Apollo publishes pricing more transparently than most B2B sales-intelligence platforms, with explicit free, paid, and enterprise tiers on its public pricing page. The headline figures still hide variables that move total cost, particularly around credit caps, included contacts, and AI-assisted features. This guide pulls together what is on the vendor's pricing page, what shows up in G2 listings, and how serious buyers should think about total cost in 2026.
Full disclosure: Abmatic AI competes with parts of the Apollo surface area, particularly around account identification and intent-driven outbound. The numbers below are pulled from public sources and matched against what we see in buyer conversations. We have a bias; verify against the linked sources before signing.
Apollo pricing in 2026 has a free tier with usable but capped functionality, paid tiers with month-to-month or annual billing, and an Organization tier for enterprise deployments. The vendor publishes per-seat monthly figures on its pricing page and tier-comparison tables. Verify current figures at apollo.io/pricing and read the G2 listing for current reviewer-supplied notes.
See a 30-minute Abmatic AI demo as a focused alternative.
Apollo is one of the most transparent vendors in the sales-intelligence category on pricing. The vendor publishes per-seat monthly pricing across multiple tiers; the variables that drive total cost above the headline are credit caps, sequence limits, and AI-feature inclusion.
Three sources frame the picture in 2026:
Three variables drive total cost above the per-seat figure:
For a structured side-by-side, see the ABM platform pricing comparison and cheaper-than-6sense alternatives.
| Deployment shape | Who it is for | Public price signal | Practical ceiling |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | Trial users, individual reps testing data | Free, capped credits and capped feature set | Usable for individual prospecting; not a production team deployment |
| Basic | Smaller sales teams running modest outbound | Vendor publishes per-seat monthly figure on the pricing page | Limited credits, basic sequencing, no advanced AI |
| Professional | Mid-market with steady outbound motion | Vendor publishes per-seat monthly figure; higher than Basic | Higher credit allocation, advanced sequencing, broader AI coverage |
| Organization (enterprise) | Larger teams, multi-region motion | "Contact us"; bespoke quote per the vendor | Custom credit allocation, full feature set, dedicated success |
Tier names and packaging change across years; the underlying shape (free, three paid tiers, custom enterprise) has stayed stable through 2026. Verify current tier names and figures with Apollo.
The free tier is genuinely usable for individual prospecting. Per public reports, individual reps can run modest outbound motion on the free tier indefinitely; the constraint binds for team deployments and for high-volume motion.
Professional is the practical mid-market tier for most production sales-led deployments. It includes meaningfully higher credit allocations, advanced sequencing and dialer features, and broader AI coverage than the Basic tier. Most teams that start on Basic upgrade to Professional within the first contract year as credit limits bind.
Organization is the enterprise tier with bespoke credit allocation, dedicated customer success, and custom security and compliance terms. Pricing is "contact us"; the negotiation is a real procurement exercise.
Apollo pricing is friendlier to evaluate than enterprise-priced platforms because the published per-seat figures give a real anchor. The variables to model:
Estimate monthly credits consumed per seat based on outbound volume. A rep running 200 contacts per month at one credit per reveal consumes 200 credits; at 1,000 contacts per month, 1,000 credits. Pick the tier that matches projected consumption with headroom; do not buy the lowest tier and assume you will manage to overage charges or downgrade behaviour.
If the team wants AI-assisted research and drafting, model the cost of the tier that includes AI versus the tier that does not. The AI surface is typically only available on higher tiers; teams that want the AI features should not assume the lowest paid tier will work.
Sales-intelligence switching cost is moderate. The contact lists, the cadence integrations, and the historical data exports are portable; the team training cost is the bigger frictor. Negotiate exportability of historical contact lists at signing.
For broader buyer-side guidance, see how to choose an ABM platform and the 2026 ABM playbook.
Apollo's published per-seat figures are mostly the prices buyers pay on Basic and Professional. Negotiation room sits on the Organization tier, on annual prepayment, and on bulk seat purchases. The levers that consistently move the number, per practitioner threads:
Asking for a discount on the published Basic tier is not where negotiation room lives. The Basic tier is the public list price; serious negotiation starts at Professional with annual commit and at Organization deals.
The annual Apollo bill is buying four things, in roughly this order of value:
Apollo's contact data accuracy and refresh cadence are competitive with the rest of the category per public G2 reviews. The verified-email rate and the phone-number coverage matter most for teams running high-volume outbound.
Apollo includes an outbound sequencing and engagement layer in the platform. Teams that previously paid for Outreach or Salesloft separately and now want a single platform get meaningful bundle value.
The AI surface drafts emails, researches contacts, and runs workflows. Per practitioner reports, the AI features are useful but not transformative; teams should not pick Apollo solely for AI capability over a pure data play.
Salesforce, HubSpot, and the major outbound platforms integrate cleanly. The Chrome extension is competitive with the rest of the category.
Two more references worth reading before you sign: Apollo alternatives and Apollo vs ZoomInfo for a head-to-head.
Abmatic AI sits in a different category than Apollo. We do not sell contact data or outbound sequencing; we identify accounts already on your site and convert that traffic with an embedded conversational layer. Buyers who lean heavily on outbound contact data and sequencing still have a real reason to evaluate Apollo, especially given the all-in-one positioning. Buyers who care most about deanonymizing existing site traffic and converting it into qualified demos in real time are typically a better fit for Abmatic. Many buyers run both: Apollo for outbound, Abmatic for inbound and account identification.
Apollo publishes per-seat monthly pricing across Free, Basic, Professional, and Organization tiers on its pricing page. Annual cost depends on tier, seat count, and whether AI features and credit overages are included; verify the live page for current figures.
The published Basic and Professional tier figures are largely fixed. The Organization tier is negotiable on annual commit, multi-year terms, seat volume, and competing-quote leverage.
The free tier is genuinely usable for individual prospecting and is a long-term option for individual reps. For team deployments, the Basic tier is the practical entry point; most teams that start there upgrade to Professional within the first contract year.
Apollo publishes per-seat list pricing; ZoomInfo quotes bespoke pricing without published figures. For most mid-market deployments Apollo is the cheaper option; for full enterprise deployments with strong data quality requirements, the comparison becomes closer. See Apollo vs ZoomInfo for a structured comparison.
The Apollo free tier is itself one of the cheapest options for individual prospecting. For team deployments, Lusha at smaller scale and certain Cognism configurations may price lower. For teams whose primary need is account identification rather than contact data, focused ABM platforms cover different ground. See Apollo alternatives for a structured comparison.
No. Lock in pricing, credit allocations, and seat counts at signing on Professional and Organization deals. Renewal-time leverage is materially weaker than initial-purchase leverage.
Apollo pricing in 2026 is one of the more transparent setups in the sales-intelligence category. The published per-seat figures give buyers a real anchor; the variables that move total cost (credit caps, AI inclusion, seat volume) are also publicly documented. Buyers who model projected credit consumption honestly and pick the tier that matches will pay roughly the published figure. Buyers who underestimate credit consumption and pick the lowest paid tier will pay more in upgrade fees within the first year.
If you are weighing Apollo against a focused account-identification platform, book a 30-minute Abmatic AI demo. We will compare deployment shape, surface the real cost variables, and show you where Abmatic fits cleanly and where Apollo is still the better answer.