Zoom Pricing: Honest 4-Plan Breakdown (Add-Ons Included)
Zoom pricing starts simply — and that simplicity is by design. The free plan’s 40-minute group meeting limit converts casual users into paying customers reliably enough that the company built an entire growth strategy around it. What gets less attention is how quickly the costs compound once a business tries to build real workflows around the platform.
This complete zoom pricing guide covers every tier, every add-on, and the math behind annual vs. monthly billing — including the features that don’t make it into the headline pricing tables.
Zoom Pricing Plans Explained
Zoom’s core product — Zoom Meetings — has four tiers. All prices below reflect 2025 rates; annual billing prices assume a 12-month commitment.
Basic (Free)
The free plan covers unlimited one-on-one meetings and group meetings up to 40 minutes with up to 100 participants. Whiteboard, chat, and screen sharing are included. For freelancers running brief check-ins or anyone who can structure meetings to end before the timer, the free plan is genuinely functional.
Limitation: The 40-minute cap applies to all group meetings — no exceptions at the free tier. Cloud recording is not available.
Pro — $15.99/month per user (or $13.33/month billed annually)
Pro removes the meeting time limit, adds 5GB of cloud recording storage, and unlocks Zoom AI Companion (AI meeting summaries and action items). Up to 9 licenses can be added at this tier. For small teams running regular external calls, Pro is the practical minimum.
Annual savings: $30.72/user/year vs. monthly billing — modest but real at team scale.
Business — $21.99/month per user (or $18.33/month billed annually)
Business raises the participant cap to 300, adds SSO and managed domains, and includes Zoom Scheduler (basic calendar booking). Requires a minimum of 10 users. The per-user cost makes this tier expensive for small teams — a 10-person team at annual billing runs $2,199.60/year at entry.
Business Plus / Enterprise
Business Plus adds unlimited cloud recording and translated captions. Enterprise (requires 250+ licenses) includes a dedicated customer success manager and negotiated pricing. Both tiers require contacting Zoom’s sales team for quotes.

Zoom Add-On Costs: Where the Bill Grows
The headline plan pricing covers meetings. The features most businesses actually need — phone, webinars, events — are each sold separately. According to Zoom’s official pricing page, here’s what each add-on costs:
Zoom Phone
- US & Canada Metered: $10/user/month — pay-per-minute outbound calls
- US & Canada Unlimited: $15/user/month — unlimited domestic calling
- Global Select: $20/user/month — unlimited calling in one international country of choice
- Pro Global Select: $25/user/month — unlimited calling in multiple countries
For a 5-person team on Pro + Zoom Phone Unlimited: $15.99 + $15 = $30.99/user/month, or $1,859.40/year — before any other add-ons.
Zoom Webinars
- Webinars (500 attendees): $66.67/user/month (annual)
- Webinars Plus: $290.83/user/month (annual)
- Events: $415.83/user/month (annual)
The webinar tier is where Zoom’s pricing becomes genuinely enterprise-level. A single webinar license at $66.67/month adds $800/year to the bill.
Large Meeting Add-On
Raising the participant cap beyond 300 (Business tier max) to 500 or 1,000 participants requires a separate add-on: $50–$90/month depending on capacity tier.

Annual vs. Monthly Billing: The Real Math
Zoom’s annual billing discount is real but modest at the Pro tier. The more significant consideration is lock-in: annual billing commits a team to 12 months regardless of whether usage patterns change.
| Plan | Monthly Billing | Annual Billing | Annual Savings/User |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pro | $15.99/mo | $13.33/mo | $31.92 |
| Business | $21.99/mo | $18.33/mo | $43.92 |
For most teams, annual billing makes sense if video conferencing is a core workflow tool that won’t be dropped. For newer teams still evaluating whether Zoom is the right fit, monthly billing preserves flexibility at a modest premium.
Zoom pricing on an annual contract locks in the discount but removes flexibility. For teams scaling headcount or reconsidering their video stack, that 12-month commitment carries more risk than the per-user savings justify.
What Zoom Doesn’t Include
Zoom is a video conferencing and phone platform. It is not a CRM, marketing automation system, or SMS tool. For businesses that need client scheduling tied to a lead pipeline, follow-up sequences, or two-way text messaging, Zoom requires integration with separate tools — each carrying its own subscription cost.
Common integrations businesses layer onto Zoom:
- CRM: HubSpot, Salesforce, or Pipedrive to log meeting activity and track deals
- Scheduling: Calendly or similar to handle booking logic that Zoom Scheduler handles only at Business tier and above
- SMS & follow-up automation: A separate marketing platform for post-meeting nurture sequences
A business running Zoom Pro + Calendly + HubSpot Starter + an SMS tool is typically spending $150–$250/month before hitting any usage limits — and managing four separate vendor relationships. Platforms like Automated Sales Machine bundle scheduling, CRM, and two-way SMS into a single subscription, which is worth evaluating if the integration stack is growing. See our guide to online scheduling tools and Calendly pricing breakdown for comparisons.
Zoom vs. Alternatives for Business Communication
| Platform | Entry Price | Meeting Limit | CRM Built-In | SMS/Automation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zoom Pro | $15.99/mo/user | 30 hours | ❌ | ❌ |
| Microsoft Teams | $6/mo/user | 30 hours | ❌ | ❌ |
| Google Meet | Free / $6 Workspace | 24 hours | ❌ | ❌ |
| Automated Sales Machine | See pricing | Via Zoom integration | ✅ | ✅ |
For additional context on scheduling and communication tool costs, see our breakdowns of HubSpot pricing and Mailchimp pricing.
Is Zoom Worth the Price?
Zoom pricing at the Pro tier ($15.99/month per user) represents fair value for businesses whose primary need is reliable video meetings with external clients or distributed teams. The platform’s stability, participant experience, and AI meeting summaries are genuinely strong at this price point.
The value proposition weakens at the Business tier ($21.99/month) for small teams — the 10-user minimum and modest feature delta over Pro don’t justify the jump for most teams under 15 people.
The add-on structure makes Zoom expensive when video is just one piece of a broader client communication workflow. Teams that need phone + webinars + scheduling + CRM should model the total cost of all add-ons before committing, since the bill can reach $80–$100/user/month at full utilization — comparable to all-in-one platforms that include these features natively.

Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost for Zoom?
The entry-level paid tier (Pro) costs $15.99/month per user on monthly billing, or $13.33/month per user billed annually. The Business plan costs $21.99/month per user (monthly) or $18.33/month annually, with a 10-user minimum. Add-ons for Zoom Phone, Webinars, and Events are priced separately.
Is Zoom free for 40 minutes?
Yes — Zoom’s free Basic plan allows unlimited group meetings up to 40 minutes per session. One-on-one meetings have no time limit on the free plan. The 40-minute cap applies regardless of how many participants are in the call.
What is the cheapest way to use Zoom?
The cheapest paid option is Zoom Pro at $13.33/user/month billed annually. For most small teams, this removes the 40-minute cap and adds cloud recording and AI Companion at a cost that’s manageable per seat. Alternatively, structuring workflows around the free plan’s 40-minute limit works for some teams.
Which is cheaper, Zoom or Teams?
Microsoft Teams is cheaper for organizations already paying for Microsoft 365 — Teams is included in Business Basic ($6/user/month) and higher M365 plans. For standalone video conferencing without the Microsoft ecosystem, Zoom Pro ($13.33–$15.99/user/month) is broadly comparable to Teams Essentials ($4/user/month standalone), though Teams Essentials lacks the phone and webinar depth of Zoom’s add-on ecosystem.
Understanding zoom pricing structure fully is the first step toward deciding whether it fits the budget for your team’s actual usage. If meeting scheduling, CRM follow-up, and client communication need to work together in one platform, see how Automated Sales Machine connects booking, pipeline, and communication in a single account.