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Landingi Pricing Breakdown: Is It Worth It for Agencies?

A no-fluff breakdown of Landingi's pricing tiers, hidden agency costs, and whether the platform actually pays for itself when you're juggling 5, 10, or 50 client landing pages.

Listicler TeamExpert SaaS Reviewers
April 25, 2026
10 min read

If you run an agency, you've probably hit this moment: a client wants a landing page yesterday, your design team is buried, and the dev queue is three sprints deep. So you start shopping for a landing page builder. And somewhere in that search, Landingi shows up — promising drag-and-drop pages, A/B testing, and a friendly enough price tag.

But "friendly enough" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Agency pricing is a different beast than solo-founder pricing. You're not just paying for one account — you're paying for client sub-accounts, white-labeling, multiple domains, and the kind of volume that turns a $49/month plan into a $500/month commitment fast.

This is the breakdown nobody on Landingi's pricing page will give you. Plans, real costs, what's missing, and whether

Landingi
Landingi

The AI-powered landing page platform for high-volume campaigns

Starting at Lite from $29/mo (annual), Professional from $69/mo, Agency from $149/mo

is actually the right call for an agency in 2026.

The Short Answer Up Front

Landingi is worth it for small-to-mid agencies (3-25 clients) who need fast turnaround and don't want to babysit a developer. It stops being worth it once you cross ~30 active clients or need deep CRM integrations — at that point Unbounce or Instapage's agency tiers usually win on per-client economics, and HubSpot's landing pages start looking attractive if you're already in their ecosystem.

If you're running fewer than 5 client pages a month, it's overkill. A WordPress page builder will do the job for a quarter of the price.

Now the details.

Landingi's Plan Structure (As of 2026)

Landingi has restructured its pricing several times, and the current setup splits into four main tiers. Here's what they actually include — not the marketing version.

Lite (~$29/month, billed annually)

The entry tier. One user, ten digital assets (landing pages, popups, lightboxes), and 5,000 monthly visits. Custom domain is included, which is the bare minimum any builder should offer.

Verdict for agencies: unusable. You'll burn through 10 assets before you finish onboarding your second client. Skip.

Professional (~$69/month, billed annually)

This is where it gets interesting. Unlimited landing pages, unlimited visits, A/B testing, smart sections, and EventTracker for behavioral data. You also get more integrations and the ability to manage everything from one dashboard.

Verdict for agencies: workable for solo operators or two-person shops. The unlimited landing pages are the headline feature — but you're still capped at three users, which means your designer, copywriter, and account manager fight over seats.

Agency (~$149/month, billed annually)

The tier Landingi explicitly markets to us. Ten user seats, white-label functionality, sub-accounts for clients, and priority support. You can spin up a separate workspace per client and hand them limited-access logins to view results.

Verdict for agencies: decent, but "white-label" here is light. You can swap logos and use a custom domain for the editor, but it's not a fully reseller-ready product the way some platforms offer.

Unlimited / Custom

Quoted on demand. If you need more than 10 users or specific compliance features (HIPAA, advanced SSO), you're in this bucket. Expect $300-$600/month depending on what you negotiate.

The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About

The sticker price is only part of the math. Here's what catches agencies off guard.

Sub-Account Limits

The Agency plan gives you sub-accounts, but "sub-account" doesn't mean unlimited client workspaces. There are practical limits on how many you can usefully manage before the dashboard becomes a mess. If you're running 40+ active clients, the org-level navigation starts feeling clunky.

Add-on User Seats

Need an 11th user? That's an upcharge. Most agencies don't realize until they try to onboard a freelancer for a sprint that adding a temporary seat costs real money. Budget for this.

Custom Code & Smart Sections

Available on Professional and up, but if you want the kind of fine-grained control where you can drop in custom JavaScript for tracking or chat widgets without breaking the editor, you'll lean on these constantly. They work — but they're a feature gate, not a bonus.

Integrations

Landingi integrates with the usual suspects (Mailchimp, HubSpot, ActiveCampaign, Zapier), but some deeper CRM connections are paywalled to higher tiers or require Zapier as a middleman. If you're routing leads through Salesforce or a custom backend, factor in Zapier or Make costs on top.

How Landingi's Agency Plan Actually Performs

Let's do the math for a real agency scenario.

Scenario: 12 active clients, 2-4 landing pages per client per quarter, 3 internal users (designer, PM, copywriter), white-labeled client logins.

On the Agency plan at $149/month, you're paying roughly $12 per client per month for unlimited pages and managed access. That's hard to beat if your clients are paying you $500+/month for landing page work.

But here's the tension: if those same clients only need 1-2 pages a year, you're overpaying. The Professional plan at $69/month with shared access (no sub-accounts) might serve you better, even if it's less polished.

Where Landingi Wins

To be fair, the platform earns its place. A few areas it genuinely outperforms.

Speed of Build

The drag-and-drop is fast. Faster than Unbounce in my experience, and miles ahead of trying to build the same page in Webflow if you're not a Webflow specialist. For agencies that need to ship pages in hours, not days, this matters.

Template Library

Over 400 templates, organized by industry and use case. Most are decent. A handful are excellent. You'll customize heavily, but the starting point saves real time.

Smart Sections

Reusable components across pages. Update once, propagate everywhere. If you're maintaining 30 client pages with shared headers/footers, this alone justifies the upgrade from Lite to Professional.

EventTracker

Landingi's behavioral analytics work without needing GA4 wired up perfectly. For clients who can't or won't share their analytics, this is a useful fallback.

Where Landingi Falls Short

Form Logic

The form builder is fine for lead capture, but conditional logic and multi-step forms feel basic compared to dedicated tools. If your clients run quiz funnels or complex qualification flows, you'll want a separate form tool.

Client Reporting

The analytics dashboards are functional, but they're not built for client-facing reports out of the box. You'll still be exporting to Looker Studio or building your own dashboards in something like a reporting tool to make clients happy.

Mobile Editing

Like most builders, the mobile-responsive editing is responsive in theory, finicky in practice. Plan for QA time on every page.

Landingi vs The Alternatives

Nobody picks a tool in a vacuum. Here's how it stacks up against the competitors agencies actually consider.

Landingi vs Unbounce

Unbounce's agency plans start higher (~$200/month) but include AI-powered Smart Traffic and Smart Builder features that genuinely help conversion rates. If your clients pay for performance, Unbounce can justify the premium. If they pay for output, Landingi's better value.

Landingi vs Instapage

Instapage is enterprise-focused. Beautiful product, real performance edge on personalization and ad-to-page matching, but starts around $299/month and only makes sense if you're running serious paid traffic budgets. Most small agencies should skip it.

Landingi vs HubSpot Landing Pages

If you're already a HubSpot agency, their landing pages are "free" (bundled with your existing tier). They're not as fast to build, the templates are weaker, but the CRM tie-in is unbeatable. Don't pay for Landingi if you're using HubSpot for everything else — just use what's already there.

Landingi vs Webflow

Webflow is a different category entirely. More design control, harder learning curve, much better for sites and landing pages that need to feel premium. If you have a Webflow specialist on staff, use Webflow. If you don't, Landingi gets pages out the door faster.

For a deeper comparison of options, our best landing page builders for agencies roundup goes through specific use cases.

The Real Decision Framework

Forget the marketing pages. Here's the decision tree I'd actually use.

Pick Landingi Agency plan if:

  • You manage 8-25 active clients
  • Most need 2+ landing pages per quarter
  • You want white-label client access without engineering it yourself
  • You're charging clients enough that $12-15/client/month is rounding error

Pick Professional plan if:

  • You're a 1-3 person shop
  • Clients trust you with shared access (no sub-accounts needed)
  • You don't need 10 user seats

Skip Landingi entirely if:

  • You're already in HubSpot and have landing pages bundled
  • You have a Webflow specialist
  • You only build 1-3 pages a year per client (use a WordPress builder)
  • You need quiz funnels or complex form logic (you'll outgrow it fast)

What I'd Actually Do

If I were starting a new agency today and landing pages were core to my offering, I'd start on Landingi's Professional plan ($69/month) and run it for 90 days. If client volume justified it, I'd upgrade to Agency. If client volume was lower than expected, I'd downgrade or move to a WordPress + Elementor stack at a fraction of the cost.

The trap is signing up for the Agency plan on day one because it sounds professional. You're paying for capacity you don't have yet. Earn the upgrade.

For a closer look at Landingi's specific feature set and signup, check the

Landingi
Landingi

The AI-powered landing page platform for high-volume campaigns

Starting at Lite from $29/mo (annual), Professional from $69/mo, Agency from $149/mo

profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Landingi offer a free trial?

Yes — 14 days, no credit card required. Long enough to build 2-3 test pages and see if the editor fits your workflow. Use it. Don't trust screenshots.

Can clients edit their own pages on Landingi's Agency plan?

You can give clients limited access via sub-accounts, but most agencies turn this off. Letting clients edit live pages is a recipe for broken layouts and frantic Slack messages at 11 PM. Use it for view-only reporting access instead.

Is Landingi GDPR compliant?

Yes, with cookie consent banners and data processing agreements available. If you serve EU clients, this is non-negotiable, and Landingi handles it adequately. Verify the specifics with their sales team if you're handling sensitive data.

How many landing pages can I publish on the Professional plan?

Unlimited landing pages and unlimited visits on Professional and Agency tiers. The Lite plan caps at 10 digital assets, which is the main reason it's a non-starter for agencies.

Does Landingi handle A/B testing well?

The A/B testing tools are solid for headline, image, and CTA tests. They're not as advanced as Unbounce's Smart Traffic (which uses ML to route visitors), but they cover 90% of typical agency testing needs.

Can I use my own custom domain for client pages?

Yes, on every plan including Lite. You can connect multiple custom domains on Professional and above, which is essential for agencies running pages across different client brands.

What happens if I exceed my visitor limit?

On Lite (5,000 visits/month), pages stop serving when you hit the cap. On Professional and Agency, visits are unlimited, so this isn't a concern. Worth noting that very few agencies actually hit the Lite cap in testing — but it's a real failure mode in production traffic.

Is Landingi better than building landing pages in WordPress?

Depends on volume and skillset. WordPress with a builder like Elementor or Bricks is cheaper and more flexible if you have someone who knows it well. Landingi is faster and more standardized if you don't. For pure landing page work — not full sites — Landingi usually wins on time-to-publish.

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