Typeform Pricing in 2026: What Every Tier Costs and the Response Cap That Decides Your Plan
Typeform is priced around one number: how many responses your forms collect each month. The paid tiers are Basic at $25 per month, Plus at $50 per month, and Business at $83 per month — all billed annually — and each one is really a response bucket (100, 1,000, and 10,000 responses/month respectively). Above that sits Growth (a B2B lead-gen SKU at $266/month annual) and a custom-quoted Enterprise plan. The Free plan is still there, but in February 2026 Typeform cut it to 10 responses a month.
So the price you actually pay isn’t set by the features you want — it’s set by how much traffic your forms get. Below is the full breakdown, including the response-cap mechanics the pricing page doesn’t spell out. Prices change, so confirm the current numbers on Typeform’s pricing page before you buy.
Typeform plans at a glance
| Plan | Annual (per mo) | Monthly (per mo) | Responses/mo | Users |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | $0 | 10 | 1 |
| Basic | $25 | $39 | 100 | 1 |
| Plus | $50 | $79 | 1,000 | 3 |
| Business | $83 | $129 | 10,000 | 5 |
| Growth | $266 | $379 | 10,000 + enrichment | 5+ |
| Enterprise | Custom | Annual only | Unlimited | Custom |
The advertised $25, $50, and $83 are the annual-billed rates. Pay month-to-month and it’s $39, $79, and $129 — roughly 35–55% more per month for the flexibility.
How response-based billing works
The thing to understand before you pick a plan: Typeform meters responses, not forms. You can build unlimited typeforms on a paid plan, but every submission across all of them draws down one shared monthly pool. A single form that goes mildly viral can burn through your entire allowance in a day.
A “response” is a completed submission — someone who reaches the end of your form and hits submit. Partial entries that people abandon partway don’t count against the cap, which is the one merciful part of the model.
What happens at the cap is the part that catches people out. The monthly response limit is a hard ceiling. When you hit it, the form stops collecting: additional visitors are turned away and their answers aren’t recorded. There’s no automatic overage billing and no “pay for 50 more” button — the only way to keep collecting is to upgrade to a higher tier, which takes effect immediately. The counter resets at the start of your next billing month. So the failure mode isn’t a surprise invoice; it’s silent lost data, right when a form is getting the most attention.
That mechanic is why teams routinely sit on Business (10,000 responses) when they only use a fraction of the features — they’re buying headroom so a busy month doesn’t shut the form off.
Free plan
Typeform’s Free plan is where the 2026 story is. It used to include 100 responses a month; in February 2026 Typeform cut that by 90%, to 10 responses per month, and forms on the free tier are also capped at a small number of questions each. Ten responses is a demo, not a workflow — enough to see what a submission looks like in your dashboard, not enough to run an actual intake form, survey, or lead capture.
The free tier also excludes the features people associate with Typeform: no AI-powered form creation, no conditional logic, no webhooks or integrations, and Typeform branding stays on every form. It’s genuinely free forever, but it’s positioned as a trial surface rather than a usable plan. If a 10-response ceiling sounds familiar, it’s the same trap Google Forms users hit for different reasons — see Google Forms response limits.
Basic plan
Basic is $25 per seat per month billed annually, or $39 month-to-month. It’s a single user and 100 responses a month, and it’s the tier where Typeform starts behaving like Typeform: AI-powered form creation, conditional logic, webhooks, and integrations all switch on here.
The constraint is the 100-response cap. For a low-volume contact form or an occasional survey that’s fine, but 100 completed submissions is easy to blow past if a form gets shared anywhere with reach. Basic is also strictly one user, so it’s a solo plan.
Plus plan
Plus is $50 per seat per month billed annually, or $79 monthly. It raises the pool tenfold to 1,000 responses a month and allows up to 3 users. The headline additions are cosmetic-but-important: you can remove Typeform’s branding and use a custom subdomain, so forms look like they belong to you rather than to Typeform.
Plus is the common “small business” landing spot — enough responses for steady traffic, enough seats for a couple of teammates, and no Typeform logo on customer-facing forms.
Business plan
Business is $83 per seat per month billed annually, or $129 monthly. It brings the response pool to 10,000 a month and up to 5 users, and it’s the tier where the analytics live: drop-off rates, conversion tracking, and priority support. If you care why people abandon a form partway — which question loses them — that reporting is Business-only.
Growth and Enterprise
Above Business, the pricing changes character. Growth (Typeform’s B2B lead-gen SKU) starts around $266 per month billed annually ($379 monthly) and layers on lead enrichment — roughly 1,500 enriched contacts a month — plus a Salesforce integration and SMS follow-ups on top of the 10,000-response pool. Enrichment is metered separately from responses, so it’s its own capacity line to watch.
Enterprise is custom-quoted and billed annually only. It’s the tier for unlimited responses, SSO/SAML, HIPAA compliance, custom domains, and dedicated account management — aimed at organizations with procurement and compliance requirements rather than teams shopping by price.
Hidden costs the pricing page glosses over
The response cap is the real price. You don’t choose a tier by feature — you choose it by traffic, and you almost always over-buy to avoid the shut-off. A team that needs Plus’s features but expects spiky traffic ends up on Business purely for the 10,000-response headroom. You’re paying for a buffer against your own success.
Per-seat, with hard user caps. Basic is one user, Plus is three, Business is five. These aren’t soft limits you can nudge — needing a sixth collaborator on Business pushes you toward a higher tier or Enterprise, regardless of how many responses you use.
Analytics are locked to Business. Drop-off and conversion insights — arguably the whole point of an interactive form — don’t appear until the $83/month Business tier. On Basic or Plus you can collect responses but you can’t see where the form is leaking.
Annual vs monthly is a steep gap. The prices Typeform advertises are annual-billed. Month-to-month runs about 35–55% higher ($39 vs $25 on Basic, $129 vs $83 on Business), and Enterprise doesn’t offer monthly at all.
Enrichment is a separate meter. On Growth, the ~1,500 enriched contacts a month are their own allowance, distinct from responses. Heavy lead-gen use can exhaust enrichment while responses are still plentiful, or vice versa — two caps to track instead of one.
Video is a different product. If you came for Typeform’s video-question experience, note that VideoAsk is a separate product with its own pricing (starting around $24/month, with its own free tier) — it’s not bundled into the standard Basic/Plus/Business plans.
Is Typeform free?
Technically yes; practically, not for real work anymore. The Free plan exists and costs nothing, but after the February 2026 cut it collects only 10 responses a month, limits how many questions a form can have, and excludes AI creation, logic, integrations, and branding removal. That’s enough to demo the product and see a submission land in your dashboard — it is not enough to run an intake form, survey, or lead capture that any volume of people will actually fill out. The moment you need more than 10 monthly responses, you’re on Basic ($25/mo annually) or higher.
When Typeform isn’t worth it
Typeform’s conversational forms are genuinely nice, but the response-based model means you can end up paying $83 a month for 10,000-response headroom you rarely touch, just to avoid the cap shutting a form off. If your forms are low-volume, or the polished experience matters less than not metering every submission, it’s worth pricing out lighter options — many competitors offer far more generous (or unlimited) free response tiers. The full field is in our Typeform alternatives roundup.
FAQ
Is Typeform free? Yes, there’s a free-forever plan, but as of February 2026 it collects only 10 responses per month and excludes AI creation, logic, integrations, and branding removal. It’s a demo tier, not a usable one for real form volume.
What happens when I hit my Typeform response limit? The form stops collecting. Once you reach your plan’s monthly response cap, additional visitors are turned away and their answers aren’t recorded — there’s no automatic overage billing. You either upgrade to a higher tier (which takes effect immediately) or wait for the counter to reset at the start of your next billing month.
How much is Typeform per month? Billed annually, Basic is $25/month (100 responses), Plus is $50/month (1,000 responses), and Business is $83/month (10,000 responses). Month-to-month those rise to $39, $79, and $129. Growth starts around $266/month annually, and Enterprise is custom.
Does a response mean every visitor? No — a response is a completed submission, someone who finishes the form and hits submit. People who start and abandon it don’t count against your monthly cap.
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