The advertised price is almost never what you pay. Vapi says $0.05 per minute. That is true if you ignore the LLM, the transcription engine, the voice synthesis, and the telephony carrier. Add those in and you are at $0.15 to $0.31 per minute before your first call ends.
I have deployed AI voice agents for over 40 businesses since 2023, across law firms, HVAC companies, healthcare practices, and property management firms. This post is what I wish existed before I spent months figuring out what everything actually costs.
The short version: AI voice agents are dramatically cheaper than humans at scale. But the path from a $0.07/min headline to a working production system is full of hidden costs that vendors do not lead with.
Quick Verdict
- Pick AI voice agent if your call volume exceeds 200 calls/month, most calls are routine (booking, FAQs, lead capture), and you need 24/7 coverage
- Stick with a human receptionist if your calls require empathy, complex judgment, or active upselling and your budget allows $4K+/month
- Use an answering service if you are under 200 calls/month and not ready to commit to AI infrastructure
- Still unsure whether AI voice fits your business? Book a call and I will tell you directly
Retell AI's pricing page — one of the more transparent platforms, though the real cost still includes LLM and telephony on top of the base rate
What We Are Actually Comparing
This post covers four distinct options:
- AI voice agents (self-serve developer platforms) — Vapi, Retell AI, Bland AI. You build on their infrastructure and bring your own API keys.
- AI voice agents (custom-built) — A developer or agency builds a voice system tailored to your workflow, CRM, and booking system.
- Traditional answering service — Remote human operators handling your calls at per-minute rates.
- Full-time in-house receptionist — The employee option, with all associated costs.
I am not covering generic chatbots or IVR phone trees here. Those are different tools with different cost structures. If you want the agent vs chatbot comparison, I covered it in detail here.
Option A: AI Voice Agents
The Platforms and What They Actually Cost
Most businesses looking at AI voice agents start with one of three developer platforms. Here is what I have found deploying across all of them.
Vapi
Vapi is the most developer-friendly platform. It advertises $0.05 per minute, but that only covers the orchestration layer. In practice, you pay separately for:
- STT (speech-to-text): ~$0.01/min via Deepgram
- LLM processing: $0.02 to $0.20/min depending on model (GPT-4o versus Claude 3.5 Haiku vary dramatically)
- TTS (voice synthesis): ~$0.04/min via ElevenLabs or Cartesia
- Telephony via Twilio: ~$0.01 to $0.03/min
True all-in cost at 300 min/month: $36 to $72/month. At 2,000 min/month, costs climb to $260 to $620/month. You are also managing four separate vendor accounts, four sets of API keys, and four billing relationships. When Twilio has an outage, Vapi support cannot help you. That is your Twilio problem.
Vapi's pricing page — the $0.05/min is just the platform layer. STT, LLM, TTS, and telephony all stack on top of it
Retell AI
Retell positions itself with more inclusive pricing. Base rate is $0.07/min, no mandatory monthly subscription. LLM costs add $0.006 to $0.06/min depending on your model choice. Phone numbers cost $2/month each. At moderate volumes of 1,000 min/month, you are looking at $85 to $130/month all-in.
Retell is my recommendation for teams with engineering resources who want more control than a fully managed product but do not want Vapi's fragmented billing.
Bland AI
Bland switched to plan-based pricing in December 2025. The current structure:
- Start (free): $0.14/min
- Build ($299/mo): $0.12/min
- Scale ($499/mo): $0.11/min
The monthly fee plus per-minute billing makes Bland expensive at lower volumes. A 500-minute month on the Build plan costs $359 ($299 plus $60 in call minutes). That is comparable to a managed answering service, without the simplicity. Bland makes more sense when you are doing 3,000+ minutes per month and need the high concurrency limits that come with Scale.
Bland AI pivoted to plan-based pricing in late 2025, which changes the math significantly at lower call volumes
All-in-One Managed AI (The Middle Path)
If you are not a developer, the BYOK platforms above are not the right fit. Managed AI receptionist products bundle everything into one invoice: the LLM, the voice, the telephony, the integrations. These typically run $199 to $2,000/month depending on call volume and complexity. No API key juggling, no four-vendor billing management.
The Custom-Built Route
When I build a voice agent for a client, we are not deploying managed SaaS. We build on AWS Bedrock or OpenAI, integrate directly with their CRM (ServiceTitan, HubSpot, Salesforce), and connect to their existing phone numbers. Setup ranges from $3,000 to $12,000 depending on complexity. Monthly infrastructure runs $300 to $1,500. The advantage is the system does exactly what the client needs, including booking, lead qualification, call routing, and post-call summaries that go directly into the CRM. More on this below.
Option B: Human Receptionists and Answering Services
Full-Time In-House Receptionist
The fully-loaded cost most businesses underestimate:
| Cost Item | Annual Amount |
|---|---|
| Base salary | $32,000 to $45,000 |
| Benefits (health, PTO, retirement) | $8,000 to $15,000 |
| Payroll taxes | $2,500 to $3,500 |
| Training and onboarding | $2,000 to $4,000 |
| Desk space and equipment | $3,000 to $5,000 |
| Total | $47,500 to $72,500 |
That is $3,960 to $6,040 per month. For 40 hours per week. Your phones go unattended nights, weekends, and whenever your receptionist calls in sick.
Think about what missed after-hours calls actually cost. If 20% of your evening calls would convert to a $500 job, and you take 100 calls per month after hours, that is $10,000 in revenue walking away because nobody answered.
Traditional Answering Service
Answering services charge per minute of operator time, typically $0.75 to $1.50/min:
| Monthly Call Volume | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| 500 minutes | $375 to $750 |
| 1,000 minutes | $750 to $1,500 |
| 2,000 minutes | $1,500 to $3,000 |
| 3,000+ minutes | $2,250 to $4,500+ |
The hidden problem: operators handling your calls are simultaneously handling 40 other businesses. They are reading scripts. They often cannot book appointments directly into your system. For service-based businesses in HVAC, legal, or healthcare, the inability to actually schedule or qualify leads is a dealbreaker.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Full-Time Receptionist | Answering Service | AI Voice Agent (Managed) | AI Voice Agent (Custom) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | $3,960 to $6,040 | $750 to $4,500 | $199 to $2,000 | $300 to $1,500 (post-setup) |
| Setup cost | $2,000 to $4,000 | Minimal | $0 to $500 | $3,000 to $12,000 |
| Availability | 40 hrs/week | 24/7 | 24/7 | 24/7 |
| Concurrent calls | 1 | Multi (shared) | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| CRM integration | Manual | None/basic | Basic | Deep |
| Appointment booking | Yes | Rarely | Basic | Yes |
| Call empathy | High | Generic scripts | Consistent | Customized |
| Scales instantly | No (hire another) | Partial | Yes | Yes |
The Decision Framework
Six questions that tell you which option wins for your business:
1. Do you take more than 200 calls per month?
Below 200 calls, AI infrastructure does not pay itself off fast enough. Stick with an answering service or part-time help.
2. Are more than 70% of your calls routine?
Routine means appointment booking, FAQ responses, lead qualification, call routing. If most calls require real judgment or emotional intelligence, humans win.
3. Do you need 24/7 coverage?
If after-hours calls represent real revenue and for home services, legal, and healthcare they always do, AI is the only cost-effective option. Human 24/7 coverage requires shift work and a much larger payroll.
4. Does your call handling need to touch your CRM or scheduling software?
A managed AI product gives you basic integrations. A custom-built system gives you deep ones. An answering service gives you a message relay at best.
5. What is your monthly call budget?
Under $500/month: answering service or self-serve AI platform. $500 to $2,000/month: managed AI voice agent. $2,000+/month: consider a full-time person or custom AI.
6. Can you tolerate 2 to 4 weeks of setup time?
AI agents need training time: building the knowledge base, testing call flows, tuning interruption handling. If you need coverage tomorrow, an answering service can go live in 24 hours.
What Most Pricing Comparisons Get Wrong
Every blog post about AI voice agent pricing compares raw per-minute rates. That is the wrong metric. Three things actually determine your true cost:
1. Call length varies wildly by use case
A law firm taking intake calls averages 8 to 12 minutes per call. An HVAC company taking appointment requests averages 2 to 3 minutes. At $0.15/min true cost, that is $1.20 per successful intake versus $0.45 per appointment booking. Your call type determines your actual cost more than any platform's per-minute rate.
2. Containment rate is the real ROI lever
Containment rate is the percentage of calls fully handled by AI without human escalation. I have seen this range from 45% on poorly configured agents to 88% on well-trained ones with solid knowledge bases. Every escalation adds cost. Getting from 60% to 80% containment on 1,000 calls per month saves more money than switching platforms.
3. Integration depth changes the math
An AI agent that cannot book appointments is a sophisticated FAQ bot. The value of voice AI is in completing the task. A plumbing company I work with saw 34% of their after-hours AI calls convert to booked jobs because the agent could check availability and lock in times directly in ServiceTitan. Without that integration, conversion would have been near zero.
Real Deployment: What One Client Actually Pays
A property management firm I work with was spending $4,200/month on a full-time front desk person plus an answering service for after-hours overflow. Their specific problem: maintenance calls after 6pm went to voicemail, and callbacks happened the next morning. Tenants escalated. Owners complained.
We deployed a custom AI voice agent that routes inbound calls 24/7 based on emergency versus routine, books maintenance appointments directly into their property management software, escalates true emergencies (flooding, fire, lockouts) to the on-call team via SMS, and records every call with a post-call summary into the system.
Cost breakdown:
- Setup: $7,500 one-time
- Monthly infrastructure: $480
- They kept their front desk person for relationship work and complex inquiries
Total ongoing cost: $480/month versus the $4,200 they were spending before. ROI positive in month 2. After-hours maintenance bookings increased 67% in the first quarter because calls were answered instead of going to voicemail.
The solutions I build for clients include custom AI voice deployments integrated directly with existing CRM and scheduling tools
FAQ
How much does an AI voice agent cost per month for a small business?
For a small business under 500 calls per month, expect $99 to $500/month for a managed AI voice agent. Developer platforms like Retell AI or Vapi can run $50 to $150/month at low volumes if you have technical resources. Custom-built systems start at $3,000 to $7,000 in setup with $300 to $700/month ongoing, making them cost-effective only at higher volumes.
What is the true cost per minute for AI voice agents?
Advertised rates ($0.05 to $0.11/min) cover only the platform layer. True all-in costs run $0.12 to $0.35/min when you include STT processing, LLM inference, TTS voice synthesis, and telephony. Managed all-in-one platforms remove this complexity but typically land at $0.15 to $0.50/min effective cost. Human agents cost roughly $0.25 to $0.50/min in real talk-time labor.
Is AI voice agent pricing better than hiring a receptionist?
At scale and for routine calls, AI is 85 to 95% cheaper. A full-time receptionist costs $3,960 to $6,040/month fully loaded. An AI agent handling the same routine volume costs $199 to $1,500/month. The AI also covers nights, weekends, and holidays without overtime. The question is not whether AI is cheaper. The question is whether your call type suits AI handling.
What are the hidden costs of AI voice agents?
Five costs most vendors do not lead with: LLM token costs that spike on complex conversations; phone number rental fees at $2 to $5 per number per month; setup and configuration time (often 20 to 40 hours); ongoing prompt tuning as your business changes; and integration development if you need deep CRM or scheduling connectivity. Custom-built systems avoid some of these through upfront design.
Which AI voice agent platform is cheapest?
At low volumes under 300 min/month, self-serve Retell AI or Vapi with your own LLM keys often wins on raw cost. At medium volumes of 1,000 to 3,000 min/month, a managed all-in-one platform with predictable monthly pricing beats pay-per-minute stacking. At high volumes above 5,000 min/month, custom infrastructure on AWS Bedrock or similar typically has the lowest marginal cost.
Can AI voice agents replace receptionists completely?
For routine call handling, yes. I have deployed AI agents that handle 82 to 88% of inbound calls without human intervention. But businesses that thrive on relationship-based selling — luxury services, financial advisory, high-ticket B2B — still need humans for calls where relationships are built. The practical model for most businesses is AI for volume, humans for value.
How long does it take to deploy an AI voice agent?
A managed SaaS product can go live in 1 to 3 days for basic use cases. A properly configured agent with knowledge base training, call flow testing, and interruption tuning takes 1 to 2 weeks. A custom-built system with deep CRM integration typically takes 3 to 6 weeks from kickoff to production. Rushing deployment leads to low containment rates and high escalation costs that negate your savings.
What is a good containment rate for an AI voice agent?
Above 70% means AI handles most calls without escalation. Anything below 60% suggests knowledge gaps or poor call flow design. The best-configured agents I build hit 82 to 88% containment on routine inbound calls. Improving containment rate is usually more valuable than switching platforms — going from 65% to 80% on 1,000 calls per month saves hundreds of dollars monthly in escalation costs.
If You Have Decided You Need Custom AI Voice
Most businesses reading this post do not need a custom-built system. A managed AI voice agent will handle routine calls well at reasonable cost.
But if your call handling requires deep CRM integration, custom booking logic, multi-location routing, or you are taking 3,000+ calls per month, that is where a custom deployment makes financial sense. The setup cost pays itself back faster than most business owners expect.
At AgenticMode, I build voice systems that connect directly to your existing software, your existing phone numbers, and your specific business logic. I have done this across 40+ production deployments.
See how I approach AI voice deployments or take the AI readiness assessment to find out whether voice automation is the right next move for your business.
Citation Capsule: Human receptionist fully-loaded cost data: Mecha AI, February 2026. Vapi pricing components: Vapi.ai, 2026. Bland AI plan pricing: Bland AI Docs, 2026. 10-platform cost comparison: Famulor, April 2026. Retell AI cost breakdown: Retell AI, 2026. Answering service pricing ranges: Mecha AI, 2026.
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