GoHighLevel AI Employee Pricing: Is $50-$97 Per Location Worth It?
GoHighLevel's AI Employee sits outside every base plan and is billed per location, then again per minute of use. This guide walks the real math per client and shows where included AI wins.
What the AI Employee actually is
The AI Employee is GoHighLevel's bundle of AI features: a voice agent that answers and makes calls, a conversation bot that handles chat and SMS, content and review tools, and a few workflow helpers. On paper it turns your CRM into something that can talk to leads on its own. That is the same job an AI receptionist does, and it is the reason so many agencies want it.
The important thing to understand up front is that the AI Employee is not part of the platform you already pay for. It is a separate product layered on top of your base subscription. You can run GoHighLevel for months on funnels, pipelines, and automations and never touch it. The moment you want the AI to answer a phone or reply to a text on its own, you are buying a new line item.
That structure matters because it changes how you should think about the cost. You are not upgrading a plan. You are adding a per-location product and then paying for every minute and message it uses. For a single business that can be fine. For an agency running many clients, the shape of the bill is very different, and that is where people get surprised.
The per-location price, plus usage on top
GoHighLevel prices the AI Employee per location. Reported figures put it at around $50 per month per location on the Growth option and around $97 per month per location on the Unlimited option, or a usage-based route reported at roughly $0.02 to $0.05 per minute instead of the flat fee. A location is one client account, so the number you care about is per client, not per agency.
On top of that seat cost, you pay for what the AI does. Usage is rebilled at cost: SMS runs around $0.0079 per segment, email around $0.675 per 1,000, and calls around $0.014 per minute. The voice AI specifically is reported at roughly $0.163 per minute in platform cost, which many agencies resell at around $0.40 per minute. None of that is included in the seat price. It stacks.
So the true monthly cost of one AI-enabled client is the per-location fee plus its share of calls, texts, and emails. A quiet client might barely move the usage meter. A busy one that takes real call volume can push the per-minute charges well past the seat fee. When you quote a client, you are quoting a floor, not a ceiling, and the ceiling depends on how much the AI actually works.
Why margin shrinks as you add clients
The per-location model behaves nicely for one client and badly for ten. Every client you onboard adds another seat fee, so the AI Employee cost grows in a straight line with your client count. There is no volume relief built into the seat price, so the tenth client costs about the same to enable as the first.
A 10-client agency running the flat-rate AI Employee is reported to pay around $970 per month in AI Employee fees alone. That figure is before a single minute of voice, before SMS, before email, and before your GoHighLevel base plan, which starts at $97 per month and runs to $297 or $497 depending on tier. Stack the base plan and the usage on top and the AI line becomes one of your largest recurring costs.
This is the quiet trap in add-on pricing. It feels affordable when you are testing it on one account. Then you win clients, which is the whole point, and the thing you were selling as a differentiator becomes the thing eating your margin. The more successful you are at putting AI in front of clients, the more the seat fees compound, so growth and cost move together in the wrong direction.
When the AI Employee is genuinely worth it
There is a clear case where paying for the AI Employee makes sense: you are already deep in GoHighLevel. If your funnels, email campaigns, pipelines, and snapshots all live there, and your team already knows the platform, then bolting AI onto that existing setup keeps everything in one place. You avoid a second login and a second system, and for a funnel-heavy agency that convenience can be worth the seat fee.
It also holds up better for a small number of high-value clients than for a large roster of thin-margin ones. If each client pays you enough that a $50 to $97 seat plus usage is a rounding error in their retainer, the math is comfortable and the integration is a real advantage. The pain only shows up at scale, or when the clients are price-sensitive.
Be honest about which situation you are in. GoHighLevel is strong at the things around the AI: the funnel builder, the template and snapshot library, and deep email and SMS automation. If those are the reason you are on the platform, the AI Employee is a reasonable add-on to an already good fit. If the AI is the main thing you want and the rest is secondary, the add-on model is working against you, and that is the case for looking elsewhere.
The alternative where AI is included, not added
SeldonFrame takes the opposite approach. The AI receptionist is not an add-on you buy per location. It is the product, and it is included. For $29 per month flat you get the receptionist across voice, chat, and SMS, plus a website, CRM, booking, reviews, a client portal, and custom domains, all agency-branded. Workspaces are unlimited, your first workspace is free forever, and you can cancel anytime. There is no free trial gate.
The reason it stays flat is the mechanism underneath: SeldonFrame runs on your own AI keys and your own Twilio account, so the calls and messages bill at raw provider cost with no platform markup. You are not paying a reseller margin on every minute. That is how the AI can be included instead of metered into a seat fee that grows with every client you add.
The honest framing is value, not just the smaller number. One booked job from an answered call usually pays for the month. A full client workspace is generated from a single conversation in about three minutes, so the setup cost in time is close to zero. If you are running a roster of clients and the AI receptionist is the thing you actually want in front of them, included AI on flat pricing keeps your margin intact as you grow, which is exactly where the per-location model starts to hurt.
Use the free tool that pairs with this guide — no signup required — then build the AI front office that handles it for you.
Agencies reading GoHighLevel comparisons are often really pricing an agency stack. The other side of that decision is selling AI agents to clients at a flat platform cost instead of per-sub-account fees — this site's builder library covers pricing, white-labeling, and where to sell.
Frequently asked questions
Is GoHighLevel's AI Employee included in the base plan?
No. The AI Employee is a separate add-on that sits outside every base plan. You pay your Starter, Unlimited, or Agency plan first, then buy the AI Employee on top of it, and then pay usage for calls, texts, and emails on top of that.
How much is the AI Employee per location?
It is priced per location, meaning per client account. Reported figures are around $50 per month per location on the Growth option and around $97 per month per location on the Unlimited option, with a usage-based route reported at roughly $0.02 to $0.05 per minute as an alternative. Voice and messaging usage is billed separately at cost on top.
What is a cheaper AI receptionist for multiple clients?
SeldonFrame includes the AI receptionist in a flat $29 per month with unlimited workspaces and the first workspace free forever, so the cost does not grow per client the way a per-location add-on does. It runs on your own AI keys and Twilio, so calls and messages bill at raw provider cost with no platform markup.
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