NewMeet Ruth, Vendr's AI negotiator

$30,566

Avg Contract Value

99

Deals handled

14.32%

Avg Savings

$30,566

Avg Contract Value

99

Deals handled

14.32%

Avg Savings

How much does Front cost?

Median buyer pays
$30,566
per year
Based on data from 121 purchases, with buyers saving 14% on average.
Median: $30,566
$5,964
$148,500
LowHigh
See detailed pricing for your specific purchase

Introduction

Front is a customer operations platform that combines email, live chat, SMS, and other communication channels into a shared workspace designed for teams. Unlike traditional help desks or basic shared inboxes, Front positions itself as a collaborative hub where customer-facing teams can manage conversations, automate workflows, and maintain context across channels. Pricing is based on seat count, feature tier, and optional add-ons like AI capabilities and advanced analytics.


Evaluating Front or planning a purchase?

Vendr's pricing analysis agent uses anonymized contract data to show what similar companies typically pay and where negotiation leverage exists—whether you're estimating budget, comparing options, or reviewing a quote. Explore Front pricing with Vendr.


This guide combines Front's published pricing with Vendr's dataset and analysis to break down Front pricing in 2026, including:

  • Transparent pricing by tier and seat count
  • What buyers commonly pay across different deployment sizes
  • Hidden costs like onboarding, premium support, and AI add-ons
  • Negotiation levers that create savings opportunities
  • How Front compares to alternatives like Intercom, Zendesk, and Help Scout

Whether you're evaluating Front for the first time or preparing for renewal, this guide is designed to help you budget accurately and negotiate with clearer market context.

How much does Front cost in 2026?

Front uses a per-seat, per-month pricing model with three primary tiers: Starter, Growth, and Scale. Each tier unlocks progressively more automation, integrations, analytics, and collaboration features. Pricing is published on Front's website, but actual contract pricing often differs based on seat count, contract term, and negotiation.

Published list pricing (monthly billing):

  • Starter: $19 per seat per month
  • Growth: $59 per seat per month
  • Scale: $99 per seat per month
  • Premier: Custom pricing (enterprise tier with dedicated support and advanced features)

Annual prepay discount:

Front offers a discount for annual prepayment. Published annual pricing is typically 15–20% lower than month-to-month rates, though the exact discount varies by tier and deal size.

Volume and negotiation:

List pricing serves as a starting point. Based on Vendr transaction data, buyers with larger seat counts, multi-year commitments, or competitive alternatives in play often achieve pricing below published rates. Observed outcomes in Vendr's dataset show meaningful variation based on deal structure and timing.

Benchmarking context:

Vendr's pricing benchmarks reflect anonymized Front transactions across a range of company sizes and contract structures, showing percentile-based pricing and observed negotiation outcomes for similar requirements.

What does each Front tier cost?

How much does Starter cost?

Pricing Structure:

Front's Starter tier is designed for small teams beginning to centralize customer communication. Published list pricing is $19 per seat per month (monthly billing) or approximately $15–$16 per seat per month with annual prepayment.

Core features:

  • Shared inbox for email and other channels
  • Basic collaboration tools (comments, assignments, mentions)
  • Mobile app access
  • Limited integrations and automation

Observed Outcomes:

Vendr data shows that buyers with 5–15 seats on Starter often achieve pricing close to or slightly below published annual rates, particularly when committing to 12-month terms. Volume discounts are less common at this tier due to smaller contract values.

Benchmarking context:

For teams evaluating Starter, see what similar companies pay for Front to access percentile-based benchmarks and observed pricing for comparable seat counts and contract structures.

 

How much does Growth cost?

Pricing Structure:

Growth is Front's mid-tier plan, adding workflow automation, advanced analytics, and broader integration support. Published list pricing is $59 per seat per month (monthly billing) or approximately $47–$50 per seat per month with annual prepayment.

Core features:

  • Everything in Starter
  • Workflow automation and rules
  • Advanced analytics and reporting
  • Expanded integrations (Salesforce, HubSpot, Slack, etc.)
  • Custom fields and tags

Observed Outcomes:

Based on Vendr transaction data, Growth is the most commonly purchased tier. Buyers with 10–50 seats often achieve 10–20% below list pricing through annual commitments and volume-based negotiation. Larger deployments (50+ seats) frequently see deeper discounts, particularly when multi-year terms or competitive alternatives are in play.

Benchmarking context:

Growth pricing varies meaningfully by seat count and deal structure. Get your custom Front price estimate to see what similar companies pay for Growth across different deployment sizes and contract terms.

 

How much does Scale cost?

Pricing Structure:

Scale is Front's advanced tier, designed for larger teams requiring enterprise-grade features, SLAs, and support. Published list pricing is $99 per seat per month (monthly billing) or approximately $79–$84 per seat per month with annual prepayment.

Core features:

  • Everything in Growth
  • Advanced automation and AI-powered workflows
  • Custom reporting and dashboards
  • Priority support and SLA
  • Advanced security and compliance features
  • Dedicated customer success manager (for larger accounts)

Observed Outcomes:

In Vendr's dataset, Scale buyers typically have 50+ seats and negotiate multi-year contracts. Vendr data shows that buyers in this tier often achieve 15–30% below list pricing, with the strongest outcomes tied to competitive evaluation, multi-year commitments, and volume-based discounting.

Benchmarking context:

Scale pricing is highly negotiable. Explore Front Scale pricing with Vendr to access percentile-based benchmarks and observed negotiation outcomes for Scale deployments across different seat counts and contract structures.

 

How much does Premier cost?

Pricing Structure:

Premier is Front's enterprise tier with custom pricing. It includes everything in Scale plus dedicated support, advanced customization, and tailored onboarding. Pricing is quoted based on seat count, contract term, and specific requirements.

Core features:

  • Everything in Scale
  • Dedicated account team and customer success manager
  • Custom onboarding and training
  • Advanced security, compliance, and audit features
  • Tailored SLAs and support response times

Observed Outcomes:

Based on Vendr transaction data, Premier buyers typically have 100+ seats and negotiate multi-year contracts. Pricing varies widely based on deployment size, contract term, and negotiation leverage. Buyers often achieve pricing below the Scale list rate on a per-seat basis when committing to larger volumes and longer terms.

Benchmarking context:

Premier pricing is fully negotiable and varies significantly by deal structure. See what similar companies pay for Premier deployments across different seat counts and contract terms to assess whether a given quote aligns with recent market outcomes.

What actually drives Front costs?

Front's total cost is determined by several factors beyond the base per-seat pricing. Understanding these drivers helps buyers budget accurately and identify negotiation opportunities.

Seat count:

The number of licensed users is the primary cost driver. Front charges per seat, and volume-based discounting becomes more common above 25–50 seats. Buyers should carefully assess which team members require full licenses versus read-only or limited access.

Feature tier:

Moving from Starter to Growth or Scale unlocks automation, analytics, and integrations, but also increases per-seat pricing significantly. Buyers should evaluate whether advanced features justify the tier upgrade or whether a lower tier with selective add-ons is more cost-effective.

Contract term:

Annual prepayment typically yields 15–20% savings versus monthly billing. Based on Vendr data, multi-year contracts (2–3 years) often unlock additional discounts, particularly for Growth and Scale tiers. However, multi-year commitments reduce flexibility, so buyers should weigh savings against potential scope changes.

Add-ons and premium features:

Front offers optional add-ons that increase total cost:

  • AI capabilities: Front's AI features (e.g., automated tagging, suggested replies, sentiment analysis) are available as add-ons or included in higher tiers. Pricing varies by deployment size.
  • Premium support: Enhanced support packages with faster response times and dedicated resources are available for an additional fee.
  • Advanced analytics: Custom reporting and analytics beyond standard tier features may require add-on purchases.

Onboarding and implementation:

Front charges separately for onboarding, training, and implementation services. Costs vary based on deployment complexity, team size, and customization requirements. Buyers should clarify what's included in the base contract versus what requires additional fees.

Channel add-ons:

Front supports email, SMS, live chat, social media, and other channels. Some channels (e.g., SMS, WhatsApp) may incur additional per-message or per-channel fees beyond the base seat license.

Benchmarking context:

Vendr's pricing tool helps buyers model total cost across different seat counts, tiers, and add-on configurations, showing how each driver impacts overall spend.

What hidden costs and fees should you plan for?

Beyond base seat pricing, Front buyers often encounter additional costs that aren't immediately obvious during initial evaluation. Planning for these fees helps avoid budget surprises.

Onboarding and implementation fees:

Front typically charges for onboarding, training, and implementation services. Costs vary based on team size, complexity, and customization requirements. Buyers should request a detailed breakdown of what's included in the base contract versus what requires additional fees. In some cases, onboarding fees are negotiable or can be waived for larger contracts.

Premium support packages:

Standard support is included in all tiers, but enhanced support (faster response times, dedicated resources, tailored SLAs) requires an additional fee. Premium support costs are typically quoted as a percentage of the annual contract value (often 10–20%) or as a flat annual fee.

AI and automation add-ons:

Front's AI capabilities (automated tagging, suggested replies, sentiment analysis, etc.) are available as add-ons or included in higher tiers. Buyers on Growth or lower tiers who want AI features should clarify pricing upfront, as these add-ons can increase total cost by 15–30% depending on deployment size.

Channel-specific fees:

While email is included in all tiers, other channels (SMS, WhatsApp, voice) may incur per-message or per-channel fees. Buyers planning to use multiple channels should request a detailed cost breakdown to avoid unexpected usage charges.

Overage and true-up fees:

If seat count exceeds the contracted amount mid-term, Front may charge overage fees or require a contract amendment. Buyers should clarify how mid-term seat additions are priced and whether there's flexibility to adjust seat count without penalties.

Data migration and integration costs:

Migrating from another platform or integrating Front with existing tools (CRM, ticketing, analytics) may require professional services or third-party support. Buyers should budget for these costs separately, as they're typically not included in the base contract.

Annual price increases:

Based on Vendr transaction data, Front contracts often include annual price escalation clauses (typically 3–7% per year). Buyers should review renewal terms carefully and negotiate caps on annual increases, particularly for multi-year contracts.

Benchmarking context:

Vendr's pricing analysis includes observed total cost of ownership data, helping buyers understand how add-ons, support, and hidden fees impact overall spend for similar deployments.

What do companies typically pay for Front?

Actual Front pricing varies based on seat count, tier, contract term, and negotiation. While Front publishes list pricing, observed outcomes in Vendr's dataset show meaningful variation based on deal structure and leverage.

Small teams (5–25 seats):

Buyers in this range typically purchase Starter or Growth. Vendr data shows that observed outcomes often align closely with published annual rates, with limited volume-based discounting due to smaller contract values. Buyers who commit to annual prepayment and evaluate alternatives often achieve pricing at or slightly below list.

Mid-market teams (25–100 seats):

This segment most commonly purchases Growth or Scale. Based on Vendr transaction data, buyers in this range often achieve below-list pricing through annual or multi-year commitments, volume-based negotiation, and competitive evaluation. Stronger outcomes are associated with multi-year terms and active consideration of alternatives like Intercom or Zendesk.

Enterprise teams (100+ seats):

Larger deployments typically purchase Scale or Premier with custom pricing. Vendr data shows that buyers in this range often achieve below published Scale list pricing, with the strongest outcomes tied to multi-year contracts, competitive alternatives, and volume-based discounting. Premier pricing varies widely and is fully negotiable.

Benchmarking context:

These ranges are directional. Vendr's benchmarking tool provides percentile-based pricing for specific seat counts, tiers, and contract structures, helping buyers assess whether a given quote aligns with recent market outcomes.

How do you negotiate Front pricing?

Front pricing is negotiable, particularly for larger deployments, multi-year contracts, and buyers with competitive alternatives in play. The strategies below are based on anonymized Front deals in Vendr's dataset and reflect tactics that have created meaningful savings opportunities.

1. How do you engage early and establish a timeline?

Front's sales team is more flexible when buyers engage early and establish a clear decision timeline. Buyers who rush into contracts or negotiate at the last minute often achieve weaker outcomes. Starting the conversation 60–90 days before a desired start date creates space for competitive evaluation and negotiation.

Timing leverage:

Front's fiscal year ends in December, and quarter-end periods (March, June, September, December) often create urgency for sales teams to close deals. Based on Vendr data, buyers who align their decision timeline with these periods may see more aggressive pricing and concessions.


 

2. How do you anchor to budget constraints?

Rather than asking "what's your best price?", buyers who anchor to a specific budget or internal approval threshold often achieve better outcomes. Framing the conversation around budget constraints (e.g., "We have $X approved for this category") shifts the negotiation dynamic and encourages Front to work within that range.


 

3. How do you leverage competitive alternatives?

Front competes directly with Intercom, Zendesk, Help Scout, and other shared inbox and customer operations platforms. Buyers who actively evaluate alternatives and share that context during negotiation often achieve stronger pricing. Vendr data shows that buyers who mention competitive evaluation or share competing quotes frequently see additional discounting beyond initial offers.

Competitive benchmarks:

Compare Front pricing to alternatives to see how Front compares to other platforms for similar requirements, helping buyers assess whether a given quote is competitive.


 

4. How do you negotiate multi-year terms strategically?

Multi-year contracts (2–3 years) often unlock additional discounting, but they also reduce flexibility. Buyers should negotiate multi-year pricing only after confirming that Front meets their requirements and that the pricing justifies the commitment. In Vendr's dataset, multi-year deals often achieve lower per-seat pricing than annual contracts, but buyers should also negotiate caps on annual price increases and flexibility to adjust seat count mid-term.


 

5. How do you clarify and negotiate add-on pricing upfront?

AI features, premium support, onboarding, and channel add-ons can significantly increase total cost. Buyers should request detailed pricing for all add-ons upfront and negotiate these separately. In some cases, onboarding fees can be waived or reduced, and premium support can be bundled at a discount for larger contracts.


 

6. How do you push back on annual price escalation clauses?

Based on Vendr transaction data, Front contracts often include annual price increase clauses (typically 3–7% per year). Buyers should negotiate caps on annual increases or remove escalation clauses entirely, particularly for multi-year contracts. Vendr data shows that buyers who push back on escalation clauses often achieve caps at 3–5% or eliminate them altogether.


 

7. How do you request flexibility for seat count adjustments?

Buyers should negotiate flexibility to adjust seat count mid-term without penalties or overage fees. This is particularly important for growing teams or seasonal fluctuations. Front is often willing to include quarterly or semi-annual true-up provisions that allow seat count adjustments without triggering overage charges.


Negotiation Intelligence

These insights are based on anonymized Front deals in Vendr's dataset across a wide range of company sizes and contract structures. Buyers can explore these insights directly using Vendr's free pricing and negotiation tools:

How does Front compare to competitors?

Front competes with several shared inbox, help desk, and customer operations platforms. The comparisons below focus on pricing rather than features, helping buyers understand how Front's cost structure compares to alternatives.

Front vs. Intercom

Pricing comparison

Pricing componentFrontIntercom
Entry-level list pricing$19/seat/month (Starter)$39/seat/month (Starter)
Mid-tier list pricing$59/seat/month (Growth)$99/seat/month (Pro)
Advanced tier list pricing$99/seat/month (Scale)Custom (Advanced)
Contract minimumVaries by tierVaries by tier
Estimated total (50 seats, annual)Often below list pricingOften below list pricing

Pricing notes

  • Front's entry-level pricing is significantly lower than Intercom's, making it more accessible for smaller teams or budget-conscious buyers.
  • Intercom's mid-tier and advanced pricing is higher than Front's, but Intercom includes more native marketing automation and customer engagement features.
  • Based on Vendr transaction data, both vendors commonly negotiate below list pricing for annual or multi-year contracts. In observed Vendr transactions, both vendors show meaningful discounting for larger seat counts and competitive evaluation.
  • Intercom's pricing model includes seat-based and usage-based components (e.g., per-contact or per-conversation fees), which can increase total cost for high-volume use cases. Front's pricing is primarily seat-based, making it more predictable for teams with high message volumes.

Benchmarking context:

Compare Front and Intercom pricing to see observed pricing for both platforms across different seat counts and contract structures, helping buyers assess which platform offers better value for their specific requirements.

 

Front vs. Zendesk

Pricing comparison

Pricing componentFrontZendesk
Entry-level list pricing$19/seat/month (Starter)$19/agent/month (Suite Team)
Mid-tier list pricing$59/seat/month (Growth)$55/agent/month (Suite Growth)
Advanced tier list pricing$99/seat/month (Scale)$115/agent/month (Suite Professional)
Contract minimumVaries by tierVaries by tier
Estimated total (50 seats, annual)Often below list pricingOften below list pricing

Pricing notes

  • Front and Zendesk have similar entry-level pricing, but Zendesk's mid-tier and advanced pricing is slightly lower than Front's on a per-seat basis.
  • Zendesk's Suite bundles include ticketing, live chat, knowledge base, and phone support, while Front focuses on shared inbox and collaboration. Buyers should compare total cost based on which features they actually need.
  • Based on Vendr data, both vendors negotiate below list pricing for annual or multi-year contracts. Vendr data shows discounting is common for both, with stronger outcomes tied to competitive evaluation and multi-year commitments.
  • Zendesk's pricing model includes add-ons for advanced features (e.g., AI, analytics, integrations), which can increase total cost. Front's add-on pricing is similarly structured.

Benchmarking context:

Compare Front and Zendesk pricing to see observed pricing for both platforms across different deployment sizes and contract structures, helping buyers assess which platform offers better value.

 

Front vs. Help Scout

Pricing comparison

Pricing componentFrontHelp Scout
Entry-level list pricing$19/seat/month (Starter)$20/user/month (Standard)
Mid-tier list pricing$59/seat/month (Growth)$40/user/month (Plus)
Advanced tier list pricing$99/seat/month (Scale)$65/user/month (Pro)
Contract minimumVaries by tierVaries by tier
Estimated total (50 seats, annual)Often below list pricingOften close to list pricing

Pricing notes

  • Help Scout's mid-tier and advanced pricing is significantly lower than Front's, making it a more cost-effective option for teams prioritizing simplicity and lower total cost.
  • Front offers more advanced automation, integrations, and collaboration features than Help Scout, which may justify the higher pricing for teams with complex workflows.
  • Based on Vendr data, Help Scout's pricing is less negotiable than Front's, particularly for smaller deployments. Vendr data shows that Front buyers often achieve deeper discounts through competitive evaluation and multi-year commitments.
  • Help Scout includes onboarding and training in most contracts, while Front typically charges separately for these services.

Benchmarking context:

Compare Front and Help Scout pricing to see observed pricing for both platforms across different seat counts and contract structures, helping buyers assess which platform offers better value for their specific requirements.

Front pricing FAQs

Finance & Procurement FAQs

What discounts are available for Front?

Front offers several discount opportunities, though they're not always advertised upfront. Annual prepayment typically yields 15–20% savings versus monthly billing. Multi-year contracts (2–3 years) often unlock additional discounting, particularly for Growth and Scale tiers.

Based on anonymized Front transactions in Vendr's platform over the past 12 months:

  • Buyers with 25–50 seats often achieved below-list pricing through annual commitments and volume-based negotiation.
  • Buyers with 50+ seats frequently achieved meaningfully lower pricing, with the strongest outcomes tied to multi-year terms and competitive evaluation.
  • Multi-year contracts (2–3 years) often yielded lower per-seat pricing than annual contracts, though buyers should also negotiate caps on annual price increases.

Negotiation guidance:

Get supplier-specific negotiation playbooks for Front deals, including timing strategies and observed discount ranges across different seat counts and contract structures.


How much can I negotiate off Front's list price?

Front's list pricing serves as a starting point, and actual contract pricing often differs based on seat count, contract term, and negotiation leverage. The amount of negotiation flexibility depends on deal size, timing, and competitive context.

Based on Front transactions in Vendr's database over the past 12 months:

  • Small teams (5–25 seats) typically achieved pricing close to or slightly below published annual rates, with limited volume-based discounting due to smaller contract values.
  • Mid-market teams (25–100 seats) often achieved below-list pricing through annual or multi-year commitments and competitive evaluation.
  • Enterprise teams (100+ seats) often achieved meaningfully lower pricing than published Scale list pricing, with the strongest outcomes tied to multi-year contracts and competitive alternatives.

Vendr data shows that buyers who actively evaluate alternatives (Intercom, Zendesk, Help Scout) and share that context during negotiation often see additional discounting beyond initial offers.

Benchmarking context:

See what similar companies pay for Front to access percentile-based pricing for specific seat counts, tiers, and contract structures, helping buyers assess whether a given quote aligns with recent market outcomes.


What are typical Front contract terms?

Front contracts are typically structured as 12-month or multi-year agreements with annual or upfront payment. Key terms to review include:

  • Contract length: 12 months is standard, but 24–36 month contracts often unlock additional discounting.
  • Payment terms: Annual prepayment is standard, though some buyers negotiate quarterly or semi-annual payment schedules.
  • Auto-renewal clauses: Front contracts often auto-renew unless canceled 30–60 days before expiration. Buyers should review renewal terms carefully and negotiate longer notice periods if needed.
  • Annual price escalation: Contracts often include annual price increase clauses (typically 3–7% per year). Buyers should negotiate caps on annual increases or remove escalation clauses entirely.
  • Seat count flexibility: Buyers should negotiate flexibility to adjust seat count mid-term without penalties or overage fees.

Negotiation guidance:

Get contract analysis and negotiation support to review Front contracts and identify negotiation opportunities around terms, pricing, and flexibility.


Are there hidden costs with Front?

Beyond base seat pricing, Front buyers often encounter additional costs that aren't immediately obvious during initial evaluation. Common hidden costs include:

  • Onboarding and implementation fees: Front typically charges separately for onboarding, training, and implementation. Costs vary based on team size and complexity.
  • Premium support packages: Enhanced support (faster response times, dedicated resources) requires an additional fee, often 10–20% of annual contract value.
  • AI and automation add-ons: AI features (automated tagging, suggested replies, sentiment analysis) are available as add-ons or included in higher tiers. Add-on pricing can increase total cost by 15–30%.
  • Channel-specific fees: SMS, WhatsApp, and other channels may incur per-message or per-channel fees beyond the base seat license.
  • Annual price increases: Contracts often include annual price escalation clauses (typically 3–7% per year).

Based on Vendr transaction data, buyers who clarify all add-on and service fees upfront and negotiate these separately often achieve lower total cost of ownership than buyers who accept initial quotes without detailed breakdowns.

Benchmarking context:

Explore total cost analysis to see observed add-on and service fees, helping buyers understand how hidden costs impact overall spend for similar deployments.


When is the best time to negotiate Front pricing?

Timing significantly impacts negotiation outcomes. Front's fiscal year ends in December, and quarter-end periods (March, June, September, December) often create urgency for sales teams to close deals.

Based on Vendr transaction data:

  • Buyers who aligned their decision timeline with quarter-end or year-end periods often achieved stronger pricing than buyers who negotiated mid-quarter.
  • Buyers who engaged 60–90 days before a desired start date created space for competitive evaluation and negotiation, often achieving better outcomes than buyers who rushed into contracts.
  • Renewal negotiations are most effective when started 90–120 days before expiration, giving buyers time to evaluate alternatives and negotiate without time pressure.

Negotiation guidance:

Get timing strategies and supplier-specific insights for Front deals, helping buyers maximize leverage based on their decision timeline.


How does Front pricing compare to competitors?

Front's pricing is competitive with other shared inbox and customer operations platforms, but total cost varies based on seat count, tier, and add-ons. Key comparisons:

  • Front vs. Intercom: Front's entry-level pricing is significantly lower than Intercom's, but Intercom includes more native marketing automation features. Mid-tier and advanced pricing is higher for Intercom.
  • Front vs. Zendesk: Front and Zendesk have similar entry-level pricing, but Zendesk's mid-tier and advanced pricing is slightly lower on a per-seat basis. Zendesk's Suite bundles include more features (ticketing, phone support, knowledge base).
  • Front vs. Help Scout: Help Scout's mid-tier and advanced pricing is significantly lower than Front's, making it more cost-effective for teams prioritizing simplicity and lower total cost.

Based on anonymized transactions in Vendr's platform, buyers who actively evaluate alternatives and share competitive context during negotiation often achieve additional discounting beyond initial offers.

Competitive benchmarks:

Compare Front to alternatives to see observed pricing for Front and competing platforms across different seat counts and contract structures, helping buyers assess which platform offers better value for their specific requirements.


Product FAQs

What's the difference between Front's Starter, Growth, and Scale tiers?

Front's tiers unlock progressively more automation, integrations, analytics, and collaboration features:

  • Starter ($19/seat/month): Shared inbox, basic collaboration tools, mobile app, limited integrations. Designed for small teams centralizing customer communication.
  • Growth ($59/seat/month): Adds workflow automation, advanced analytics, expanded integrations (Salesforce, HubSpot, Slack), custom fields and tags. Most commonly purchased tier.
  • Scale ($99/seat/month): Adds advanced automation, AI-powered workflows, custom reporting, priority support, SLA, advanced security and compliance features. Designed for larger teams requiring enterprise-grade capabilities.
  • Premier (custom pricing): Everything in Scale plus dedicated account team, custom onboarding, tailored SLAs, advanced security and compliance features.

Buyers should evaluate whether advanced features justify the tier upgrade or whether a lower tier with selective add-ons is more cost-effective.


What channels does Front support?

Front supports email, live chat, SMS, social media (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram), WhatsApp, and custom channels via API. Email is included in all tiers. Some channels (SMS, WhatsApp) may incur additional per-message or per-channel fees beyond the base seat license. Buyers planning to use multiple channels should request a detailed cost breakdown upfront.


Does Front offer AI features?

Yes. Front offers AI capabilities including automated tagging, suggested replies, sentiment analysis, and workflow automation. AI features are available as add-ons or included in higher tiers (Scale and Premier). Buyers on Growth or lower tiers who want AI features should clarify pricing upfront, as these add-ons can increase total cost by 15–30% depending on deployment size.


Can I integrate Front with my CRM or other tools?

Yes. Front integrates with Salesforce, HubSpot, Slack, Microsoft Teams, Asana, Jira, and many other tools. Integration availability varies by tier. Growth and higher tiers include expanded integration support. Buyers should confirm that required integrations are available in their chosen tier and clarify whether any integrations require additional fees or professional services.

Summary Takeaways: Front Pricing in 2026

Based on analysis of anonymized Front deals in Vendr's dataset, Front pricing is negotiable, particularly for larger deployments, multi-year contracts, and buyers with competitive alternatives in play.

Key takeaways:

  • Front's published list pricing serves as a starting point, but actual contract pricing often differs based on seat count, contract term, and negotiation leverage.
  • Buyers with larger seat counts, multi-year commitments, or competitive alternatives in play often achieve pricing below published rates.
  • Hidden costs (onboarding, premium support, AI add-ons, channel fees, annual price increases) can significantly impact total cost of ownership.
  • Timing matters: aligning decision timelines with quarter-end or year-end periods often creates stronger negotiation leverage.
  • Competitive evaluation (Intercom, Zendesk, Help Scout) frequently unlocks additional discounting beyond initial offers.

Regardless of platform choice, the most important step is clearly defining requirements, understanding total cost drivers, and benchmarking pricing against comparable deals before committing.

 

Explore Front pricing with Vendr to access percentile-based benchmarks, competitive comparisons, and observed negotiation patterns, helping buyers assess how a given Front quote compares to recent market outcomes for similar scope.

 


This guide is updated regularly to reflect recent Front pricing and negotiation trends. Consider revisiting it ahead of any new purchase or renewal to account for changing market conditions. Last updated: February 2026.