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Common Questions

ReadMe vs Slite: FAQ

Pricing Questions

Q: How does ReadMe pricing compare to Slite for a team of 25 people?

A: For a team of 25, ReadMe's Business plan costs $349/month flat regardless of team size, while Slite Premium would cost $312.50/month ($12.50 × 25). They're surprisingly close in cost at that scale, but ReadMe is for API documentation portals while Slite is for internal wikis — they're not directly comparable products. For larger teams, Slite's per-member model scales more expensively, while ReadMe's flat pricing becomes more cost-efficient.

Q: Is AI included in the base price for ReadMe and Slite?

A: Slite includes Ask AI (unlimited) on its Standard plan at $8/member/month — a genuine value. ReadMe gates its entire AI suite (Agent Owlbert, Ask AI search, doc auditing) behind the Business tier at $349/month. If AI-powered documentation is a priority, Slite offers better value at entry-level pricing, though its AI is limited to internal knowledge retrieval only.

Q: What hidden costs should I watch for with ReadMe and Slite?

A: With ReadMe, the key hidden cost is the Business tier requirement ($349/month) to unlock features like SSO, analytics, AI, and review workflows that competitors include at lower tiers. With Slite, per-member pricing is the scaling trap — 100 users on Premium equals $1,250/month for internal wiki functionality only. Both tools also require additional platforms for customer-facing documentation, video production, and multi-language support, adding indirect costs.

Q: Does ReadMe or Slite offer a free trial?

A: ReadMe offers a free plan (1 project, 3 versions, 5 admins) but no free trial on paid plans. Slite offers both a free plan (up to 50 docs) and a 14-day free trial on paid plans. If you want to evaluate the full feature set before committing, Slite's free trial is more useful for assessing paid capabilities.

Choosing the Right Tool

Q: Can ReadMe or Slite handle multi-client documentation delivery?

A: Neither ReadMe nor Slite supports multi-tenant portals where one knowledge base powers multiple branded customer-facing portals. ReadMe is designed for a single developer portal per project, and Slite is strictly internal — it has no customer-facing publishing capabilities whatsoever. Teams needing to deliver documentation to multiple clients simultaneously would need to look beyond both tools.

Q: Is there a better alternative to both ReadMe and Slite for enterprise documentation?

A: Yes — Docsie addresses the core limitations of both tools in one platform. Unlike ReadMe, Docsie isn't limited to API documentation and supports multi-tenant portals, 100+ languages, video-to-docs conversion, and built-in LMS. Unlike Slite, Docsie publishes customer-facing knowledge bases with custom branding and doesn't charge per-member fees that inflate at scale. Docsie's $199/month Premium plan includes 15 users, 300,000 AI credits, and 3 custom domains — making it a more complete solution for enterprise knowledge management than either competitor at a comparable or lower price point.

Deep Dive

How ReadMe and Slite Compare in Detail

Value for Money

ReadMe and Slite represent opposite ends of the pricing spectrum. Slite delivers strong value at the lower end — unlimited docs, AI-powered Q&A, and doc verification for just $8/member/month on Standard. ReadMe's Startup plan ($79/month flat) is reasonable for API teams, but value drops sharply at Business ($349/month), where you're paying primarily for AI features, SSO, and analytics that most platforms include at lower price points. Neither tool offers multi-tenant portals or video-to-docs capabilities at any price, making both poor value for enterprise knowledge management use cases regardless of plan tier.

Scalability Costs

Slite's per-member model creates a hidden scaling problem. A team of 100 on Premium pays $1,250/month — more than ReadMe's Business tier — but for internal wiki functionality only. ReadMe's per-project model is more predictable at scale for API documentation teams, but its $3,000+/month Enterprise tier represents a dramatic cost jump with no public pricing transparency. Both tools lack the workspace-based pricing model that modern teams prefer for multi-client or multi-department documentation delivery. Companies scaling beyond 50 users on Slite or needing Enterprise features on ReadMe will find costs escalate faster than value delivered.

Hidden Costs and Limitations

ReadMe's most significant hidden cost is the Business tier requirement for features that appear standard elsewhere — AI search, analytics, SSO, and review workflows all require the $349/month minimum. Slite's hidden costs emerge at scale with per-member pricing and at the enterprise level where audit logs, advanced analytics, and dedicated support require custom Enterprise contracts. Both tools share a more fundamental hidden cost — neither can replace a technical writer for documentation creation, meaning teams still need external resources for content production. There's also no video conversion, multi-language support, or client portal delivery at any price point on either platform.

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