AI receptionist services in 2026 cost $200 to $1,200 per month depending on call volume, features, and provider. Most small business setups land at $400 to $600 per month. Setup fees are normal and range from $250 to $1,500 one time. My own service, Clampitt Automation, charges $497 per month flat plus setup. Below I break down what each tier actually includes, how it stacks up to a human receptionist, and the hidden fees to watch out for.
What does an AI receptionist actually do?
An AI receptionist is a voice AI that picks up your business phone, talks like a real human, and gets the work done that a front desk person would. It books appointments straight on your calendar, qualifies leads with the questions you tell it to ask, sends a text or email summary to your team, and routes the urgent calls to whoever is on call.
It runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It doesn't take lunch, it doesn't quit, and it doesn't get sick. That's the whole pitch in one paragraph.
How much does an AI receptionist cost per month?
Most AI receptionists cost between $200 and $1,200 per month in 2026. The actual price depends on three things: how many calls you take per month, how custom your agent is, and which integrations you need.
Here's the rough breakdown I see across the market right now:
- $200 to $300 per month: Generic, off-the-shelf bot. Limited customization, basic call handling.
- $400 to $700 per month: Custom voice, your scripts, calendar booking, CRM sync, after-hours coverage. This is where most small businesses end up.
- $800 to $1,200 per month: Multi-location, deep custom integrations, dedicated support, higher minute caps.
Clampitt Automation sits at $497 per month flat, in the sweet spot for small businesses that want a fully custom agent without paying enterprise prices.
What's included at different price points?
The thing nobody tells you upfront is that the monthly price is only half the story. What you actually get for that money varies wildly between providers. Here's what to expect at each tier:
At $200 to $300 per month
You get call answering with a stock voice and a stock script. The agent can take a message and maybe transfer calls. Customization is limited to your business name and hours. Most of these are sold self-serve and sound robotic.
At $400 to $700 per month
This is the real sweet spot. You get a fully custom voice agent built around your business, calendar booking that writes to Google Calendar or your scheduling tool, CRM integration so leads land in HubSpot or GoHighLevel, after-hours coverage with on-call routing, and call transcripts emailed or texted to you.
At $800 to $1,200 per month
You get everything above, plus multi-location support, deep custom integrations with software like ServiceTitan or Clio, higher monthly minute caps, and a dedicated account manager who tunes the agent as your business changes.
Are setup fees normal?
Yes, setup fees are normal and they range from $250 to $1,500 one time. A real custom agent takes a few hours of work to build out: writing the voice prompt, training it on your business, connecting your calendar and CRM, and testing it on real call flows.
Be cautious of any service that promises zero setup. It usually means you're getting a generic bot with your business name plugged in. The robot voice is a dead giveaway, and your callers will hang up.
What I charge for setup
Clampitt Automation setup runs $500 to $1,000 depending on how many integrations you need. The setup fee covers a custom voice, a tuned prompt for your industry, calendar booking setup, and live testing on your actual phone line before launch.
How does pricing compare to a human receptionist?
Here's the math I run for every prospect. A full-time human receptionist in the US costs $35,000 to $55,000 per year in base salary, depending on the state. Add 25 to 30 percent for benefits, payroll taxes, and equipment, and you're at $45,000 to $70,000 all-in.
And a human works roughly 40 hours a week. There are 168 hours in a week. So you're paying $45k+ to cover less than a quarter of the time your phone is actually ringing. After-hours calls go to voicemail or, more likely, to your competitor.
An AI receptionist at $497 per month is $5,964 per year and covers every hour of every day. That's the real comparison.
AI receptionist pricing comparison: Smith.ai, Ruby, Bland, Clampitt
Here's how the most common options stack up in mid-2026. Prices change, so verify with each provider, but this is the picture as of when I'm writing this.
| Provider | Monthly Price | Pricing Model | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smith.ai | $285 to $1,200+ | Per-call tiers, hybrid AI plus human | Law firms that want human backup |
| Ruby Receptionists | $345 to $1,000+ | Per-minute, human-first | Professional services wanting a real person |
| Bland AI | $0.09 per minute | Usage-based, developer platform | Tech teams building their own agent |
| Clampitt Automation | $497 flat | Flat monthly, plus setup | Small businesses that want custom AI without surprises |
Honest take: if you want a real human voice and you have a big budget, Ruby is solid. If you're a developer who wants to build something custom, Bland is the cheapest per minute. If you're a small business that wants a custom AI receptionist with predictable pricing, that's where Clampitt fits.
When does the ROI break even?
For most businesses, the AI receptionist pays for itself after one or two captured calls per month.
Quick math. If your average customer is worth $500 in revenue and you capture two extra calls a month that you would otherwise have missed, that's $1,000 of new revenue for a $497 service. The first call covers the cost. The second is profit. Everything after that is upside.
For HVAC, plumbing, and other emergency trades where one job can be worth $2,000 or more, the break-even is one captured call per quarter. See my missed calls cost calculator for industry-specific numbers.
Hidden costs to watch out for
Here's where AI receptionist pricing gets shady. Things to ask about before you sign:
- Per-minute overage fees. Many providers cap monthly minutes and bill you extra above the cap. Ask what the cap is and what overage costs.
- SMS charges. Some services charge per text message sent to you or to customers. Adds up fast on a busy line.
- Integration fees. Calendar booking sometimes costs extra. CRM sync sometimes costs extra. Ask what's included.
- Annual contracts. Read the fine print. Some require 12-month commitments with cancellation penalties.
- Voice cloning fees. If you want a custom voice that sounds like you, some providers charge extra for that.
My take: always ask for the all-in monthly total in writing before you sign anything. If they can't give you a flat number, that's a sign the bill will surprise you.
The bottom line
For a small business in 2026, expect to pay $400 to $600 per month for a custom AI receptionist that actually works, plus a one-time setup fee between $250 and $1,500. Anything cheaper and you're probably getting a generic bot. Anything more and you're paying for enterprise features you don't need.
If you want to see what $497 per month gets you, book a demo and I'll send a 60-second sample call from your AI receptionist within one business day.