Standard
Contact vendor for exact pricing and packaging details.
Plan type: Commercial. Billing period: Custom.
Scalefusion publicly lists four UEM plans billed annually: Essential at $2 per device per month ($24 annually), Growth at $3.50 per device per month ($42 annually), Business at $5 per device per month ($60 annually), and Enterprise at $6 per device per month ($72 annually). The official pricing page also states that the free trial lasts 14 days with full feature access and that cloud deployments do not carry setup fees.
Scalefusion uses a Per-device pricing, four tiers model. Your bill scales with managed devices or endpoints, which means cost is predictable when that metric is stable but can grow quickly during expansion. A 14-day free trial, full feature access, no credit card required.
Use this Scalefusion pricing page to understand commercial fit, rollout assumptions, and where pricing conversations need more detail.
Scalefusion publishes pricing for 4 tiers: Essential ($2/device/month, or $24 billed annually), Growth ($3.50/device/month, or $42 billed annually), Business ($5/device/month, or $60 billed annually), Enterprise ($6/device/month, or $72 billed annually).
Per-device pricing is predictable for stable environments but compounds during onboarding bursts or acquisitions. Clarify whether a device counts from enrollment or only once fully managed, and whether you can reduce device count mid-term. Most vendors lock counts annually, so over-provisioning in year one is money that doesn't come back.
Pricing source: official pricing page, verified 2026-03-14.
Scalefusion pricing should be evaluated in the context of rollout scale, admin ownership, and the commercial metric that drives expansion cost over time.
Pricing pages should help buyers understand not just what the vendor charges, but what implementation scope, support needs, and operational complexity mean for total ownership. Use this page to frame vendor conversations before final procurement.
The Essential tier ($2/device/month, or $24 billed annually) is the right starting point for smaller teams or pilots — it covers the core workflows without paying for enterprise governance most teams won't need in year one. Mid-tier options (Growth ($3.50/device/month, or $42 billed annually), Business ($5/device/month, or $60 billed annually)) suit teams that need added automation or reporting depth.
The Enterprise tier ($6/device/month, or $72 billed annually) makes sense when you specifically need what it unlocks — typically automation depth, advanced integrations, or compliance-level reporting. If the main reason to upgrade is more capacity, check whether a mid-tier with add-ons delivers better cost efficiency.
Contact vendor for exact pricing and packaging details.
Plan type: Commercial. Billing period: Custom.
Identify whether Scalefusion cost grows by devices, then model the bill if that number doubles in 18 months. That figure is more useful than the first quote.
Ask explicitly whether implementation support, premium SLAs, advanced reporting, or integrations with your existing stack are extras. Those additions often close the gap between tiers faster than plan descriptions suggest.
First-year Scalefusion pricing often includes promotional discounts or bundled minimums that don't carry forward. Ask for the standard renewal rate and whether it's indexed to usage growth or a flat percentage uplift.
Scalefusion publicly lists four UEM plans billed annually: Essential at $2 per device per month ($24 annually), Growth at $3.50 per device per month ($42 annually), Business at $5 per device per month ($60 annually), and Enterprise at $6 per device per month ($72 annually). The official pricing page also states that the free trial lasts 14 days with full feature access and that cloud deployments do not carry setup fe...
Yes — 14-day free trial, full feature access, no credit card required. Use the trial to validate the product fits your environment before committing to an annual contract.
Scalefusion charges per device or endpoint. Cost is predictable for stable environments but can compound quickly during onboarding or fleet expansion — clarify whether mid-term reductions are allowed before signing.
Value depends on how well the product fits your workflows and whether the tier you actually need is priced proportionately. The clearest test is comparing it against one direct alternative at the same budget — if Scalefusion covers more of your critical workflows at comparable cost, it belongs on the shortlist.
Use the next pages below to move from pricing back into category context, product detail, alternatives, comparisons, and glossary terms.
Return to the category hub when the team needs broader buying context before narrowing further.
Use the ranked shortlist when you want to see how this product compares against the strongest options in the same category.
Check the commercial model, official pricing notes, and what to validate before procurement treats the pricing as settled.
Use alternatives when the product is credible but the buying team still needs stronger pressure-testing against competing fits.
Use comparison pages once the shortlist is specific enough for direct vendor-to-vendor evaluation.
Use glossary terms when the product page raises category language that needs a clearer operational definition.
Use research to pressure-test category assumptions before the vendor narrative gets too far ahead of the buying criteria.