Part of the Signal Ledger site family. Structured pricing intelligence for busy buyers.

Vendor Pricing

ActiveCampaign

ActiveCampaign makes more sense once you read it as an automation-first platform with CRM attached, not as a clean flat-price CRM for a growing team.

CRM + marketing automation 2 official sources Checked 2026-04-10T00:00:00+00:00

Pricing posture

No free plan

Automation-first contact-based platform used by SMB marketing teams that also need CRM workflows.

Who, How, and Why

This page should make it obvious who is responsible for it, how the conclusion was built, and why it exists.

Who

CRM Pricing Ledger Editorial Review

Source-backed pricing review

How

  • 2 official sources support this vendor page.
  • This page keeps the vendor's pricing language visible, then maps it into a smaller normalized field set.
  • Low-confidence mappings stay visible for review instead of silently deciding rankings.

Why

Use this page to read ActiveCampaign pricing more clearly than the official pricing stack alone makes possible.

Plan tiers

This is the fastest structured view of each published pricing tier.

Tier Monthly Annual Seat model Included seats Contact limit Email sends Automation
Starter 15 9 included 1 1000 10000 5
Plus 49 36 included 1 1000 12000 Not stated
Professional 79 66 included 3 1000 15000 Not stated

Pricing signals

These notes capture where the pricing page is unusually clear, awkward, or likely to surprise a buyer.

Best for

  • Growth teams comparing CRM and automation in one budget
  • Teams that can tolerate contact-based pricing complexity

Watch for

  • Pricing is strongly tied to contact bands, which makes quick comparisons harder than flat per-seat products.
  • Included user counts change by plan, so cheap entry pricing can hide team growth costs.

Where this gets expensive

Use this section before trusting the entry price, because this is usually where the real budget pressure starts to show up.

Cost trigger

The cost pressure is tied more to usage than seats here, so the buyer should watch what happens once contact volume pushes past the 1,000-contact entry band.

Upgrade trigger

Upgrade pressure shows up when more teammates need access, because included-user counts change across plans and the cheap starting tier stops reflecting the real team shape.

What to verify before paying

These are the checks worth making before a team treats the headline plan price as the real answer.

  • Verify what is truly included before assuming the entry plan covers the whole team without extra user or usage costs.
  • Check how contact thresholds change the real bill, because contact-based pricing is where cheap-looking plans usually get harder to defend.
  • Verify which automation, reporting, or workflow features only unlock on the next tier before treating the entry plan as the real answer.

Normalized pricing map

Use this map when you want to see how the vendor's own wording lines up with the fields used across the rest of the site.

monthly_price: Price billed monthly (high)

annual_price: Price billed annually (high)

seat_model: Per user (high)

included_seats: Included users (high)

contact_limit: Contacts (high)

email_send_limit: Emails per month (high)

automation_limit: Automation actions (high)

enterprise_contact_sales_only: Contact sales / custom pricing (medium)

Sources

Use these links when you want to verify the pricing language against the official pages directly.

Keep exploring

These related pages help move from one vendor page into a decision or an explanation.