How much does Clay really cost in 2026? Credits, add-ons, and full stack cost

Clay's advertised pricing starts at $185 to $495 per month, but the real cost for a 25-user team lands at $75,000 to $120,000 per year.
The gap comes from credit overages, CRM sync locked to the higher tier, and four to five additional tools Clay's basic Sequencer still cannot replace.
Here's the full cost breakdown.
Clay's pricing page is one of the most transparent in the category.
The numbers are public, the free tier is real, and the 4.7 out of 5 G2 rating across 189+ reviews is not inflated.
The problem is not what Clay shows you. It is what happens after you sign up: credits burn faster than you forecast, CRM sync sits behind a higher tier, and the things Clay still does not handle well (multi-step sequences beyond 4 emails, phone dialing, social automation, advanced deliverability) each require a separate invoice.
That is what this guide is for.
How much does Clay cost in 2026?
Clay costs $185 per month on the Launch plan and $495 per month on the Growth plan after its March 11, 2026 pricing overhaul. Credits are now split into Data Credits (for enrichment lookups) and Actions (for platform activity, including sending emails through the native Sequencer). Enterprise pricing is custom.
Legacy plans (Starter $149, Explorer $349, Pro $800) remain available to existing customers only, until April 10, 2026. All paid plans include unlimited users, a genuine advantage over per-seat pricing.
What are Clay's hidden costs?
Clay's hidden costs fall into five categories:
(1) CRM integration with Salesforce or HubSpot is locked to the Growth plan at $495 per month, not available on Launch;
(2) waterfall enrichment consumes 10 to 25 credits per row, making monthly credit burn unpredictable;
(3) top-up credits carry a 50 percent markup over plan rates when you exceed your allocation;
(4) Clay is enrichment-first with a basic Sequencer, so multi-step email sequences beyond 4 steps, social automation, advanced deliverability, and outbound dialing each require separate tools;
(5) the technical expertise required to build and maintain workflows typically means a dedicated RevOps or GTM engineer is needed.
Is Clay worth it in 2026?
Clay is worth it for technical RevOps teams that need maximum enrichment flexibility across 100+ data providers, already have an engagement platform, and can absorb unpredictable credit costs.
It is not worth it for teams that need multichannel outreach (email plus social plus phone) in the same tool, lack dedicated RevOps resources, or want predictable per-user pricing.
We analyzed Clay's 2026 pricing across every line item, pulled user evidence from G2 and Reddit, and calculated the total cost of ownership at 5 users and 25 users.
Here is what we found.
The real cost of running Clay at 25 users in 2026 is $75,000 to $120,000 per year, not the $5,940 to $30,000 the pricing page suggests.
The gap comes from credit overages ($2,000 to $15,000 per year), four to five additional tools Clay cannot replace ($40,000 to $85,000 per year), and the RevOps capacity needed to maintain workflows.
Clay is a genuinely powerful enrichment tool. The 4.7 out of 5 G2 rating reflects real user love for the 100+ provider waterfall, the table-based workflow flexibility, and one of the strongest PLG communities in B2B SaaS.
The free tier is a legitimate way to experiment. Clay University and the shared workflow templates set the standard for product education. The late-2025 Sequencer launch added basic email sending capability, closing one small gap in the stack.
But Clay's pricing page advertises a component, not a solution. Closing the gap between "enriched contact" and full multichannel outbound still requires four to five additional purchases that the pricing page does not mention. That is what this blog will break down, category by category, with user evidence.
TL;DR: advertised vs real price
The advertised base plan for a 25-user team can look as low as $5,940 per year if credits behave. Actual spend typically lands between $75,000 and $120,000 per year once the full stack is assembled and credit overages are counted. That is a 12x to 20x gap.
The published price: Clay pricing plans in 2026
Credit where it is due. Clay publishes its pricing openly, offers a genuine free tier, and restructured its plans on March 11, 2026 to give customers more value per dollar. That transparency is more than ZoomInfo, Outreach, Salesloft, or Cognism provide.
Legacy plans (Starter at $149, Explorer at $349, Pro at $800 per month) remain available to existing customers until April 10, 2026, after which all customers migrate to the new structure.
The new two-bucket credit system is an improvement. Under the old model, every action burned from the same credit pool. Under the new model, Data Credits pay for third-party data lookups (what Clay actually costs to deliver), and Actions pay for platform activity (running workflows, AI steps, and Sequencer email sends).
Teams get more predictable Actions allocation at each tier.
The problems start when you look at what each tier actually unlocks and what it does not.
What Clay does not show you on the pricing page
CRM integration is locked to the Growth plan
This is the single most important pricing detail Clay does not emphasize. Salesforce and HubSpot integration, table-stakes for any GTM tool, is only available on the Growth plan at $495 per month and above.
Launch ($185 per month): no CRM sync. Enriched data lives in Clay tables. Getting it into your CRM requires manual exports or Zapier workarounds.
Growth ($495 per month): CRM sync unlocked. This is the real starting price for production GTM workflows.
"We were on a cheaper plan and thought we were getting a good deal. Then we realized CRM integration, which is table stakes for any sales tool, is locked behind the higher plan. That's a massive price jump for what should be a basic feature." - G2 reviewer
"The jump from the lower tier to the one with CRM sync is brutal. The only features that really matter in the upgrade are CRM sync and more credits. You're paying $310 per month more essentially for a Salesforce connection and higher credit limits." - G2 reviewer
For comparison, Amplemarket includes bi-directional CRM sync with Salesforce and HubSpot on all plans.
How much do Clay's credits really cost?
Clay's credit system is the most frequently cited frustration in user reviews. Unlike per-seat pricing where costs are predictable, credit-based pricing makes budgeting an exercise in guesswork.
The math that matters
Waterfall enrichment, Clay's core value proposition and most praised feature, is also its most expensive action. It queries multiple providers sequentially to maximize match rates. Each provider in the waterfall consumes credits regardless of whether it returns a result.
Real-world example: enriching 1,000 contacts with email, phone, and company data via waterfall burns 15,000 to 25,000 credits. On the Launch plan (2,500 Data Credits per month), that is six to ten months of credits consumed in a single afternoon. On Growth (6,000 Data Credits), it is two to four months in one run.
The Sequencer adds its own consumption: 1 Action per lead added to a campaign, plus Data Credits for AI snippets. For a team sending 5,000 emails per month via Sequencer, that is 5,000 Actions before any enrichment work happens.
The 50 percent top-up markup
When you inevitably burn through your monthly credit allocation, Clay charges a 50 percent premium for top-up credits over your plan rate. Credit rollover is capped at 2x your monthly allocation, so you cannot bank unused credits for a high-volume month.
"Top-up credits cost 50 percent more than your plan rate. So when you inevitably burn through your monthly allocation (and you will), you're paying a premium to keep your workflows running. It feels like a penalty for using the product." - G2 reviewer
"Credits vanish before you know it. I built a 10-step enrichment workflow for 500 contacts and burned through my entire monthly allocation in a single afternoon." - G2 reviewer
"The credit counter is anxiety-inducing. Every time I add an enrichment step, I'm doing mental math on whether I can afford to run this workflow." - G2 reviewer
Learning costs real money
Clay's power comes with a steep learning curve, and in a credit-based system, mistakes cost credits.
"I burned 2,000 credits in my first week just learning how the tool works. Making mistakes in Clay is expensive because every test run costs credits. There's no sandbox mode or free practice environment." - G2 reviewer
"I accidentally ran a test workflow on my full dataset instead of a 10-row sample. 3,000 credits burned in 90 seconds. There's no undo, no confirmation prompt." - G2 reviewer
"We started on the lower plan thinking the credit allocation would be enough. We burned through them in 3 days. Upgraded to the bigger plan. Burned through those credits in 2 weeks. Now we're on custom pricing and still worrying about credits every month." - G2 reviewer
There is no sandbox mode. Every test workflow consumes live credits. Teams routinely report that their first month's credits go primarily to learning the tool, not to production output.
The RevOps dependency
Clay is built for RevOps engineers, not salespeople. The table-based interface, multi-step workflows, and provider configurations require technical knowledge that most SDRs do not have.
"We bought Clay for our 8-person SDR team. After a month, only 2 people could actually use it independently. The other 6 gave up and went back to manual prospecting." - G2 reviewer
"Clay is built for RevOps engineers, not salespeople. If your reps aren't comfortable with concepts like waterfall logic, API responses, and data mapping, they'll struggle." - G2 reviewer
This translates to a cost that does not appear on any invoice: the RevOps capacity needed to build and maintain Clay workflows.
For most mid-market teams, that means either hiring a dedicated RevOps engineer or allocating significant time from an existing one. Clay's pricing page does not mention this. Your CFO will notice it.
The real cost at 25 users
Here is the full total cost of ownership calculation: Clay alone (enrichment plus basic Sequencer) versus Clay plus the tools needed to run a complete outbound operation.
Clay alone at $5,940 to $30,000 per year for 25 users (on Growth or Enterprise with native Sequencer) is meaningfully cheaper than any all-in-one platform, but you only get enrichment plus basic email sending.
You cannot run multi-step sequences beyond 4 emails, automate social outreach, make calls, track contact-level intent, monitor deliverability at scale, or analyze performance.
A fully-loaded Clay stack at $75,000 to $120,000 per year is comparable in price to the all-in-one platforms it is trying to replace, except it still lacks contact-level intent signals, autonomous AI agents, AI voice messages, and AI reply handling entirely.
For a full head-to-head comparison at 25 users including per-user pricing benchmarks, see Amplemarket vs Clay.
What you still cannot buy through the Clay ecosystem
Even at $120,000 per year on a fully-loaded Clay stack, these capabilities are unavailable at any price:
These gaps explain why Clay scored 83 out of 231 on our 231-point feature evaluation, while all-in-one platforms score 94 percent and above. Clay covers enrichment and basic email sending. Everything else requires separate tools, or simply does not exist anywhere in the Clay ecosystem.
What real users say about Clay's pricing
Clay's 4.7 out of 5 G2 rating is real, and the enthusiasm in its user community is genuine. But pricing is the most common friction point even among fans.
On the enrichment power:
"Clay changed how we think about data enrichment. Instead of being locked into one provider's database, we can waterfall across Apollo, Clearbit, Hunter, and 10 other sources in a single workflow. Our match rates went from 60 percent to 90 percent." - G2 reviewer
"If you're a data-first GTM team, Clay is the most powerful enrichment tool on the market. Nothing else lets you orchestrate across this many providers." - G2 reviewer
On the credit trap:
"We set up a waterfall enrichment across 5 providers for email finding. Each provider costs 5 to 10 credits per lookup, and the waterfall tries them sequentially. A 500-contact list consumed 8,000 credits. Our monthly plan included 10,000. One workflow, one list, 80 percent of our credits gone." - G2 reviewer
"Every new workflow we build has a different credit consumption profile. A simple email finder uses 2 credits per row. A waterfall enrichment with AI research uses 20 to 25 per row. Budgeting is guesswork." - G2 reviewer
"Clay is priced like a premium enterprise tool but delivers a component, not a solution. You're paying top dollar for enrichment, then paying again for advanced engagement, again for deliverability, and again for a dialer." - G2 reviewer
The right way to compare pricing
Clay's per-workspace price will always look lower than a per-user platform price. That is comparing the cost of one puzzle piece to the cost of the finished puzzle.
The right question is: what does it cost to run outbound end-to-end?
For a 25-user team running full outbound operations, the honest comparison is:
Amplemarket, for reference, costs $80,000 per year at 25 users ($3,200 per user with annual plus multi-year commitment), and includes data, multichannel engagement, social automation, deliverability, 100+ contact-level intent signals, and Amplemarket's Duo Copilot in a single subscription. Predictable per-user pricing, no credits.
Bottom line
Clay is a genuinely powerful enrichment tool with a passionate community. The 4.7 G2 rating is not inflated; it reflects authentic enthusiasm from technical GTM teams who love the 100+ provider waterfall, the table-based workflow flexibility, and the creative possibilities.
The free tier is a real entry point. Clay University is one of the best learning resources in B2B SaaS. The late-2025 Sequencer adds basic email sending, closing one small gap.
But powerful enrichment with a basic email sender and complete outbound platform are different things. Clay does not handle multi-step sequences beyond 4 emails, make calls, automate social outreach, track buying intent at the contact level, or protect your deliverability at scale. When you add the four to five tools needed to close those gaps, plus the credit overages that routinely push costs 2x to 3x above projections, Clay's full stack lands at $75,000 to $120,000 per year for 25 users. That is comparable to or more than all-in-one platforms that include all of those capabilities natively.
Clay makes sense if you are a technically sophisticated team that already has an engagement stack, values maximum enrichment flexibility over simplicity, has dedicated RevOps capacity to build and maintain workflows, and can absorb unpredictable credit costs month to month.
Clay does not make sense if you are building an outbound motion from scratch, need predictable per-user pricing, want prospecting through execution in a single tool, or lack the RevOps resources to manage a multi-tool stack.
Further reading
- Amplemarket vs Clay: the complete side-by-side comparison: full head-to-head across 231 features with per-user pricing, feature scores, and real customer evidence.
- Best AI B2B data providers in 2026: how Clay compares to 7 other data platforms at different price points.
- How B2B data enrichment works in 2026: waterfall, real-time, and hybrid workflows: a deep dive on enrichment approaches, including Clay's managed-waterfall model.
- What does Clay really do? Features vs marketing (2026): the feature audit that shows what the pricing actually buys.
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Frequently asked questions
Is Clay really free?
Clay offers a genuine free tier with 100 credits per month. That is enough to test a few enrichment workflows on small datasets, and it is one of the best free B2B data tools for experimenting with waterfall enrichment. The limitations: 100 credits will not survive a single production workflow, there is no CRM sync on any plan below Growth ($495 per month), and the free tier is designed as an evaluation sandbox, not a usable production plan.
Why does waterfall enrichment cost so many credits?
Waterfall enrichment queries multiple data providers sequentially until it finds a match. Each provider query costs credits, typically 2 to 10 per provider. A waterfall across 5 providers costs 10 to 25 credits per row. For a 1,000-contact list, that is 10,000 to 25,000 credits. On the Growth plan (6,000 Data Credits per month), a single large enrichment run can consume 40 to 100 percent of your monthly allocation. The unpredictability comes from the fact that you cannot forecast in advance how many providers will be queried before a match is found on each row.
Can I use Clay without the Growth plan?
Technically yes, practically no for most teams. The Launch plan ($185 per month) includes the basic Sequencer for simple email campaigns (4 steps max), but lacks CRM integration, which means enriched data stays in Clay tables unless you manually export via CSV or build Zapier workarounds. API access is limited. Most teams discover they need Growth within the first month of production use for Salesforce or HubSpot sync.
How unpredictable are Clay's credit costs?
Users consistently report being off by 40 percent or more on credit forecasts. The unpredictability stems from waterfall enrichment behavior: you cannot predict how many providers will be queried before a match is found, different workflows consume credits at wildly different rates, and there is no reliable calculator for projecting monthly usage across varied enrichment tasks. Teams routinely end up paying 50 percent markup top-up fees to complete planned work.
Does Clay's Sequencer replace tools like Smartlead or Salesloft?
Not for most serious outbound teams. Clay launched a native email Sequencer in late 2025 that handles basic campaigns (up to 4 steps per sequence, around 24 emails per day per account) with AI snippets and a unified inbox. For simple single-sequence campaigns, it may be enough. But the Sequencer lacks inbox rotation, sender health monitoring, A/B testing, and multi-channel support, all standard in Smartlead, Salesloft, or Instantly. Clay's own FAQ still recommends pushing to those tools for advanced needs. Teams that already pay for a sequencer will keep using it; teams getting started may find the native Sequencer sufficient until they scale past 1-2 mailboxes.


