If you are pricing out an AI receptionist for your business, the honest answer is that "AI receptionist" now covers everything from a $29 stripped-down answering bot to a $399-per-location restaurant platform. This guide breaks down what vendors actually charge in 2026, using prices taken from each vendor's own pricing page and linked so you can check them yourself.

Full disclosure: we make District AI, one of the products in the comparison below. The numbers are real either way, and we link every source.

The four pricing models

Every AI receptionist on the market prices one of four ways:

  1. Per-minute plans. You buy a monthly bundle of call minutes, then pay a per-minute overage. Most of the market works this way, including District AI, Rosie, and Dialzara. The number to compare is the effective per-minute rate: monthly price divided by included minutes.
  2. Per-call plans. You buy a bundle of answered calls regardless of length. Smith.ai works this way at $1.80 to $3.00 per call. Fine for short reception calls, expensive if your callers need real conversations.
  3. Flat plans with usage caps. "Unlimited minutes" with a cap on something else. Goodcall is unlimited minutes but caps unique customers per month (100 on the $79 Starter tier, then $0.50 per extra customer).
  4. Per-location vertical platforms. Restaurant and multi-location products like Slang.ai price per location at $399 and up.

What 10 vendors actually charge

Vendor · planMonthlyIncludedEffective $/minOverageNotes
District AIVoice Solo$39250 minutes$0.156$0.20/min, with a spending cap you set in BillingCalendar booking, CRM, spam screening, and VIP caller recognition included at entry tier.
District AIVoice Starter$79500 minutes$0.158$0.18/min, with a spending cap you set in BillingSame feature set as Solo with double the included minutes.
DialzaraBusiness Lite$2960 minutes$0.483$0.48/minTop inbound tier is $349 for 1,000 minutes with $0.35/min overage.
RosieProfessional$49250 minutes$0.196Not published on the pricing pageCalendar appointment booking and warm transfer start at the $149 Scale tier (1,000 min).
GoodcallStarter$79100 customersn/a$0.50 per unique customer over the monthly capUnlimited minutes, but capped at 100 unique customers per month on Starter.
Smith.aiAI Receptionist FreeFree25 callsn/a$3.00 per call after 25 callsPaid AI tiers: $150/mo for 75 calls ($2.00/call) or $270/mo for 150 calls.
My AI Front DeskBusiness-in-a-Box$99200 minutes$0.495Credit-based, roughly $0.25/min$79/mo on annual billing. $20 Basic tier is chatbot-only with no voice minutes.
Ask BennyStarter$99 CAD300 minutes$0.330Not published on the pricing pageCanadian vendor (Toronto). C$149 Business PRO and C$399 Enterprise tiers.
Slang.aiCore$399Unlimited / per locationn/aPer-location pricingRestaurant-focused; priced per location, $399 to $599/mo.
Ruby (human)Starter$25050 minutes$5.000Higher tiers: $395/100 min, $720/200 min, $1,725/500 minHuman receptionists, not AI. Included for cost context.

Prices from each vendor's own pricing page (linked), last verified 2026-07-18. CAD prices marked; all others USD.

Three things stand out in that table:

  • The per-minute spread is wide. Dialzara's entry tier works out to $0.48 per minute, Rosie's to about $0.20, and District AI's to about $0.16. On identical call volume, that spread is the difference between $29 buying one hour of coverage and $39 buying more than four.
  • Feature gating changes the real price. Rosie's $49 plan cannot book calendar appointments; that starts at the $149 Scale tier. If booking is why you want a receptionist, Rosie's real price for you is $149. District AI includes calendar booking, a CRM, spam screening, and repeat-caller recognition at $39.
  • Human services anchor the top. Ruby charges $250 per month for 50 minutes. That is the market AI receptionists are replacing, at roughly one twentieth of the per-minute cost.

The overage trap

The headline price only covers the included minutes. What happens after them matters just as much, because a busy month is exactly when you cannot afford your receptionist going dark or your bill exploding.

Overage rates across the vendors above range from $0.14 to $0.48 per minute, more than a 3x spread. Two questions to ask any vendor:

  • What exactly is the overage rate at my tier?
  • Can I cap my spending?

Most vendors publish the first number reluctantly and do not offer the second at all. District AI publishes both: overage runs $0.14 to $0.20 per minute depending on tier, and every workspace can set a hard spending cap in Billing so the meter physically cannot run away.

How to choose at each budget

  • Under $50/month: you are choosing between stripped-down minutes (Dialzara at 60 minutes) and complete-but-small (District AI Solo at 250 minutes with booking and CRM included). Decide whether you need the receptionist to actually do things (book, text, remember callers) or just answer.
  • $50 to $150/month: this band buys 500+ minutes or unlimited-with-caps. Check the caps and the feature gates carefully; this is where "unlimited" plans quietly limit customers or gate transfers.
  • $150+/month: you should be getting live transfers, integrations, and multi-number support. If you run a restaurant, this is also where the $399 vertical platforms start; a general-purpose receptionist at a fraction of that price handles reservations for most independent operators.

Try before you pay anything

Most vendors in this market gate their product behind a "book a demo" form. We think you should hear an AI receptionist handle a real conversation before giving anyone your email address, which is why the District AI demo runs live in your browser.