Most businesses pay $200 to $1,500 a month for an AI receptionist — and the number swings on two things: how many calls and texts come in, and how much you ask it to do once it picks up. This guide breaks down every real price driver in plain English, the honest tradeoffs between doing it cheap and doing it right, and how Pinnacle bundles a true AI receptionist into one flat monthly plan with no per-minute meter and no surprise add-ons.
Tell us your call volume and what you need it to handle. We'll show you what a standalone tool would run, what it'd cost bundled with everything else, and which plan actually fits — no obligation.
Most businesses pay $200 to $1,500 per month for an AI receptionist, driven mostly by call volume and how much it has to do — just answer, or also qualify and book. Pinnacle takes a different path: flat-rate monthly plans that bundle the AI receptionist with everything else you need to grow, with no per-minute meter and no surprise add-ons. Pinnacle's flat-rate plans start at $3,997/month, with custom packages scoped to your business.
Per-minutehow most “cheap” AI receptionists actually bill youThat eye-catching starter price almost always buys a tiny bucket of minutes. Go over — one busy week, one ad campaign, one storm of calls — and you're paying overage by the minute. Pricing it for businesses, we see the same thing every time: the advertised number is the floor, and the bill you actually get is two or three times higher the month you need it most.
Add-onscalendar, CRM, texting, after-hours — each one a separate line itemThe base plan answers the phone. Booking into your calendar? Add-on. Pushing the lead into your CRM? Add-on. Two-way texting, Spanish, after-hours coverage? More add-ons. By the time it does what you actually pictured, the “$99 tool” is a $600 stack of subscriptions you're wiring together yourself — and babysitting when one breaks.
Lost callsthe cost that never shows up on any invoiceThe most expensive line item isn't on the bill at all. Every call that rings out, every form that sits till Monday, every after-hours lead that calls the next company instead — that's revenue gone, and a cheap tool that only answers some of the time quietly leaks it. The real question isn't “what's the cheapest tool,” it's “what does a missed call cost me?”
An AI receptionist isn't a cost line — it's a catcher for revenue you're already losing. Here's why the spend pays for itself.
of consumers who do a local search on their phone call or visit a business within 24 hours — miss that call and the job is gone, which is exactly the revenue an AI receptionist catches
of all Google searches have local intent — high-intent “near me” callers ready to book, the calls that justify paying for instant 24/7 pickup
of clicks go to the #1 organic result, and the top 3 take more than half — you pay to earn that traffic, so letting those calls go to voicemail wastes the spend that won them
of consumers read online reviews before choosing a local business — an AI receptionist that answers fast and follows up earns the 5-star experiences that drive your next leads
One booked job a month usually covers the whole spend — and Pinnacle's flat plans make sure a busy month never costs you extra.
Every quote you get comes down to these six levers. Understand them and you'll know exactly why one tool costs $200 and another costs $1,500 — and whether you're overpaying.
The single biggest driver. More calls and texts means more minutes and more conversations — and most tools meter both. A high-call business on a per-minute plan pays far more than the sticker price suggests.
Connecting it to your calendar and CRM so it can actually book jobs and log leads usually costs extra — often a per-integration fee. The more of your stack it has to touch, the higher the price climbs.
Answering in Spanish as well as English — or any second language — is almost always a paid upgrade. For markets like Florida that can be the difference between booking a caller and losing them.
Nights, weekends, and holidays are when the most leads slip away — and many tools charge more for true 24/7 answering. The coverage you need most is often the line item priced highest.
A tool that just answers is cheap. One that asks the right questions, qualifies the lead, and books the appointment does real work — and that jump from “answer” to “qualify and book” is the biggest price step there is.
Off-the-shelf scripts are cheap but generic. A receptionist trained on your services, your prices, and your booking rules takes setup work — paid once up front, or baked into a higher monthly with the better tools.
The AI receptionist that answers, qualifies, and books every call and text, plus your website and the core local foundation — everything one flat price, no per-minute bill. It's the floor, and we scope your exact plan on the call.
Everything in Foundation plus Google Ads, SEO, and more channels working together — so the receptionist isn't just answering calls, it's answering calls you're actively driving in. Scoped to your market, so where you land depends on your scope.
The complete system — every channel, the AI receptionist, top-priority builds and the fastest turnaround. For businesses that want the whole engine, not a piece of it — scoped to exactly what you need.
Every plan is flat-rate and quarter-to-quarter. No per-minute meter, no add-on creep, no annual lock-in — a busy month never turns into a surprise invoice.
Start with how many calls and texts you get a month — and how many you miss after hours. That volume sets your floor on any metered tool and shows what missed calls already cost you.
Write down what you need it to do: just answer, or also qualify, book, text back, and speak Spanish. Each job you add moves the price — so price the receptionist you actually need, not the cheapest one.
Tally the integrations, overage, and add-ons a cheap tool needs to do all that. The honest number is almost always higher than the sticker — that's the real comparison.
Stack that real number against a flat plan that includes it all. Most businesses find the bundle costs about the same as a fully loaded standalone stack — and does far more.
You can wire up cheap tools yourself, hire a freelancer, sign with a generic agency, or run one integrated system. Here's what each really costs — and what you actually get.
| Capability | DIY Tools | Freelancer | Generic Agency | Pinnacle All-In-One |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Answers calls 24/7 | ~ | ~ | ||
| Qualifies & books the appointment | ~ | ~ | ~ | |
| Flat price — no per-minute overage | × | ~ | × | |
| Calendar & CRM connected for you | × | ~ | ~ | |
| Bundled with ads, SEO & web | × | × | ~ | |
| One team owns the whole result | × | × | ~ | |
| Cost | $200–600 / mo stacked | $1,000–3,000 / mo | $1,500–5,000+ / mo | Flat tier, all-in |
A standalone receptionist just answers the phone. Inside Pinnacle, it's wired into everything — your ads tell it which calls are worth the hardest sell, your CRM remembers every caller, and every booked job feeds back into what we target next. It answers every call and form in under 60 seconds, the moment that decides whether a lead books with you or the next company. That's why the flat plan beats a cheaper tool on price and on what it returns: one integrated system that gets smarter the longer it runs, not another subscription to babysit. We run this exact closed-loop tracking for home-services contractors like Coastal Outdoor Construction in Jacksonville — every call tied back to real revenue.
Most businesses pay $200 to $1,500 a month for a standalone AI receptionist, based on what we see pricing it for businesses. Where you land comes down to call and text volume and how much you ask it to do — just answering is cheap, while qualifying leads and booking appointments costs more. Pinnacle takes a different approach: flat monthly plans starting at $3,997/month that bundle the AI receptionist with your website, ads, SEO, and CRM, with no per-minute meter and no surprise add-ons. That's the floor, not a ceiling — most owners get custom packages scoped to their market, and we scope your exact plan on the call.
For most service businesses, yes. The math is simple: a single booked job a month usually covers the entire cost, and an AI receptionist catches the calls and after-hours leads you're losing today — the ones that otherwise call the next company. Since 88% of people who search locally on their phone call or visit a business within 24 hours (Think with Google), the calls you miss are high-intent and ready to book. The real cost isn't the tool, it's the revenue a missed call walks out the door with.
The price reflects what it actually does. A tool that just plays a greeting is cheap. One that answers in your brand's voice, asks the right qualifying questions, books straight into your calendar, texts the lead back, speaks Spanish, and covers nights and weekends is doing the work of a trained front-desk hire — for a fraction of the salary. Volume, integrations, languages, after-hours coverage, and how much qualifying and booking it handles are the five levers that move every quote.
Usually within the first month or two. For most service businesses, the average job is worth far more than the monthly cost, so recovering one or two leads you'd otherwise have missed covers the whole spend. Because it answers every call and form in under 60 seconds — nights and weekends included — it catches leads that used to slip away, and that recovered revenue is what pays for it. We tie every call back to real booked revenue so you can see the payback in plain numbers, not guesses.
You can stitch together cheap tools for $200–$600 a month, but read the fine print first. The starter price usually buys a small bucket of minutes, and booking, CRM logging, texting, languages, and after-hours coverage are each separate add-ons. By the time it does what you actually pictured, the cheap stack costs about the same as a done-for-you plan — except you're the one wiring it together and fixing it when it breaks. DIY makes sense for very low call volume; past that, bundled almost always wins on both price and result.
Every plan is flat-rate and month-to-month with no per-minute meter. Foundation starts at $3,997/month and includes the AI receptionist, your website, and the core local growth foundation. Growth is a custom package that adds Google Ads, SEO, and more channels working together. Pinnacle+ is the complete system — every channel, top-priority builds, and the fastest turnaround. Every plan bundles the receptionist with the rest of your marketing, so you're never paying separately for the tool and the traffic that feeds it. That $3,997 is the floor, not a ceiling — where you land depends on your scope. Call (888) 411-5145 and we'll scope the right fit on the first call.
Tell us your call volume and what you need it to handle. We'll show you what a standalone tool would run, what it costs bundled with everything else, and which plan fits. 15 minutes, no pressure — or call (888) 411-5145.
Real strategist, real numbers, real quote. Quarter-to-quarter — no lock-ins.
