Originally Posted On: https://1800officesolutions.com/guide/how-much-do-managed-it-services-cost-2026-pricing-guide/
Quick Answer
The Bottom Line on Managed IT Pricing
per user/month for most SMBs with 10 to 50 employees
Most small businesses with 10 to 50 employees pay between $100 and $250 per user per month for managed IT services. Your number depends on how many people you’ve got, your compliance obligations, the service tier you pick, and whether cybersecurity comes bundled in.
Service Tiers
Pricing by Service Tier
| Tier | Per User/Month | What’s Included | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic Help Desk | $75–$110 | Remote support, monitoring, patching | Companies with internal IT who need backup |
| Standard Managed IT | $110–$175 | Full management, backup, security basics, IT planning | Most small businesses (10-50 users) |
| Premium + Compliance | $175–$275 | HIPAA/PCI compliance, 24/7 SOC, priority response, vCIO | Healthcare, legal, and finance firms |
| Full-Stack + Cyber | $200–$400 | All of the above plus advanced threat detection, MDR, incident response | Regulated industries, multi-location companies |
The jump from Standard to Premium isn’t about getting “better” IT. It’s about compliance. If your industry has regulatory requirements like HIPAA for healthcare, PCI DSS for payment processing, or SOC 2 for SaaS companies, the compliance overhead adds 30 to 50 percent to your base cost.
And that’s worth it. A single HIPAA violation can cost $50,000 or more per incident. We’ve seen it happen to medical offices trying to cut corners on IT compliance.
Company Size
Total Monthly Cost by Company Size
Per-user pricing tells one part of the story. What does your total monthly bill look like? Here’s a realistic breakdown based on contracts we’ve handled:
| Company Size | Users | Monthly Range | Annual Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup / Micro | 1–10 | $750–$2,500 | $9,000–$30,000 |
| Small Business | 10–25 | $1,500–$5,000 | $18,000–$60,000 |
| Growing SMB | 25–50 | $3,500–$10,000 | $42,000–$120,000 |
| Mid-Market | 50–100 | $7,500–$20,000 | $90,000–$240,000 |
| Enterprise SMB | 100–250 | $15,000–$50,000 | $180,000–$600,000 |
Something we notice all the time: companies in the 25-to-50 user range get the best bang for their buck. You’re big enough to benefit from volume pricing but not so big you need custom enterprise agreements. Our team has set up dozens of these contracts. The sweet spot for most businesses tends to land around $125 to $175 per user.
Sweet spot per-user pricing for companies with 25 to 50 employees
Quick note on minimums. Most providers won’t take a client with fewer than 5 users. And if you’ve got fewer than 10, you’ll often pay a flat monthly minimum (usually $1,000 to $1,500) instead of pure per-user pricing.
Pricing Models
How Providers Actually Charge You
Not every MSP prices the same way. And the model they use can shift your total cost by thousands per year. Here are the six models you’ll run into when getting quotes:
Per-User Pricing
Fixed cost per employee. The most predictable and scalable option. We recommend this for most SMBs with 10 to 250 users.
Per-Device Pricing
Charge by laptop, server, or printer. Works for mixed environments but gets pricey if you’ve got employees bringing their own devices.
Tiered Packages
Bundled services at fixed levels (Starter, Pro, Enterprise). Simple to understand, but you might pay for services you don’t use.
All-Inclusive Flat Rate
One monthly price for unlimited support. Best for stable environments under 50 users where nothing changes much month to month.
A La Carte
Pick and pay for only the services you need. Flexible, but watch your bill or costs creep up fast.
Break-Fix (Hourly)
Pay per incident. Cheapest upfront, most expensive long-term. Fine for tiny shops with minimal IT needs. Risky for everyone else.
Cost Factors
Hidden Costs That Inflate Your Bill
Here’s where a lot of business owners get burned. The monthly per-user price looks reasonable during the sales pitch. Then the extras start piling up.
We’ve reviewed hundreds of managed IT contracts over the years. These surprise charges show up in most of them:
Watch Out for These Surprise Expenses
- Onboarding fees: Expect 1 to 2 months of service cost upfront for network documentation and initial setup
- Hardware markup: Providers often charge 20 to 40 percent above retail when they buy equipment for you
- Project work: Migrations, upgrades, and custom deployments can run $5,000 to $40,000 per year on top of your monthly fee
- After-hours surcharges: Need help at 9 PM on a Friday? Many plans tack on a 50 to 100 percent premium for evening and weekend support
- Per-incident fees: Some “basic” plans cap the number of support tickets included. Go over and you’re paying per ticket
- Auto-renewal traps: Watch for contracts that auto-renew at higher rates. Always check the cancellation policy before signing
So what do you do about it? Ask for a detailed service schedule (sometimes called an SOW or Statement of Work) before you sign anything. A good one lists every included service, every response time commitment, and every possible add-on cost. If a provider won’t give you one, walk away. Seriously.
Price Drivers
What Pushes Your Price Up or Down
Two businesses with the same headcount can get very different quotes. Why? Because pricing depends on a lot more than just how many people you’ve got.
Number of Users
More users means a lower per-user cost (volume discounts), but your total monthly spend goes up.
Compliance Requirements
HIPAA, PCI DSS, or SOC 2 compliance adds 30 to 50 percent for auditing tools and specialized configurations.
Support Availability
24/7 support with guaranteed SLAs costs 20 to 40 percent more than business-hours-only coverage.
Multiple Locations
Multi-site deployments add monitoring overhead, travel costs, and management complexity to your contract.
On-Site vs. Remote
Having a technician show up in person costs a lot more than remote-only management. Budget accordingly.
Infrastructure Age
Running Windows Server 2012 or a 10-year-old firewall? Older gear means more hands-on work, and that costs extra.
Industry matters too. Healthcare, legal, and financial firms pay 25 to 50 percent more because of specialized tooling and expertise. And if you need advanced cybersecurity (things like MDR, threat intelligence, or penetration testing), that alone can add $5,000 to $50,000 or more per year.
The Real Risk
What Happens When You Don’t Invest in IT
Some business owners look at managed IT pricing and think, “We’ll just handle it ourselves.” We hear this a lot. And we get it. These numbers aren’t small.
But here’s what the other side of the equation looks like.
The average cost of a data breach for small businesses hit $140,000 in 2025. That’s a 13% jump from the year before. And the recovery time? About 21 business days. Close to a full month of disrupted operations, lost revenue, and stressed-out teams scrambling to figure out what happened.
Average cost of a data breach for small businesses in 2025
One of our clients, a 35-person accounting firm, came to us after a ransomware attack took their network down for 12 days. They’d been using a break-fix provider who hadn’t updated their firewall firmware in two years. The recovery cost them over $90,000 between the ransom payment, forensic investigation, and lost billable hours.
Their managed IT contract with us? $4,900 a month. The math writes itself.
And it’s not just breaches. Unplanned downtime from any cause (hardware failure, software crashes, internet outages) costs businesses about $5,600 per minute according to Gartner. Even a few hours of downtime per year adds up fast when you run the numbers.
Business Model Comparison
Managed IT vs. Break-Fix vs. In-House
Which IT model makes sense for your business? We hear this from nearly every prospect who calls. Here’s how the three options compare for a company with about 25 users:
| Factor | Break-Fix | Managed IT | In-House IT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly Cost | $0–$2,000 (unpredictable) | $2,500–$6,250 (fixed) | $8,000–$15,000+ (salary + benefits) |
| Response Time | Hours to days | 15 min to 4 hours (SLA) | Immediate (if they’re in) |
| Cybersecurity | Minimal or none | Included | Requires buying separate tools |
| Scalability | Poor | Excellent | Requires more hiring |
| 24/7 Monitoring | No | Yes | Depends on staffing |
| Strategic Planning | No | vCIO included | Only if you hire a senior person |
For businesses under 50 users, managed IT costs less than hiring in-house. Think about it: one full-time IT employee runs $50,000 to $70,000 a year in salary alone, plus benefits, payroll taxes, training, and tool licenses. And when they’re sick or on vacation? You’ve got nobody.
But with managed IT, you’re getting an entire team for $30,000 to $75,000 a year depending on your tier and size. That’s the math most of our clients end up doing before they make the switch.
Break-fix sounds cheap. And it is, until something breaks. Then you’re paying $150 to $250 per hour with no guarantees on response time and no proactive monitoring preventing the next problem.
Why Choose Us
Why Businesses Pick 1800 Office Solutions
We’re not the cheapest option out there. We’re also not the most expensive. But here’s what we bring to the table that most providers don’t:
One Vendor, One Bill
IT, copiers, and cybersecurity bundled together. No more juggling three vendors with three contracts and three invoices.
Local Support Nationwide
We’ve got boots on the ground across the country. Our technicians understand regional compliance requirements and can show up when you need them.
1,100+ Verified Reviews
That’s not a marketing number. It’s from real businesses we’ve worked with over 20+ years.
Free Network Assessment
No-obligation IT audit before you commit. We’ll identify risks and give you a transparent pricing proposal.
Flexible Terms
No long-term lock-in contracts. Scale up or down without penalty. We keep clients because they want to stay, not because they’re stuck.
Bundled Savings
Combining IT, copiers, and cybersecurity with one vendor saves 15 to 25 percent vs. working with separate providers.
Next Steps
How to Get a Quote (Without the Sales Runaround)
Getting managed IT pricing doesn’t need to be a three-week process with four meetings and a demo you didn’t ask for. Here’s what we recommend:
Count your users and devices
Know how many employees you’ve got and roughly how many endpoints (laptops, desktops, phones, servers) before you call anyone
List your compliance needs
Do you fall under HIPAA, PCI DSS, SOC 2, or any state-specific data regulations? This is the single biggest price factor
Get 3 to 5 proposals
Compare per-user cost, included services, SLAs, and upfront fees across multiple providers
Ask for the SOW
A detailed Statement of Work shows exactly what’s included, what’s not, and what every add-on costs
Take the free assessment
Any reputable provider will do a no-obligation network audit. If they won’t, that tells you something
And one more thing. Watch out for providers who won’t give you a straight answer on pricing until they’ve run you through weeks of discovery calls. Good providers can give you a ballpark range on the first conversation based on your user count and industry. The detailed proposal comes after the assessment, but you deserve a general idea upfront.
Frequently Asked Questions
Managed IT Pricing FAQs
What’s the difference between per-user and per-device pricing
Per-user pricing charges a fixed amount per employee regardless of how many devices they use (laptop, phone, tablet). Per-device pricing charges for each endpoint on its own. For most SMBs with standard setups, per-user pricing is simpler and more predictable. Per-device works better for organizations with lots of shared equipment, but the cost can add up fast.
Does managed IT include hardware replacement
Not usually. Most plans cover software management, monitoring, and support, but hardware procurement is a separate charge. Some providers offer flat-rate packages with hardware included for an extra monthly fee. Always ask upfront whether equipment replacement is part of the deal or if you’ll pay a markup on new computers and networking gear.
Is there a minimum number of users
Most managed IT providers set a 5 to 10 user minimum. Some will take smaller teams, but you’ll often pay a flat monthly minimum instead of per-user pricing. As you scale from 10 to 50+ users, the per-user cost tends to drop because of volume discounts.
What happens if we outgrow our plan
Scaling is simple with most providers. You add users to your existing plan and your monthly bill adjusts to match. Good providers build this into the agreement with no ramp-up fees. Just confirm scaling terms and any transition costs before you sign.
Does managed IT cost less than hiring an in-house IT person
For most businesses under 50 users, yes. A salaried IT employee costs $50,000 to $70,000 per year plus benefits and overhead. Managed IT runs $30,000 to $75,000 per year depending on your tier and company size, and you get a full team instead of one person who can’t be in two places at once.
Are there setup or onboarding fees
Yes, most providers charge onboarding fees equal to 1 to 2 months of service. This covers network documentation, security baseline setup, and migration work. Some vendors roll onboarding into the first month’s bill. Ask for the full cost breakdown before you commit.
What if we need help outside normal business hours
Standard plans cover 8 AM to 6 PM with email or ticket support after hours. 24/7 support with guaranteed response SLAs costs 20 to 40 percent more. Emergency after-hours calls may come with surcharges even on 24/7 plans. Get those response time commitments in writing before something goes wrong.
How do we know if we’re getting a fair price?
Get 3 to 5 proposals from different providers and compare per-user cost, included services, SLAs, and upfront fees side by side. Your industry, compliance requirements, and infrastructure age all affect pricing. A free network assessment (like the one we offer) helps you understand your current gaps and what a fair price looks like for your specific situation.