SaaSFor exists to make SaaS pricing legible. Pricing pages bury per-seat math, usage overages and add-on fees; older directories list tools but no prices, and price changes go unnoticed until renewal. We track the real cost of 1,000+ tools, record how prices change over time, and map every alternative — so choosing, switching and budgeting becomes a decision you can defend.
How we collect prices
Source from the official page
Prices come from each vendor's official pricing page. We record the source URL and the date the figure was captured.
Update weekly
An automated job re-checks prices weekly and writes each reading to a time-series, so the price-history curve grows over time. We never discard old data points.
Human review for changes
When a price change or a scrape failure is detected, it goes to a human review queue before publishing. If a scrape fails, we keep the last known price and label it "data delayed — verify with vendor."
Flag hidden fees factually
Per-seat billing, usage overages and add-ons are noted only when they appear in official terms, phrased as facts — e.g. "per official pricing, AI is +$8/seat/mo" — never as judgements.
What we don't do
- We don't invent prices. If a figure isn't public (e.g. Enterprise), we say "contact sales — not public."
- We don't let commissions change rankings. Order is by functional relevance, not payout.
- We don't use disparaging language about vendors. Hidden-fee notes are sourced and neutral.
Affiliate & neutrality disclosure
Some "Visit site" links are affiliate links and we may earn a commission if you sign up. This supports the project but has no effect on prices shown, ratings, ranking, or which alternatives appear. Where a tool has no affiliate program, it's listed and ranked identically.
Found an outdated price?
Accuracy is the whole point. If a price looks wrong, report it here with the tool and the correct figure — these go straight to our review queue. Prices are always "as of" the date shown; treat the vendor's page as the source of truth.