Real pricing page examples from SaaS, ecommerce, services, and agencies. Each analyzed by pricing model, design patterns, and the psychology principles that make them work.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min
A pricing page is the page on a website that displays product or service prices, plan comparisons, and purchase CTAs. It’s typically the last stop before a visitor becomes a customer and the highest-impact page on any commercial website.Pricing pages have the highest conversion intent of any page type. Visitors who reach your pricing page are 3-5x more likely to convert than those on your homepage (ProfitWell, 2024). Yet most pricing pages lose visitors because of decision paralysis, hidden costs, or unclear plan differences. The examples below solve each of these problems differently.
“Your pricing page is the most honest page on your website. Every other page can sell the dream. The pricing page has to sell the reality. We tell every client at ScaleGrowth.Digital: if you’re uncomfortable publishing your prices, that’s a pricing strategy problem, not a web design problem. Fix the strategy first.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Principle | How It Works | Examples That Use It |
|---|---|---|
| Anchoring | The first price a visitor sees becomes the reference point for all subsequent prices. A $3,600 Enterprise tier makes $890 feel affordable. | HubSpot (#4), Apple (#6), Basecamp (#3) |
| Decoy Effect | Adding a third option that’s deliberately less attractive makes one of the other two look like a better deal. The overpriced “Premium” makes “Standard” feel like a bargain. | Apple iPhone lineup (#6), Mailchimp (#5) |
| Charm Pricing | Prices ending in 9 or 99 are perceived as significantly lower. $299 feels closer to $200 than $300. This effect has been replicated in 60+ studies since the 1930s. | Basecamp (#3), FreshBooks (#10), Bench (#9) |
| Social Proof | “Most Popular” badges, user counts, and customer logos reduce uncertainty. If 750,000 organizations chose this plan, it’s probably the right one. | Slack (#1), Mailchimp (#5), Calendly (#12) |
| Loss Framing | Showing what you lose by choosing the lower tier is more motivating than showing what you gain by upgrading. “You’ll miss out on X” is stronger than “You’ll get X.” | Notion annual savings badge (#2), Amazon Subscribe & Save (#7) |
| Monthly Payment Framing | Breaking annual costs into monthly equivalents makes large numbers feel small. “$33/month” triggers less price sensitivity than “$999.” | Apple (#6), FreshBooks (#10) |
| Risk Reversal | Money-back guarantees, free trials, and “cancel anytime” promises reduce the perceived risk of choosing wrong. Toptal’s 2-week guarantee eliminates the biggest objection. | Toptal (#11), Basecamp (#3) |
17 landing page breakdowns including pricing-focused pages. View Examples →
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For most businesses, yes. Published pricing reduces unqualified leads, builds trust, and saves your sales team time on price-shoppers. The exception is enterprise sales or custom services where pricing genuinely varies by 5-10x depending on scope. Even then, showing a “starting at” price helps visitors self-qualify. Companies that hide pricing when their competitors publish it lose 30-50% of price-comparison shoppers (Gartner, 2024).
Three tiers is the standard for good reason. Two tiers creates a binary choice with no middle ground. Four or more tiers creates decision paralysis (Hick’s Law). Three tiers gives you an anchor (high-priced), a target (middle tier you want most people to choose), and an entry point (low-priced or free). If your product has genuinely different use cases requiring 4+ tiers, consider using a pricing calculator or interactive selector instead of a static table.
Prices ending in 9 ($29, $99, $199) convert better for products under $1,000 because of the left-digit anchoring effect ($29 feels closer to $20 than $30). For premium products and services above $1,000, round numbers ($3,000, $5,000) perform better because they signal quality and reduce the “deal-seeking” mindset. This finding has been replicated in over 60 pricing studies since the 1930s (Thomas and Morwitz, Journal of Consumer Research, 2005).
Show prices in the visitor’s local currency using IP-based detection. Consider purchasing power parity (PPP) pricing if your market includes developing economies. Spotify, Netflix, and many SaaS tools offer PPP-adjusted pricing and see higher conversion rates in those markets as a result. At minimum, display currency with the country flag or code (USD, EUR, GBP) to avoid confusion.
Review pricing annually or when you add significant new features. Companies that haven’t raised prices in 2+ years are almost certainly undercharging. Patrick Campbell (ProfitWell) recommends reviewing pricing every 6 months and adjusting at least once per year. When you raise prices, grandfather existing customers at their current rate for 6-12 months. This builds loyalty and reduces churn. Always test price changes on new customers first before rolling them out broadly.
Our content strategy team designs pricing pages, runs pricing A/B tests, and builds conversion-optimized page structures for SaaS, services, and ecommerce brands. Talk to Our Strategy Team →