monthly minutes = calls × average call minutes.
If your average call is 2–3 minutes and you get 300 calls/month, you’re usually in the 600–900 minute range.
Why most AI receptionist pricing uses volume tiers
A receptionist workflow has real compute + telephony costs and (often) human oversight costs. Vendors keep base pricing predictable by offering a package that covers a volume allowance (minutes/calls), then charging for additional usage.
- Low volume: mostly missed-call capture, basic booking, and simple transfers.
- Mid volume: steady lead flow, more routing rules, and more exceptions.
- High volume: peak seasons, multi-location operations, or call-heavy industries (property management, towing, medical).
Minutes vs calls vs conversations: what’s the difference?
The practical difference is how billing is measured, not what you get. When a vendor bills by minutes, it’s critical to understand what counts as a billable minute.
- Minutes: best for forecasting if your average call duration is stable.
- Calls: simpler on paper, but can hide a “fair use” duration cap.
- Conversations: sometimes includes SMS threads or multi-step flows; clarify definitions.
If you prefer a call-based mental model, see AI receptionist pricing per call.
Common call-volume tiers (example ranges)
Tiers vary by vendor, but these ranges are common enough to use for planning. Your “right” tier depends on your average call length and how often you transfer.
Pro tip: If you have multi-location routing, your call volume can be modest but your setup still needs more rules. That’s why some vendors separate platform/setup costs from usage costs. See pricing per location for the multi-site drivers.
How to forecast your tier in 5 minutes
Step 1: Pull three numbers
- Total inbound calls/month (from your phone system, call tracking, or receptionist logs)
- Average call duration (talk time)
- After-hours share (optional, but helps forecast peak weeks)
Step 2: Convert calls to minutes
Use: minutes = calls × average minutes. Then add a buffer for peak weeks.
- Example: 450 calls/mo × 2.5 minutes = 1,125 minutes
- Add 15% buffer for seasonality/marketing spikes → ~1,300 minutes
Step 3: Identify “volume multipliers” that increase minutes
- Long explanations: callers asking “How much?” and “What’s included?” can turn 1-minute calls into 4-minute calls.
- Bad routing: multiple transfers or “hold while I check” patterns.
- Too many questions: scripts that collect nice-to-have data on every call.
A good call flow reduces minutes by capturing only what matters and routing cleanly. If you’re mapping your flow, use this routing checklist.
Overages: what to ask before you sign
Overages aren’t “bad” (they’re normal), but surprises are. Ask these questions:
- What’s billable? Does time during transfers count? What about voicemails and hang-ups?
- Rounding rules: per-second billing vs rounding up to the minute.
- Peak protection: can unused minutes roll over, or can you temporarily burst to the next tier?
- Rate clarity: overage rate per minute/call and whether it changes at higher volumes.
When call volume tiers are the wrong model
Some businesses want a flat rate for predictable budgeting. Flat-rate works best when you have stable volume and a consistent script. If your call volume swings wildly (HVAC peak season, storms, etc.), a tiered plan can be safer—if overage pricing is transparent.
If you want a quick sanity check, start with our pricing FAQ and then compare against your call logs.
Next steps
- See pricing for packaging and typical setup options.
- Use the ROI calculator to estimate what one saved missed call is worth.
- Book a demo and bring your last 30 days of call data for an accurate tier recommendation.