Pricing Feature Matrix
A detailed breakdown of features available across pricing tiers for both platforms — so you know exactly what you're paying for at each level.
| Feature / Capability |
GitBook
|
Help Scout
|
|---|---|---|
| Free Plan Available | Yes (1 user, limited) | Yes (1 inbox, 25 contacts/mo) |
| Entry Paid Plan Cost | $65/site + $12/user/month | $25/user/month |
| Custom Domain | $65/site add-on (Plus+) | Standard plan ($25/user) |
| AI Features | Ultimate tier only | AI Drafts on Plus ($50/user) |
| SSO / SAML | Paid tiers | Pro only ($65/user, 10+ users) |
| HIPAA Compliance | Pro plan only | |
| Knowledge Base / Docs Sites | Per-site pricing ($65/site) | 1–10 Docs sites (plan-dependent) |
| Advanced Analytics | Paid tiers | Plus plan ($50/user) |
| API Access | Paid tiers | Standard plan ($25/user) |
| Version Control | Git-based (all paid tiers) | |
| Multi-Language Support | Partial (manual only) | |
| Auto-Translation | ||
| Multi-Tenant Portals | ||
| Help Desk / Shared Inbox | Core product feature | |
| Embeddable Widget | Beacon widget (all plans) | |
| Video-to-Docs Conversion | ||
| Built-in LMS / Certifications | ||
| Audit Logs | Higher tiers | Pro plan |
| Priority / Dedicated Support | Ultimate (custom) | Pro ($65/user, annual, 10+ users) |
Data as of February 2026. Pricing based on publicly available information from each vendor's website. GitBook's 2024–2025 pricing restructure introduced per-site fees. Help Scout's Pro plan requires annual billing and a minimum of 10 users.
Strengths & Weaknesses
Deep Dive
An in-depth analysis of the three most critical pricing dimensions for teams evaluating GitBook and Help Scout — value for money, scalability costs, and hidden limitations.
GitBook's free plan is genuinely useful for open-source projects and solo developers, but paid tiers escalate quickly. The Plus plan charges $65/site plus $12/user/month — a 5-person team with 3 documentation sites pays $225/month minimum before any optional features. Help Scout's Standard plan at $25/user/month bundles KB and help desk together, making it a reasonable deal for support teams. However, AI features require upgrading to Plus ($50/user/month), doubling your per-seat cost. For pure knowledge base value, neither tool delivers compelling ROI at scale compared to purpose-built alternatives.
GitBook's per-site pricing model is its biggest scalability problem. A company managing 10 documentation sites on the Plus plan pays $650/month in site fees alone — before factoring in per-user costs. Help Scout's per-user model creates a different scalability ceiling. A 20-person support team on Plus pays $1,000/month and gets only 2 Docs sites. The Pro plan ($65/user/month, 10+ users, annual billing only) unlocks up to 10 Docs sites and enterprise security, but at $650+/month for 10 users, it's priced as a premium product. Both tools become expensive as teams and documentation needs grow.
GitBook's 2024–2025 pricing restructure introduced custom domain fees that previously didn't exist at that level — teams migrating from older plans face significant cost increases. AI capabilities (GitBook Assistant, adaptive content, MCP server) are gated behind the custom-priced Ultimate tier, making it impossible to budget predictably. Help Scout's hidden cost is the minimum-user requirement on Pro — you cannot access HIPAA compliance, enterprise SSO, or more than 2 Docs sites without committing to 10 users on an annual plan. Both tools also lack video-to-docs conversion, multi-tenant portals, and built-in LMS — meaning teams with those needs must pay for additional platforms on top.
Pricing Breakdown
Side-by-side breakdown of every pricing tier for GitBook and Help Scout — including what's included, what's gated, and what it costs at team scale.
GitBook and Help Scout serve fundamentally different use cases, which makes direct pricing comparison tricky. GitBook's per-site model works for small teams with one or two documentation sites but becomes expensive at scale. Help Scout's per-user model is reasonable for support teams that want a bundled KB and help desk, but the AI features, enterprise security, and additional Docs sites are all gated behind higher tiers. Neither tool offers a predictable, scalable pricing model for teams managing documentation across multiple clients or products. GitBook edges ahead for developer documentation value; Help Scout wins for support-focused SMBs that need inbox + KB in one place. For teams that need transparent, scalable documentation pricing — including AI, multi-tenant portals, and video conversion — Docsie's workspace-based AI credit model is a stronger alternative.
Our Recommendation
GitBook is purpose-built for developer documentation with Git-native workflows — its pricing reflects that specialization, with per-site fees rewarding teams that maintain a small number of technical docs. Help Scout is a help desk platform with a bundled knowledge base — its per-user pricing makes sense for support teams but becomes costly for larger organizations that primarily need documentation management. Both tools have genuine strengths in their respective niches, but both share meaningful gaps that matter to enterprise documentation buyers.
Choose GitBook if you need...
Choose Help Scout if you need...
Choose Docsie if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Both GitBook and Help Scout leave the same critical gaps unfilled regardless of which pricing tier you choose — no video-to-docs conversion, no multi-tenant client portals, no built-in LMS with certifications, and no auto-translation at scale. Docsie's AI credit model ($199/month for teams of 15, $750/month for teams of 90) avoids both the per-site fees that make GitBook expensive and the per-user inflation that makes Help Scout costly for larger teams. More importantly, Docsie delivers the full CONVERT → MANAGE → DELIVER → LEARN → AUTOMATE → MONITOR workflow in a single platform — covering use cases that neither GitBook nor Help Scout were built to address.
Common Questions
Q: Why did GitBook's pricing change so significantly in 2024–2025?
A: GitBook restructured its pricing in 2024–2025 to a per-site plus per-user model, introducing a $65/site fee for custom domains that was previously included at lower cost. This change was intended to better align pricing with the value of hosting multiple documentation sites, but it significantly increased costs for teams with more than one or two sites. Teams on older plans saw their effective monthly bills increase substantially, making GitBook less competitive for multi-site documentation use cases.
Q: Does Help Scout's free plan include a real knowledge base?
A: Yes, Help Scout's free plan includes one Docs site with unlimited articles and the Beacon widget for in-app contextual help. However, it caps you at 25 contacts per month and one shared inbox, which limits its utility for growing teams. The knowledge base functionality itself is not capped on articles, but the free plan is better suited for very early-stage teams or as a trial than for ongoing production use at scale.
Q: How expensive does GitBook get with multiple documentation sites?
A: Costs escalate quickly. With three documentation sites on the Plus plan, you're paying $195/month in site fees alone — before any per-user costs. A 10-person team with five documentation sites pays $325/month in site fees plus $120/month in user fees, totaling $445/month minimum. Teams managing documentation for multiple products or clients can easily exceed $500–$1,000/month on GitBook before reaching AI features, which require the custom-priced Ultimate tier.
Q: What is the minimum cost to get HIPAA compliance with Help Scout?
A: HIPAA compliance is only available on Help Scout's Pro plan, which requires a minimum of 10 users and annual billing at $65/user/month. That means the minimum annual commitment for HIPAA compliance is $7,800/year (10 users × $65 × 12 months). There is no monthly billing option on the Pro plan, and you cannot access HIPAA compliance with fewer than 10 users — making it impractical for smaller healthcare teams.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both GitBook and Help Scout for documentation at scale?
A: Yes — Docsie is purpose-built for teams that have outgrown both platforms. Where GitBook is optimized for developer API docs and Help Scout for help desk + simple KB, Docsie covers the full documentation lifecycle. Its workspace-based AI credit pricing ($199–$750/month flat) avoids per-site and per-user fee escalation. Crucially, Docsie adds capabilities neither competitor offers at any price — video-to-docs conversion, multi-tenant client portals, built-in LMS with certifications, 100+ language auto-translation, and real-time compliance monitoring. Try it free at docsie.io.
Q: Can I use GitBook for customer-facing help center documentation like Help Scout?
A: GitBook can publish public documentation sites, but it is not designed as a help desk or customer support platform. It lacks a shared inbox, ticketing system, Beacon-style contextual widget, and the customer conversation workflows that Help Scout provides natively. GitBook is optimized for developer-facing technical documentation rather than support-oriented help centers. If you need both a customer support inbox and a knowledge base, Help Scout is the more practical choice between the two — though neither matches a purpose-built knowledge management platform for complex documentation needs.
Docsie offers transparent workspace pricing with no per-site fees and no per-user inflation — plus capabilities neither GitBook nor Help Scout offer at any price. Convert training videos into structured knowledge bases, deliver them through multi-tenant branded portals, train teams with a built-in LMS, and monitor compliance in real time. All in one platform, across 100+ languages.
Free AI credits included — convert a 10-minute training video with no credit card required.
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