If you’re searching “SavvyCal pricing”, you probably want the number. Pricing changes, so rather than guessing and being wrong, here’s a better approach: how to evaluate the plan based on your workflow.
SavvyCal is usually a good fit when…
- You do a lot of 1:1 scheduling and care about a thoughtful booking experience.
- You’re fine paying for a premium tool because scheduling is part of your job (sales, consulting, recruiting).
- You want features that feel “polished” rather than the absolute cheapest option.
Questions to ask before paying
- Is pricing per person (per seat)? If so, what happens at 5, 10, 25 teammates?
- Which tier includes the features you’ll actually use every week (routing, branding, team features)?
- Do you need group availability (seeing when multiple people are free), or only 1:1 booking links?
If you schedule as a team (not just as a person)
Team scheduling often becomes “coordination” rather than “booking”. If your pain is finding overlapping availability across multiple people, look at tools built around shared availability.
Here’s a direct comparison you can skim: TimeLync vs SavvyCal.
A kind rule of thumb
Pay for what reduces daily friction. If a tool saves you a few minutes every day and helps meetings happen without stress, it’s usually worth it. If you’re paying mostly to remove small limits, it’s worth reconsidering.