Pricing Plans
A complete breakdown of pricing plans, included features, and what you actually get at each tier. Docsie charges per workspace with AI processing credits; Slite charges per team member for internal access.
For customer-facing documentation delivery, multi-tenant portals, video conversion, or multi-language support, Docsie is the only option—Slite simply doesn't offer these capabilities at any price. For pure internal wikis with small teams (under 25), Slite's per-user pricing can be cheaper. But teams over 30 users or needing external knowledge delivery will find Docsie's workspace model more economical and vastly more capable.
Value Comparison
Feature-by-feature comparison of what's included in each pricing tier. Focus on capabilities that actually deliver business value, not just feature checkboxes.
| Feature / Capability |
Docsie Premium ($199/mo)
Best Value
|
Slite Standard ($8/user × 25 = $200/mo)
|
|---|---|---|
| Video-to-Documentation Conversion | 300k AI credits (~10 hrs/mo) | Not available |
| Customer-Facing Portals | 3 branded sites with custom domains | Not available |
| Multi-Tenant Architecture | Unlimited portals per site | Not available |
| Multi-Language Support | 100+ languages with auto-translation | Not available |
| User Seats Included | 15 editors | 25 members (at $200/mo cost) |
| AI Chatbot for Customers | Included (agentic, tool calls) | Internal Ask AI only |
| Version Control | Full version history + inheritance | Page history only |
| Content Reuse & Templates | Reusable blocks + templates | Templates only |
| Embeddable Widget | In-app widget + help desk | Not available |
| API Access | Premium tier includes API | Not included (Premium+ only) |
| SSO (SAML/OAuth) | Organization tier ($750/mo) | Premium tier ($12.50/user) |
| Custom Branding | Included (white-label portals) | Not available |
| Storage | 50GB | Unlimited docs (no storage spec) |
| Analytics & Reporting | Page views, search queries, sessions | Premium tier only |
| Built-in LMS & Training | Course builder + certifications | Not available |
Pricing comparison assumes 25-user team for equivalent scale. Docsie $199/mo Premium vs Slite $200/mo Standard (25 × $8). Docsie includes video conversion, customer portals, and multi-language—Slite does not offer these at any price.
Value Analysis
Deep Dive
Beyond the sticker price—analyzing total cost of ownership, scalability economics, and hidden limitations that impact long-term value.
At 25 users, Docsie Premium ($199/mo) and Slite Standard ($200/mo) cost nearly the same—but Docsie includes video-to-docs conversion, multi-tenant customer portals with custom domains, 100+ language translation, AI chatbot, embeddable widgets, and version control. Slite provides an internal wiki with basic AI search. For external knowledge delivery, Docsie is the only option regardless of price. For pure internal wikis with teams under 15 users, Slite can be cheaper ($96-$120/mo). But once you need customer portals, multi-language support, or video conversion, Docsie delivers exponentially more value per dollar. The Premium tier includes capabilities that would require 3-4 separate tools (wiki + translation service + video tool + portal builder + LMS).
Docsie's workspace model becomes dramatically cheaper at scale because you're not paying per-seat. Organization tier ($750/mo) supports 90 users—equivalent cost would be $720-$1,125/mo for 90 Slite users. More importantly, Docsie's unlimited viewer model means external customers, partners, and trainees access portals at zero additional cost. Slite's per-member pricing punishes growth—every new team member costs $8-$12.50/month forever. For agencies serving multiple clients or enterprises with large training audiences, Docsie's economics are vastly superior. A consultancy with 30 internal staff serving 500 client users pays $750/mo on Docsie versus impossible economics on Slite (which doesn't support external portals anyway). AI credit top-ups ($140-$650 one-time) are far cheaper than adding seats.
Slite's biggest hidden cost isn't in the pricing—it's in the missing capabilities that force you to buy additional tools. No customer portals means buying a separate help center (Zendesk, Intercom). No multi-language means paying for translation services. No video conversion means hiring technical writers to manually document training content. No LMS means buying a separate training platform. Slite's "affordable" $8/user pricing becomes $30-50/user when you stack the necessary complementary tools. Docsie includes all six pillars (CONVERT, MANAGE, DELIVER, LEARN, AUTOMATE, MONITOR) in one platform. The only limitation is the 50-doc cap on Slite's free plan and API access requiring Premium tier. Docsie's AI credits are transparent and predictable—you know exactly what 10 hours of video costs before you process it.
Our Recommendation
Docsie and Slite aren't really competing on pricing—they solve fundamentally different problems. Slite is an internal team wiki with per-user pricing, great for small teams wanting clean collaboration. Docsie is a knowledge orchestration platform that converts video into multi-tenant customer portals with built-in LMS. At equivalent user counts, Docsie costs the same or less while delivering 10x the capabilities. The question isn't which is cheaper—it's whether you need internal-only collaboration or external knowledge delivery.
Choose Docsie for better value if you need...
Choose Slite for budget reasons if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Better value for most use cases. At similar total costs (25 users), Docsie delivers customer portals, video conversion, multi-language support, LMS, and unlimited external viewers—capabilities Slite doesn't offer at any price. Docsie's workspace model scales better for growing teams and multi-client scenarios. Only very small teams (under 10 users) doing pure internal collaboration should consider Slite's lower entry price. For documentation delivery, training, or external knowledge sharing, Docsie is the clear value winner.
Common Questions
Q: How much does Docsie cost compared to Slite for a 50-person team?
A: For 50 users, Slite Standard costs $400/mo ($8 × 50) or Premium costs $625/mo ($12.50 × 50). Docsie Organization tier costs $750/mo for up to 90 users—more expensive than Slite Standard but cheaper than Premium per-seat equivalent. However, Docsie includes video conversion, customer portals, multi-language, LMS, and unlimited external viewers. Slite offers none of these capabilities, so you'd need 3-4 additional tools making total cost $1,000-1,500/mo.
Q: What are AI credits and how much do they actually cost?
A: Docsie's AI credits power video conversion, translation, and content generation. Premium tier includes 300,000 credits/month (roughly 10 hours of Standard quality video conversion). If you need more, credit packs cost $140 for 200k credits, $350 for 500k, or $650 for 1M. Processing 30 hours of training video monthly costs ~$350 in top-up credits—far cheaper than hiring technical writers to manually document that content.
Q: Does Slite charge for external viewers like customers or partners?
A: Slite doesn't support external viewers at all—it's internal-only. You cannot create customer-facing portals, public documentation sites, or partner knowledge bases with Slite at any price tier. If you need to share knowledge with anyone outside your team, you must export content or use a different tool entirely.
Q: Which tool offers better ROI for consultancies serving multiple clients?
A: Docsie dramatically outperforms for consultancies. Multi-tenant architecture means one Organization subscription ($750/mo) powers unlimited branded client portals, each with custom domains and branding. Slite has no multi-tenant capability and no customer portals—consultancies would need separate instances per client (impossible) or manual content duplication. Docsie's ROI is exponential for agencies; Slite fundamentally cannot serve this use case.
Q: Can I avoid per-user pricing inflation with either tool?
A: Yes with Docsie, no with Slite. Docsie charges per workspace (15-90 users depending on tier) with unlimited viewers—add trainees, customers, or partners at zero cost. Slite charges per member forever—every person you add costs $8-12.50/month indefinitely. For teams expecting to grow or serving external audiences, Docsie's model avoids the SaaS tax trap.
Q: What's the true total cost of ownership including complementary tools?
A: For internal-only wikis, Slite's TCO is its subscription cost ($8-12.50/user). For external knowledge delivery, Slite forces you to buy a help center ($50-200/mo), translation service ($100-500/mo), video documentation tool ($100-300/mo), and LMS ($200-1,000/mo)—adding $450-2,000/mo. Docsie includes all of these in one platform, so TCO equals subscription cost ($199-750/mo). Docsie's TCO advantage grows with team size and feature requirements.
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