Pricing · Chatbots
Hidden Costs of AI Chatbots (and How to Avoid Them)
The advertised price of a chatbot is rarely the price you pay. The gap hides in setup fees, usage meters, paid add-ons, and the quiet cost of not owning what you bought. Here's where chatbot bills actually swell — and the questions that keep yours flat.
The problem: the sticker price is the opening bid
Chatbot pricing pages are built around a low headline number. Then reality arrives: an onboarding fee to get started, a conversation cap that your busiest month blows through, a "premium integration" charge to connect the calendar you already use, and a retraining fee every time your prices change. None of it is illegal — it's just not on the sticker.
For a small business, the most expensive surprise is usually lock-in: the chatbot lives on the provider's platform, so the day you stop paying is the day it stops existing. Years of paying, nothing owned.
The hidden costs to watch for
- Setup and onboarding fees — charged before the bot has answered a single question.
- Usage meters — per-conversation or per-message overages that punish you for being busy.
- Per-seat pricing — paying per team member for a bot your customers talk to.
- Paid integrations — calendar booking or lead export sold as add-ons instead of basics.
- Retraining charges — a fee every time your services, prices, or policies change.
- Lock-in — no export, no ownership; cancel and the chatbot vanishes.
What a straight-dealing setup sounds like
Owner: "What happens when I update my prices?"
Botlery: "Send the new prices to hello@botlery.com and the bot gets updated — that's part of the deal, not an add-on."
Owner: "And if I take the $200 one-time option and we part ways?"
Botlery: "It's built on your own accounts, so nothing changes. It's yours. It keeps working."
See the whole price before you pay any of it
Botlery builds a working demo trained on your business first — free. Test it live, then decide.
Get mine built freeHow to avoid every one of these costs
- Ask if the price is flat. Botlery's is: $10/month (or $100/year — two months free) fully managed, or $200 one-time. No meters, no seats.
- Ask what's included. With Botlery: training on your real business data, lead capture to a Google Sheet with instant owner emails, calendar booking, multilingual answers, and on-topic guardrails — all standard.
- Ask who owns it. The $200 build lives on your own accounts. It's yours forever, whatever happens.
- Ask to try before paying. Botlery builds a free working demo first — no deposit, no card, no setup fee.
What it costs — with nothing hidden
Botlery's AI chatbot is $10/month (or $100/year — two months free) fully managed, or $200 one-time on your own accounts. The AI voice agent (talks with visitors on your site) and AI phone agent (answers your business line — number set up for you) are each $300 one-time. That's the entire price list. For context against agencies charging $2,000–$7,000 plus $300+/month, see the full AI receptionist cost breakdown or the chatbot pricing explainer.
The bottom line
A chatbot should cost what the pricing page says — nothing more, ever. If a provider needs a meter, a seat count, and an onboarding fee to serve a local business, the complexity is the product. Botlery keeps it flat, keeps it transparent, and proves it with a free demo (there's a live one running right now for Ric's Repairs, a real handyman business).
Flat price. Free demo. No asterisks.
Tell us about your business and we'll build your chatbot free. Pay only when you're happy.
Get mine built free