In a world where Power BI Embedded starts at ~$750/month but adds per-user licensing complexity, Izenda’s pricing story whispers: “We are the boring, reliable partner for B2B SaaS. You grow, we don’t tax your growth.”
Once upon a time, in the early 2010s, the business intelligence market was ruled by giants like Tableau, Qlik, and Microsoft Power BI. They were beautiful, powerful, and expensive. But they had a blind spot: they were built for analysts , not for software vendors .
Enter Izenda.
But here’s the deep twist: Izenda didn’t charge per end user . Unlike Tableau ($70/user/month), Izenda charged by server instance or CPU cores in the cloud, plus a flat fee for the platform. Why? Because Izenda’s real customer was the software company , not the end customer of that software. The software vendor didn’t want a per-seat model that destroyed their margins.
So Izenda’s pricing story became: “We align with your business model.” If you have 10,000 customers each with 50 users, Izenda’s price stays flat. That’s a powerful narrative.
That’s the deep story of Izenda pricing. It’s not a price list. It’s a business model mirror.
As software shifted to multi-tenant SaaS, Izenda realized its on-prem model wouldn’t survive. Customers didn’t want to manage servers; they wanted an API. So Izenda launched a cloud-embedded version. Pricing became subscription + usage-based for the first time.
Open-source BI tools like Metabase, Superset, and Apache Doris started eating the low end. Izenda responded by adding a free tier for developers (cloud sandbox, 3 reports, limited data) and a freemium path to paid plans. But the catch: Izenda’s real lock-in wasn’t the engine—it was the embedding and white-labeling features. Competitors charged 2–5x for SSO, tenant isolation, and custom branding. Izenda bundled them into mid-tier plans ($25k–$50k/year).