Stop guessing your price. Calculate the optimal price point based on market data, value anchors, and conversion psychology.
"My SaaS had zero conversions at $9/mo. I raised to $29 and people started paying." — Low prices can signal low quality. Users often assume higher price = better value.
Market data + value anchors = optimal price point
Predict conversion and revenue at different prices
Calculate what your product is really worth
Inspired by: "$9/mo zero conversions → $29/mo paying customers"
Source: Reddit r/Entrepreneur
Estimate stronger SaaS pricing from customer value, hours saved, visitor volume, and scenario testing so pricing decisions feel less arbitrary. This page is built for people who want a fast path to a working result, not a vague prompt-and-pray workflow. If you need a more reliable first draft, cleaner output, or a repeatable workflow you can hand to a teammate, SaaS Pricing Calculator is designed to shorten that path.
Most visitors use SaaS Pricing Calculator because they need something specific done now: a deliverable, a decision, or a workflow checkpoint. The sections below show the fastest way to get value from the tool and the adjacent pages that help you keep going.
Use it when you need a more grounded pricing starting point based on value and monetization assumptions.
Best for teams that need a practical first-pass pricing model before deeper pricing experiments or market interviews.
Estimate a reasonable launch price with more context than guesswork
Compare pricing scenarios against traffic and conversion assumptions
Get a pricing baseline before shipping a new product or major pricing change
A strong outcome from SaaS Pricing Calculator is not just “some output.” It should be usable with minimal cleanup, aligned to the task you opened the page for, and specific enough that you can paste it into the next step of your workflow without rewriting everything from scratch.
If the first pass feels too generic, use the use cases, FAQs, and related pages here to tighten the scope. That usually produces better results faster than starting over in a blank chat.