Learn new skills, connect in real time, and grow your career in the Salesblazer Community.

Join now
Revenue model: Three individuals collaborate to resolve a financial problem.

Subscription Pricing: A Complete Guide with Models and Examples

Tiffany Lin , Senior Product Marketing Manager, Salesforce

June 25, 2026

Hybrid pricing

A hybrid model blends two distinct pricing strategies into one package — most commonly a flat subscription base combined with a variable usage fee. According to G2 research, 95% of companies still use subscriptions as their revenue foundation, while 73% layer usage-based pricing on top. The subscription protects financial forecasting. The usage fee captures growth. Companies that led with pure usage — no subscription anchor — reported more difficulty with forecasting, renewals, and contract negotiations.

Model How it works Best for Key challenge
Flat-rate Single fixed fee for all features Simple products, easy to sell Leaves expansion revenue on the table
Per-user Fixed rate per seat Predictable headcount-based growth Login sharing, adoption friction
Tiered Multiple packages at escalating price points Wide market spectrum Package design complexity
Usage-based Charges for actual consumption Variable workloads, AI products Forecasting unpredictability
Hybrid Subscription base + usage layer Most B2B SaaS and AI companies Requires unified billing infrastructure

Subscription Pricing FAQs

Software pricing has moved through three distinct eras. The first relied on perpetual licensing — a large one-time fee to own the software permanently, plus an annual maintenance fee typically running 18–22% of the original license cost. The second era introduced the standard per-seat subscription, replacing ownership with access. The third is the current state: hybrid pricing, mixing a base subscription with variable consumption metrics and increasingly outcome-based components. The question today is no longer whether to move beyond traditional licensing — it is how fast your revenue infrastructure can keep up.

Optimal pricing is value-based, not formulaic. Validate your numbers using willingness-to-pay surveys by specific customer segments, then test against your actual cost to serve — especially important for AI products where inference costs vary heavily by customer type. Balance what the market will accept with the margins your business requires to grow.

Mid-term amendments happen constantly in B2B sales software. Customers add seats, upgrade tiers, or buy consumption credits before their annual contract ends. A connected revenue platform automatically prorates new charges and aligns them with the existing billing cycle through co-termination — keeping the renewal date singular and clean.

The subscription protects forecasting by acting as a predictable baseline fee covering core platform access. The usage-based component captures expansion by tracking variable consumption — like API calls or compute power — and charging for overages. The billing system must be able to meter, calculate, and invoice variable charges without manual intervention. This is where most companies break down operationally.

The real driver of churn isn't unstable pricing — it is usage unpredictability. Customers cancel when they receive surprise bills they can't explain to their finance departments. Real-time usage signal monitoring is the best retention tool available. It allows account managers to step in, explain consumption spikes, and adjust contracts before the customer gets frustrated enough to cancel.

AI supported the writers and editors who created this article.