ZoomInfo pricing in 2026 starts around $15,000 per year for a small Sales OS seat pack and scales past $150,000 per year for full Sales + Marketing + Operations deployments with Copilot, Engage, and Intent. There is no published price card, no self-serve free plan, and no single "list price" — every contract is built from three levers (users, credits, and modules) and is negotiable, especially on multi-year terms.
If you've ever asked a ZoomInfo rep "how much does this cost?" and gotten a 45-minute discovery call instead of a number, you're not alone. ZoomInfo's pricing model is intentionally consultative — which is great for the rep and frustrating for the buyer comparing it against Apollo, Cognism, LinkedIn Sales Navigator, Lusha, or Clearbit. The good news: once you understand the underlying mechanics, you can model your own quote, spot what's overpriced, and walk into procurement with leverage.
This guide is written from the perspective of a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner — Quantum Business Solutions (QBS). We sit on the buyer side of the table with our clients every week, reviewing quotes, renegotiating renewals, and implementing the platform inside HubSpot and Salesforce. What follows is the same framework we use in those conversations: actual price ranges by company size, the modules that move the needle (and the ones that don't), the contract gotchas that will cost you 15–30% if you don't catch them, and an honest ROI model you can defend to your CFO.
If you're renewing, evaluating, or stuck in a "send me your best price" stalemate with your rep, this is the post to bookmark. By the end you'll know exactly what your quote should look like — and what to push back on before you sign.
ZoomInfo costs between roughly $15,000 and $150,000+ per year in 2026, with most B2B mid-market customers landing in the $40,000–$80,000 annual range. The exact number is driven by three multiplicative levers — named users, credit pool size, and the bundle of modules attached — and is delivered as a 1-year or 3-year contract with annual or quarterly billing. There is no monthly self-serve option and no free tier beyond the Community Edition trial.
That range is wide on purpose. ZoomInfo doesn't sell a "plan" the way Salesforce sells Sales Cloud at a per-user list price. They sell an outcome bundle, and the line items underneath shift based on what you say you need during discovery. Two companies of the same size can pay very different numbers depending on how the deal is scoped — which is exactly why understanding the cost model matters more than chasing a single number.
Every ZoomInfo quote is built from three components. If you can model these three, you can model any quote:
ZoomInfo doesn't publish prices for the same reason most enterprise data vendors don't: their value scales with how much of your GTM motion runs through it. A 10-person outbound team using ZoomInfo for prospect search is a fundamentally different deal from a 200-person revenue org running enrichment, intent routing, and AI-driven cadences across HubSpot and Salesforce. List pricing would either underprice the second deal or scare off the first.
What this means for you as a buyer: your quote is built around your stated use case, not a menu. If you walk into discovery saying "we want to do account-based outbound with intent signals routed to reps via Slack and HubSpot workflows," you'll get a different quote than if you say "we need a contact database." Both can be true for the same company — the framing changes the price by tens of thousands.
Standard ZoomInfo contracts are 12 months, paid annually upfront, with a 7% auto-renewal escalator unless you negotiate it out. Multi-year deals (24 or 36 months) typically come with 10–20% discounts off Year 1 list and lock pricing — but they also lock you in, which matters if your headcount or strategy might shift. Quarterly billing is available on most deals over $50K but rarely volunteered.
For a deeper breakdown of platform capabilities and how pricing maps to outcomes, see our 2026 Ultimate Guide to ZoomInfo for Sales and Marketing.
ZoomInfo's product portfolio is organized into four "OS" product lines, each priced separately and each with its own seat type, credit pool, and module set. Most buyers start with one and expand. Knowing which OS you actually need — versus which one your rep wants to sell you — is the single biggest budget decision in a ZoomInfo evaluation.
The flagship product and what most people mean when they say "ZoomInfo." Sales OS is built for outbound sellers, SDRs, AEs, and account managers. It includes contact and company search, the ZoomInfo browser extension, basic CRM integration, and a baseline credit pool. Sales OS is where 70% of ZoomInfo spend lives.
Typical Sales OS Professional+ pricing in 2026: $10,000–$30,000 for 3–5 seats with a starter credit pool, scaling to $60,000–$120,000 for 25-seat teams with Advanced+ features (Scoops, org charts, news signals). Copilot, Engage, and Intent are sold as add-ons on top of Sales OS, not bundled by default in most tiers.
Built for demand gen and ABM teams. Includes the targeting and segmentation engine, programmatic display advertising buys (with media spend separate), website visitor identification (WebSights), and form enrichment. Marketing OS uses a different credit model weighted toward audience builds and ad impressions.
Typical Marketing OS pricing: $20,000–$60,000 per year for a starter SMB/MM package, often co-sold with Sales OS at a bundled discount. If you only need contact data for marketing ops enrichment, you usually don't need Marketing OS — Sales OS plus Operations is cheaper.
The data quality, dedup, normalization, and routing layer. Acquired from RingLead and now deeply integrated. Operations is the most underrated and most under-bought piece of the portfolio — and the one we recommend most often to clients whose CRM is a mess.
Typical Operations pricing: $15,000–$50,000 per year depending on record volume and workflow complexity. It is sold per workflow or per record processed, not per user, so the math is different from Sales OS.
Recruiter-focused product with candidate sourcing, contact data, and pipeline tools. Priced similarly to Sales OS by seat. If you're a TA team buyer, your conversation looks more like a LinkedIn Recruiter replacement evaluation than a sales tooling one — outside the scope of most of this guide.
| Product Line | Primary Buyer | Typical Annual Spend | Pricing Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sales OS | VP Sales, Sales Ops | $15K–$120K | Per named user + credits |
| Marketing OS | CMO, Demand Gen | $20K–$60K | Per seat + audience credits |
| Operations | RevOps, MarOps | $15K–$50K | Per record / workflow |
| TalentOS | Head of TA / Recruiting | $12K–$40K | Per named user + credits |
One nuance worth flagging: ZoomInfo's product names and tier labels (Professional, Advanced, Elite) have shifted multiple times in the last three years. The labels matter less than the underlying line items in your quote. Always read the order form, not the website.
Open any ZoomInfo order form and you'll see a stack of line items that look reasonable individually and shocking in aggregate. Here's what each one is, what it actually does, and whether it's worth paying for. We've reviewed several hundred quotes at QBS — these are the patterns that come up every time.
Copilot is ZoomInfo's AI sales assistant layer launched in 2024 and matured significantly through 2025. It surfaces "next best action" recommendations, drafts emails using account context, and generates account research summaries. Copilot is typically priced $1,500–$3,000 per user per year on top of the Sales OS seat, sometimes bundled into Elite tiers.
Worth it? For SDR teams that don't already have a strong sales engagement platform, yes — it materially lifts personalization quality. For teams already running Outreach or Salesloft with their own AI features, Copilot can be duplicative. Pilot with 2–3 reps before licensing the team.
ZoomInfo's native sales engagement and sequencing tool — competes directly with Outreach and Salesloft. Pricing runs $1,200–$2,400 per user per year as an add-on. If you're already on Outreach or Salesloft, you don't need Engage. If you're not, Engage bundled with Sales OS can be a clean single-vendor play.
Conversational marketing tool (acquired from Insent). Replaces or competes with Drift and Qualified. Pricing $15K–$50K annually depending on traffic volume and seat count. Only worth it if you have meaningful inbound traffic and a chat-led demand strategy already running.
Trigger-based automation that connects ZoomInfo intent and scoop signals into your CRM, Slack, or marketing automation platform. Pricing varies wildly — $5K–$25K per year — depending on workflow count and execution volume. This is one of the highest-ROI add-ons if you have an ops team that will actually build the workflows. If you don't, it sits dormant.
Bulk and real-time record enrichment for your CRM. Priced by record volume, typically $0.50–$3.00 per enriched record depending on data depth and refresh cadence. For most mid-market companies, an annual enrich allocation of 50,000–250,000 records lands at $15K–$50K. If you're running our recommended HubSpot setup, see how to set up the ZoomInfo–HubSpot integration in 5 steps to make sure enrich credits are being used efficiently.
Buyer intent signals from ZoomInfo's network of publisher and review-site data partners. Sold as an add-on with a topic library — you pick the intent topics relevant to your business (e.g., "CRM software," "sales engagement platform"). Pricing $10K–$40K per year depending on topic count and account universe.
Intent is high-value if (and only if) you have a routing and play-running motion in place to act on it. Buying intent without a play to run when an account spikes is one of the most common wasted-spend patterns we see.
Editorially curated signals about hiring, leadership changes, funding, and initiatives at target accounts. Bundled into higher Sales OS tiers, sometimes priced separately. Quietly one of the best lead-gen signals in the platform if your reps are trained to use them.
De-anonymizes website visitors at the account level. Part of Marketing OS, sometimes available as a Sales OS add-on. $10K–$30K per year. Useful for ABM but increasingly commoditized — competitors include Clearbit Reveal, 6sense, and Demandbase. Don't pay enterprise prices for WebSights alone.
Data quality, deduplication, and enrichment workflows. Worth its own evaluation if your CRM hygiene is poor — often higher ROI than buying more seats.
Pricing benchmarks are the question every buyer wants answered first and the question reps least want to answer directly. Based on quotes QBS has reviewed across our client base in the past 18 months, here's where you should expect to land by company size and use case. These are real ranges, not vendor marketing.
Expected annual spend: $15,000–$30,000. Typical configuration is Sales OS Professional with 3–6 seats, 5,000–10,000 bulk credits, basic Salesforce or HubSpot integration. No Copilot, no Engage, often no Intent. Multi-year discounting is limited at this tier — ZoomInfo's economics work less well for true SMB, which is why their alternatives (Apollo, Lusha, Cognism) compete hard here.
If you're at the bottom of this range, seriously evaluate whether ZoomInfo is the right fit. For sub-$10M revenue B2B companies with one or two outbound reps, Apollo or Cognism often deliver 70% of the value at 30% of the price. See our analysis of ZoomInfo alternatives for B2B data in 2026.
Expected annual spend: $40,000–$80,000. This is ZoomInfo's sweet spot. Typical configuration: Sales OS Advanced+ for 10–20 reps, 20,000–40,000 credits, Intent add-on with 10–20 topics, basic Workflows, and HubSpot or Salesforce integration. Copilot is often piloted with 3–5 reps before team rollout.
At this tier you should expect 10–15% off Year 1 list with a multi-year commitment, and a partner-led deal can often get to 20%+ off with implementation included.
Expected annual spend: $80,000–$200,000. Configuration scales to Sales OS Elite or Advanced+ with Copilot and Engage, Marketing OS attached for ABM, Operations for data hygiene, Intent expanded to 30+ topics, and full Workflows. Custom integration work is usually in-scope.
At this size, you have real negotiation leverage — ZoomInfo's enterprise reps have quota pressure on logo expansion. Use it. We've seen 25%+ multi-year discounts at this tier with the right deal structure.
Expected annual spend: $150,000–$500,000+. Fully bundled deployments with all four OS products, custom data feeds, dedicated CSM, executive sponsor program, and bespoke contract terms. These deals are negotiated quarter-by-quarter against ZoomInfo's enterprise sales targets — timing your renewal to their fiscal quarter-end (especially Q4) is worth real money.
Send us your ZoomInfo proposal and we'll tell you what's missing, what's overpriced, and where you have negotiation room — free, in 30 minutes. We review quotes every week as a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner.
Book Your Strategy Call →This is the section your ZoomInfo rep would rather you skip. Every one of these clauses is in their standard order form by default; every one is negotiable; and almost none of them get flagged unless you know to look. We've negotiated each of these out (or down) on behalf of QBS clients in the past 12 months.
ZoomInfo's standard MSA includes a 7% annual auto-renewal price increase. Compounded over a 3-year contract, that's 22.5% above Year 1 pricing by Year 3 — on top of any module expansions. Always negotiate the escalator to 0% or cap it at 3–4%. If they won't move on the escalator, ask for a fixed renewal price written into the order form.
If you blow through your contracted credit pool mid-year, overage credits cost 2–5x the in-contract rate. The default order form rarely caps the overage — meaning if your team exports aggressively in Q3 you can get hit with a five-figure surprise. Always negotiate either a capped overage rate or a credit true-up clause that lets you buy additional credits at in-contract pricing.
Multi-year discounts are real, but the default contract gives you no right to reduce seats or modules in Year 2 or Year 3 — only to add. If your headcount drops, you're paying for empty seats. Negotiate a reduction right (typically 10–20% of seats per renewal anniversary) in exchange for the multi-year commitment.
ZoomInfo markets data freshness aggressively, but the standard contract has no SLA tying freshness to a remedy. If 40% of your enriched records turn out to be stale, you have no contractual recourse. We don't always win this one, but ask for a written commitment on email validity rates and a credit-back mechanism if the floor isn't hit.
If you add seats mid-contract, the default is to price them at current list — not at your negotiated rate. On a 25-seat deal where you negotiated 20% off, adding 5 seats in month 6 can cost you the equivalent of 8 seats at your negotiated rate. Lock in "same-rate seat expansion" language in the order form.
Sometimes a "free" trial module added in Year 1 — Copilot for 5 seats, Intent on 10 topics — quietly converts to paid at renewal at list price. Anything that's free in Year 1 must have written renewal pricing, or it must contractually disappear at renewal unless you opt in.
ZoomInfo contracts are non-cancellable for the term. If your business pivots, gets acquired, or runs out of runway, you still owe the contract value. The only out is a material breach by ZoomInfo. Plan accordingly — don't sign a 3-year if there's a meaningful chance of an acquisition or strategy shift within 18 months.
The default cancellation window requires 60–90 days written notice before the term ends. Miss the window and you auto-renew for another full term at the escalator rate. Put the notice deadline on your CFO's calendar the day you sign. This is the single most expensive missed deadline in B2B SaaS, and it happens to companies every quarter.
If your CFO asks "what does this $60,000 actually buy us?" — and they will — you need a defensible model, not a feature list. Here's the framework we use with clients. It's intentionally conservative; if you can't justify the spend with these assumptions, you probably shouldn't sign.
ZoomInfo ROI is fundamentally a pipeline math problem:
ROI = (Net-New SQLs × SQL-to-Close Rate × ACV × Gross Margin) − ZoomInfo Annual Cost
You need four inputs, all of which you can defend from your own historical data:
Let's run the numbers for a realistic mid-market scenario. Assume:
Math: 81 deals × $25,000 × 75% = $1,518,750 in new gross profit against $65,000 in ZoomInfo cost. Net ROI: ~23x. Payback period: roughly 21 days of new bookings.
That's the optimistic-but-honest case. The pessimistic case — 1 SQL per rep per month, 15% close rate, $15,000 ACV — still pays back in ~120 days. The case where ZoomInfo doesn't pay back is almost always one where the platform was bought but never operationalized. See our deeper write-up on maximizing ZoomInfo ROI with a Solutions Partner.
The variance between ZoomInfo working and not working has almost nothing to do with the platform and almost everything to do with the deployment. Three factors drive outcomes:
Beyond pipeline math, there are two soft-ROI categories worth quantifying:
This is the question we get asked every week, usually some version of "doesn't going through a partner just add a markup?" Let's answer it directly, with no hand-waving.
Buying through a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner like QBS typically results in equal or lower net pricing compared to buying direct — and includes implementation, integration, and training that would otherwise be a separate spend. ZoomInfo's partner program is designed this way intentionally; partners are compensated by ZoomInfo, not by marking up your contract.
When you go through a Solutions Partner, three things happen that don't happen on a direct deal:
Honest disclosure: there are scenarios where buying direct is genuinely the right call. If you already have a strong in-house RevOps team, an existing ZoomInfo-experienced admin, and an established CRM integration, the partner-led implementation value is lower. You'd still benefit from contract negotiation help, but the services component is smaller.
For everyone else — and that's most B2B mid-market companies — the partner path is a net win. For a deeper read, see what a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner does and why it matters.
We're not the only ZoomInfo Solutions Partner, so here's the honest pitch: QBS is also a HubSpot Solutions Partner and ConnectAndSell partner. That matters because most of our clients are running ZoomInfo data into HubSpot for marketing automation, and into a calling motion (ConnectAndSell or otherwise) for SDR output. We connect the dots between data, CRM, and revenue motion in a way that single-vendor partners can't. If you're a HubSpot shop in particular, see our HubSpot–ZoomInfo integration guide.
Over the past three years we've watched (or rescued) dozens of ZoomInfo deals. The same five mistakes show up over and over. None of them are about being a bad negotiator — they're about not knowing what to look for.
The rep will recommend a credit pool sized for a hypothetical worst-case quarter. Reality: most teams use 40–60% of their contracted credits in Year 1. Buy for actual Year 1 usage, not aspirational Year 2 usage. Negotiate a credit true-up at in-contract pricing instead. You'll save $5K–$25K on a mid-market deal.
The opposite mistake: buying for the SDR team only and forgetting that AEs, CSMs, and marketing ops also benefit from the data. When those users need access mid-year, you pay list-price true-ups (see gotcha #5). Map the full set of users who'll touch ZoomInfo before the order form, even if they're "view-only" candidates.
Intent is the most over-bought add-on in ZoomInfo's portfolio. Teams buy 30 intent topics and end up with a dashboard nobody looks at. Before you license Intent, define the play: when topic X spikes for account Y, what happens, who owns it, and what's the SLA? If you can't answer that in two sentences, don't buy Intent yet.
Data without governance is noise. Companies buy ZoomInfo, enable enrichment on every record, and three months later their CRM is a mess of overwritten fields, duplicate contacts, and confused reps. Decide before signing: which fields does ZoomInfo own, which does sales own, what's the refresh cadence, and who arbitrates conflicts. This is often where the data-driven sales motion falls apart.
Renewal starts the day you sign. The teams that get the best renewal terms are the ones who tracked utilization weekly from month one, knew exactly what they used and didn't, and walked into the renewal conversation with data instead of vibes. Set up a monthly utilization review with your CSM in writing — it's their job to provide the data, but you have to ask.
ZoomInfo's fiscal year ends in December, but they push hard on quarter-ends throughout the year. The best discounts of the year are typically available the last two weeks of Q4 (late December), with secondary spikes at end of Q2 and Q3. If your renewal date is flexible, time it. If it's fixed, start negotiation 75–90 days out so you can play the timing game.
ZoomInfo is worth it for B2B companies with at least 5 outbound sellers, a defined ICP, and the operational capacity to act on data and signals. For SMBs under $10M with one or two SDRs, alternatives like Apollo or Cognism usually deliver better unit economics. For mid-market and enterprise teams with a real revenue operations function, ZoomInfo's combined data, intent, and workflow capabilities are hard to match — but only if the platform gets implemented and used, not just licensed.
ZoomInfo is typically 2–4x more expensive than Apollo and 1.5–2x more expensive than Cognism on a per-seat basis, but includes capabilities (Intent, Scoops, Workflows, Operations) that those competitors either don't offer or sell as separate products. On a total-cost basis once you add the equivalent intent, enrichment, and ops tools to Apollo or Cognism, the gap narrows significantly. The right comparison is bundle-to-bundle, not seat-to-seat.
ZoomInfo cost per user typically ranges from $4,000 to $15,000 per year depending on tier, modules, and total seat count. Sales OS Professional starts around $4,000–$6,000 per user at small volumes. Advanced+ with Copilot and Engage runs $8,000–$12,000 per user. Elite enterprise configurations with full bundle access can hit $15,000+ per user. Volume discounts kick in meaningfully above 20 seats.
ZoomInfo does not offer a self-serve free plan in 2026. They previously offered a "Community Edition" with limited access in exchange for sharing your contact data, but the program has been scaled back. Paid trials of 14–30 days are available through their sales team for serious evaluators, typically as part of a procurement process. There is no equivalent of HubSpot's free CRM tier or Apollo's free starter plan.
The five highest-leverage negotiation moves are: (1) time the deal to ZoomInfo's quarter-end, especially Q4; (2) ask for a multi-year commitment in exchange for a 15–25% discount and locked pricing; (3) eliminate or cap the 7% auto-renewal escalator; (4) negotiate a credit true-up clause at in-contract pricing; and (5) require "same-rate seat expansion" in writing. If you're not sure where the room is in your specific quote, a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner can typically identify $10K–$30K of negotiation room on a mid-market deal at no cost to you.
Professional is the entry tier — contact search, basic CRM integration, limited credits. Advanced adds Scoops, org charts, intent topics, and higher credit pools. Elite adds Copilot, Engage, expanded workflows, and the largest credit allocations. The right tier depends on your motion: Professional is fine for a basic prospecting team; Advanced is the sweet spot for most mid-market; Elite is for teams running ZoomInfo as the central GTM data layer. Tier names and inclusions have changed several times — read the order form, not the marketing page.
ZoomInfo Copilot typically costs $1,500–$3,000 per user per year as an add-on to a Sales OS seat, with bundle pricing available at higher tiers. Volume discounts apply above 25 seats. Copilot is sometimes included in Elite-tier bundles for no incremental cost. Before licensing the full team, pilot Copilot with 2–3 reps for 60–90 days to measure incremental email response and meeting conversion lift — the platform is genuinely useful, but the ROI varies materially by team and motion.
QBS is a ZoomInfo Solutions Partner. We help B2B teams negotiate, implement, and operationalize ZoomInfo so it actually pays back. Book a free 30-minute call with Shawn — bring your current quote or wish-list, and we'll walk through what to keep, what to cut, and where you have negotiation room. No pitch deck, no follow-up sequence, just a working session.