Common Questions
Q: Why did Notion discontinue its AI add-on in May 2025?
A: Notion restructured its pricing in May 2025, bundling full AI capabilities (GPT-4 + Claude 3.7, AI Agents, Enterprise Search, meeting transcription) exclusively into its Business tier at $20/user/month. The standalone AI add-on was discontinued, and legacy users were grandfathered. Plus plan users now receive only a 20-response one-time trial — not ongoing AI access. This effectively doubled the per-user cost for teams that previously paid $10/user for Plus plus a separate AI add-on.
Q: Is ReadMe's $349/month Business plan worth it compared to its $79/month Startup plan?
A: For teams that need AI features, review workflows, SSO, and advanced analytics, the jump to $349/month is unavoidable — ReadMe gates all of those capabilities behind Business. The Startup plan at $79/month is a solid value for a single developer portal with a custom domain and API explorer, but it offers no AI and no collaborative review process. If your developer portal team relies on review workflows or Ask AI search, the $270/month premium for Business is the cost of entry.
Q: How does Notion's per-user pricing compare to ReadMe's flat-rate pricing for larger teams?
A: For small developer teams (under 10 people) working on a single API portal, ReadMe's flat $349/month Business plan is cheaper than Notion Business at $20/user. At 18+ users, Notion Business ($360/month) surpasses ReadMe Business in cost. However, the two tools serve different purposes — comparing them directly on price alone ignores that most teams using ReadMe are also using a separate internal workspace tool like Notion, meaning real-world costs are additive.
Q: Does ReadMe charge extra for team members beyond a certain limit?
A: ReadMe's published pricing does not expose per-seat limits for its Business tier — it operates as a flat per-project rate. Enterprise pricing is custom and negotiated based on usage requirements, project count, and support needs. For large organizations needing multiple projects, custom integrations, and dedicated SLAs, ReadMe Enterprise at $3,000+/month is the only published option, making mid-market teams with complex needs potentially underserved between Business and Enterprise tiers.
Q: Can I use Notion for API documentation instead of ReadMe to save money?
A: Notion can host API documentation as static pages, but it lacks ReadMe's core capabilities — interactive API explorers, live API testing, OpenAPI/Swagger import, versioned developer hubs, and changelog management. For internal API reference notes, Notion works. For a public-facing developer portal where your customers test API calls directly in the docs, ReadMe's interactive explorer is a meaningful capability that Notion cannot replicate regardless of the plan.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Notion and ReadMe for enterprise documentation teams?
A: Docsie is built for enterprise teams that have outgrown what either tool offers. Notion is an internal workspace without external delivery capabilities, and ReadMe is a developer portal tool without general knowledge management. Docsie combines video-to-docs conversion (processing any training video into structured documentation), multi-tenant portals for delivering branded knowledge bases to multiple clients simultaneously, 100+ language auto-translation, built-in LMS with certifications, and an AI credit pricing model that avoids per-seat inflation. For implementation partners, consulting firms, and enterprises managing documentation across multiple clients or languages, Docsie addresses gaps that neither Notion nor ReadMe can fill at any price point.
Deep Dive Analysis
Notion's Plus plan at $10/user/month offers solid collaborative docs but withholds all meaningful AI behind the $20/user Business tier — a 100% price jump. For a 10-person team, that means $2,400/year just to access AI features. ReadMe's $79/month Startup plan is genuinely good value for a single developer portal, but its Business tier at $349/month — required for AI, review workflows, and SSO — represents a 340% price increase. Both tools force significant upgrades to unlock their most differentiated features, making entry-level plans feel like trials rather than full products.
Notion's per-user model creates predictable but compounding costs. A 25-person team on Business pays $500/month ($6,000/year) — before any Enterprise negotiations. ReadMe's flat per-project pricing is more scalable for large teams on a single portal, but the moment you need multiple projects or hit Enterprise-tier requirements, costs jump to $3,000+/month with no published ceiling. Neither tool offers a consumption-based model that rewards efficient usage. Growing organizations using both tools simultaneously — a common pattern for companies needing both internal wikis and developer portals — face combined costs well above $500/month before reaching full capability.
Notion's biggest hidden cost is version history. The 7-day window on Plus means teams lose documentation history without upgrading, creating implicit pressure toward Business. ReadMe's hidden cost is its Enterprise tier — many features that competitors include at mid-market pricing (advanced security, dedicated support, custom integrations, SLAs) are gated behind $3,000+/month. Both tools also lack multi-language support entirely, meaning companies with global audiences must purchase separate translation services on top of their subscription. Neither offers video-to-documentation conversion, so teams paying for either still need additional tools to process training video content.
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