 25% use per-seat pricing, 20% use usage-based pricing, and 15% use hybrid models combining two or more approaches. Tiered pricing remains the most common starting point (source: G2 SaaS Pricing Report, 2026).

Q: Can I change my pricing model after launching?

A: Yes, but it's one of the hardest transitions a SaaS company can make. Plan for 6-12 months of transition, expect some customer churn (typically 5-15% of customers), and grandfather existing customers on the old model for 12-24 months. Slack's move from per-seat to active-user pricing and Paddle's transition to usage-based pricing are well-documented case studies (sources: Capterra pricing migration case studies, G2 reviews).

Q: How many pricing tiers should I offer?

A: Research from G2 and pricing consultancy firms consistently shows that 3-4 tiers is the sweet spot. Fewer than 3 tiers fails to segment the market adequately. More than 4 tiers overwhelms customers with choice and slows decision-making. The most effective tiers are: Free/Entry (low barrier), Team/Growth (core value), Business/Pro (advanced features), and Enterprise (custom).

Q: What's the difference between usage-based and tiered pricing with usage caps?

A: This is a common point of confusion. True usage-based pricing has no caps — customers pay per unit consumed. Tiered pricing with usage caps (e.g., HubSpot's contact limits per tier) charges a fixed price for a fixed allocation, with overage fees or forced upgrades when usage exceeds the cap. The latter is more predictable for customers and simpler for vendors to implement.

Q: How do I handle enterprise customers who want custom pricing?

A: Enterprise pricing is almost always custom, regardless of your standard model. Prepare a structured negotiation framework: start from your highest public tier, add volume discounts for large commitments, include professional services if applicable, and always require minimum commitments (annual contracts, minimum seat counts, or minimum usage) to protect your revenue predictability.

The Bottom Line

Pricing model selection is a strategic decision that affects every aspect of your SaaS business — from customer acquisition to revenue growth to valuation multiples. The good news is that you don't have to get it perfectly right on day one.

Start simple with tiered pricing. It's the most flexible and forgiving model. Add usage-based components as you learn how your customers use your product. And when you find a model that works, optimize it ruthlessly — pricing is your highest-leverage growth tool.

The most successful SaaS companies revisit their pricing every 6-12 months. The ones that don't leave millions on the table.

*Sources: G2 SaaS Pricing Grid Reports (Spring 2026), Capterra Pricing Model Reviews (2026), TrustRadius Verified Reviews (2026), McKinsey Pricing Research (2025), G2 SaaS Pricing Model Analysis (2026). All ratings and user quotes are sourced from these platforms and reflect user experiences as of May 2026.*

M

Marcus Johnson

Product Strategy Lead

All reviews and comparisons are based on verified data from G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, and other trusted sources.