SuperOps pricing: what MSPs pay for the combined RMM and PSA platform

SuperOps publishes pricing for three tiers of its combined RMM and PSA platform, all on a per-technician model with unlimited endpoints. Starter is $79 per technician per month billed annually, Professional is $129 per technician per month billed annually, and Business is $159 per technician per month billed annually. A 21-day free trial is available with no credit card required. SuperOps also offers module-specific plans for practices that want RMM-only or PSA-only at lower per-technician rates — useful if the evaluation is replacing only one part of the existing stack.

The $79 Starter entry point is the lowest published rate among the major combined RMM+PSA per-technician platforms. Atera's equivalent MSP Pro tier starts at $129 per technician per month annually — a $50 per-technician gap. On a three-technician practice, that difference is $1,800 per year before factoring in which features each tier includes at those prices. Confirm during the 21-day trial that the Starter tier covers the specific workflows the practice runs, because the tier gap between Starter and Professional ($79 to $129) is meaningful and the right starting tier matters more than the entry headline rate.

Written by RajatFact-checked by Chandrasmita

Use this SuperOps pricing page to understand commercial fit, rollout assumptions, and where pricing conversations need more detail.

SuperOps pricing model: per technician, unlimited endpoints, published tiers

The Starter tier includes core RMM (monitoring, alerting, patch management for Windows and macOS, remote access, asset inventory) and core PSA (ticketing, basic billing, contract management, time tracking). It is the right tier for small practices, pilots, and MSPs that need the all-in-one foundation without advanced automation or reporting depth. The Professional tier adds deeper automation capabilities, more sophisticated reporting, additional integration options, and expanded AI features. The Business tier is for practices that need the full feature set including the most advanced automation policies, the deepest AI functionality, and enterprise-level account management tooling.

The per-technician model with unlimited endpoints means the bill does not grow as device count grows — only as technician headcount grows. For a practice adding clients and endpoints without adding technicians, the cost stays flat. This is the same structural advantage as Atera's model: compare the per-technician all-in cost against NinjaOne's per-device rate at the actual endpoint count to see where the crossover is. At typical MSP endpoint-to-technician ratios (100 to 400 endpoints per technician), SuperOps's per-technician model is substantially cheaper than per-device alternatives at equivalent feature levels.

Read the pricing through the buying motion, not only the packaging language.

SuperOps 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.

  • Clarify whether cost scales by endpoint, technician, site, or another metric.
  • Confirm what onboarding, premium support, or implementation services add to total spend.
  • Model pricing against the actual environment size expected over the next 12 months.

What each SuperOps tier includes and when to upgrade

For most small MSPs (2 to 8 technicians) starting on SuperOps, Starter is the right validation tier. Use it to confirm the RMM monitoring and alerting workflow, test the PSA billing against one or two real client invoices, and evaluate whether the AI alert triage reduces noise meaningfully in the practice's actual monitoring environment. If the trial reveals that the specific automation depth or reporting features the practice needs are locked to Professional, upgrading at annual commitment is straightforward — the difference is $50 per technician per month, which for a three-technician practice is $1,800 per year.

The Business tier ($159/tech/month annual) makes sense when the practice specifically needs the highest-tier automation policies, deepest AI feature access, or full enterprise account management features. For most small and mid-sized MSPs, Professional or Starter will cover the operational requirements without paying the Business premium. Before committing to Business at annual rates, verify that the features it unlocks are currently required rather than aspirational — the Professional-to-Business gap is $30 per technician per month, which accumulates to $1,080 per year on a three-technician team.

Standard

Contact vendor for exact pricing and packaging details.

Plan type: Commercial. Billing period: Custom.

Pricing checks before committing to a SuperOps annual contract

Validate PSA billing coverage against real client contract complexity during the trial

SuperOps's PSA handles standard flat-rate and time-and-materials billing well. Before committing to annual pricing, run the practice's actual billing configuration — client contract terms, service line items, invoice templates — through the trial environment to confirm the PSA handles the specific billing structures in use. Discovering a billing gap after the annual contract is signed is the most common SuperOps deployment friction point.

Check the integration list before the trial rather than after

SuperOps's integration ecosystem is growing but is narrower than Atera's or NinjaOne's. If the practice uses a specific documentation tool, backup platform, security vendor, or accounting system, verify that SuperOps supports it natively before the trial begins. If an integration is on the roadmap but not yet available, get a delivery timeline from the SuperOps team and decide whether the practice can operate without it while waiting.

Model the bill at the tier the practice actually needs — not just Starter

The $79 Starter rate is the entry point, but some practices will need Professional ($129) or Business ($159) for the features they actually use. Before comparing SuperOps against Atera or NinjaOne, identify which tier is required for the full feature set the practice needs, and compare at that tier. A three-technician practice on SuperOps Professional ($387/month annual) versus Atera MSP Pro ($387/month annual) is cost-equivalent — the comparison then shifts from price to platform quality and maturity.

Frequently asked questions

How much does SuperOps cost per month?

+

SuperOps charges per technician with unlimited endpoints. Combined RMM+PSA plans: Starter is $79 per technician per month billed annually, Professional is $129 per technician per month billed annually, Business is $159 per technician per month billed annually. Module-specific pricing (RMM-only or PSA-only) is available at lower rates for practices that do not need both modules. A 21-day free trial is available with no credit card required.

Does SuperOps offer a free trial?

+

Yes — SuperOps offers a 21-day free trial with no credit card required. The trial covers the full combined RMM+PSA platform. Use it to test RMM agent deployment, alerting configuration, PSA billing setup, and AI alert triage behavior in the practice's actual environment before evaluating commercial terms.

Is SuperOps cheaper than Atera?

+

Yes at the entry tier: SuperOps Starter is $79 per technician per month annual versus Atera MSP Pro at $129 per technician per month annual — a $50 per-technician difference. At mid-tier, SuperOps Professional ($129) and Atera MSP Pro ($129) are equivalent in price. The cost comparison then shifts to which platform delivers better value at that price point — which is a product quality question, not a pricing question. SuperOps wins on UI and AI features; Atera wins on integration ecosystem and maturity.

Does SuperOps have a free plan?

+

No — SuperOps does not offer a permanent free tier. The 21-day free trial is the pre-purchase evaluation path. After the trial, a paid subscription is required for continued use.

What is included in SuperOps's base pricing?

+

All combined RMM+PSA tiers include: RMM (monitoring and alerting, OS patch management for Windows and macOS, remote access, asset inventory, network discovery), PSA (ticketing, billing, contract management, time tracking, invoicing), and AI features (alert triage, ticket classification, remediation suggestions — with depth varying by tier). Backup and endpoint security are handled through integrations with third-party providers and are billed through those providers separately.

Continue through this software cluster

Use the next pages below to move from pricing back into category context, product detail, alternatives, comparisons, and glossary terms.

MSP Software

Return to the category hub when the team needs broader buying context before narrowing further.

Best MSP Software tools

Use the ranked shortlist when you want to see how this product compares against the strongest options in the same category.

SuperOps pricing

Check the commercial model, official pricing notes, and what to validate before procurement treats the pricing as settled.

SuperOps alternatives

Use alternatives when the product is credible but the buying team still needs stronger pressure-testing against competing fits.

Open related comparisons

Use comparison pages once the shortlist is specific enough for direct vendor-to-vendor evaluation.

Open the glossary

Use glossary terms when the product page raises category language that needs a clearer operational definition.

Open research reports

Use research to pressure-test category assumptions before the vendor narrative gets too far ahead of the buying criteria.