Short version: Booksy is a good product with unusually honest pricing – $29.99 a month, every feature included, no tiers. The catch is not hidden fees; it is $20 a month for every extra person on your team, payments locked to Booksy’s own rails, and a marketplace you are renting your customer relationship from. Bookafy is $7 or $11 per user, runs payments through your Stripe, and has no marketplace at all. Which is exactly why it is not for everyone.
What Booksy actually costs in 2026
Straight from Booksy’s own pricing page, checked today:
- $29.99/month + tax for the first user. All features included – no higher tier to unlock anything.
- +$20/month per additional team member.
- Card processing: 2.49% + $0.10 with the Booksy card reader, 2.49% + $0.20 tap to pay, 2.69% + $0.30 for mobile and keyed-in payments.
- Payouts: next business day is free; 30-minute payouts cost 1.5%.
- Hardware: Stripe Reader M2 $53.10, BBPOS WisePOS E $219.85, plus shipping.
- Boost: free to switch on, then a one-time 30% commission on a Boost client’s first visit.
- Texts: 2,000 SMS marketing messages a month included; confirmations and reminders always free.
The number that decides it: team size
Bookafy is free for one user, then $7/user/month on Pro and $11/user/month on Pro+ (Pro+ adds HIPAA/BAA and a second SMS reminder). Booksy is $29.99 for the first person and $20 for every person after. So the two prices diverge fast:
| Team | Booksy | Bookafy Pro ($7/user) | Difference / year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $29.99/mo | $0 (free) or $7 | ~$360 |
| 3 people | $69.99/mo | $21/mo | ~$588 |
| 5 people | $109.99/mo | $35/mo | ~$900 |
| 10 people | $209.99/mo | $70/mo | ~$1,680 |
None of that includes processing. A five-chair shop turning over $30,000 a month on cards pays roughly $750 in Booksy processing at 2.49% + $0.10. On Bookafy that money moves through your own Stripe account at whatever rate you have negotiated, and Bookafy takes 0% of it.
The three real arguments for leaving
1. Your payment processor should be yours
On Booksy, payments run on Booksy. That is convenient – and it means your rate is their rate, your payout timing is their timing (or 1.5% to get paid today), and your transaction history lives inside someone else’s platform. Bookafy connects to your own Stripe account. Deposits, prepayments and no-show fees land in your account, at your rate.
2. The marketplace cuts both ways
Booksy’s app genuinely brings salons and barbers new clients. It also puts your business in a shop window next to your competitors, and Boost charges 30% of a new client’s first visit. Booksy is upfront about this and even tells you to share your own profile link so your regulars do not get counted. Read that sentence again, though: you have to actively manage your own clients away from the marketplace to avoid paying for them.
3. Booksy is built for a chair. A lot of businesses are not.
If you are a consultant, a clinic, a law firm, a university department, an agency or a sales team, the salon shape does not fit. You want round-robin across a team, skill-based routing so only the qualified person gets offered, buffers, group bookings, and a booking page in your own brand. That is what Bookafy is – and round robin plus skill-based routing are on the $7 plan, not an upsell.
Bookafy vs Booksy, side by side
| Bookafy | Booksy | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free (1 user); $7/user/mo; $11/user/mo | $29.99/mo + $20/mo per extra member |
| 5-person team | $35/mo | $109.99/mo |
| Payments | Your own Stripe, 0% commission to Bookafy | Booksy payments, 2.49%-2.69% + fee |
| Commission on new clients | None | Boost: 30% of first visit (optional) |
| SMS reminders | Included; 2nd reminder on Pro+ | Included |
| Round robin + skill-based routing | Yes, on Pro | Not really – built around individual chairs |
| Consumer marketplace | No | Yes – a real strength |
| POS, card reader, retail, gift cards | No | Yes |
| HIPAA + BAA | Yes, on Pro+ | Not positioned for it |
| Languages | 32 | Several |
| White label (own brand/URL) | Yes, for larger accounts (paid setup) | No |
Where Booksy wins – and you should stay
- The marketplace. If people find you by searching the Booksy app, that is new revenue Bookafy cannot replace. We have no marketplace and we will not pretend otherwise.
- The till. Card readers, tap to pay, retail, gift cards, loyalty cards. Bookafy has none of it.
- Walk-in salon flow. Booksy is built by people who understand a barbershop floor. It shows.
- Solo, and staying solo. At one user, $29.99 for everything is a fair price and switching is not worth your evening.
Who should switch
Switch if you already own your demand and you are being charged like you do not:
- Salons, barbers and studios whose clients come from Instagram, Google and word of mouth – not the Booksy app
- Teams of four or more, where the $20-per-head line has quietly become the biggest software bill you have
- Anyone who wants deposits and prepayments in their own Stripe account at their own rate
- Clinics and practitioners who need HIPAA and a BAA
- Any business that is not a chair: consultants, clinics, advisers, agencies, universities, sales teams
Bookafy has been doing appointment scheduling for over a decade, syncs both ways with Google and Outlook, takes deposits through your Stripe, sends reminders by text and email, and books in 32 languages. Start free, move your services over, and see what your bill looks like next month.
Common questions
How much does Booksy cost?
Booksy’s own pricing page says $29.99 a month plus tax, plus $20 a month for each additional team member. Every feature is included at that price – there are no tiers. On top of that sit card processing fees (2.49% + $0.10 with their card reader, 2.49% + $0.20 tap to pay, 2.69% + $0.30 keyed in), an optional 1.5% fee for 30-minute payouts, card reader hardware ($53.10 or $219.85 plus shipping), and Boost, which is free to switch on but charges a one-time 30% commission on a Boost client’s first visit.
Is Bookafy cheaper than Booksy?
On the subscription line, yes, and the gap widens with team size. A five-person shop pays $109.99 a month on Booksy ($29.99 + four extra users at $20) versus $35 on Bookafy Pro. Ten people: $209.99 versus $70. The bigger difference is payments – Bookafy runs on your own Stripe account at your own rate and takes no commission.
What is Booksy Boost and does it cost me anything?
Boost promotes your profile inside the Booksy consumer marketplace. Booksy says it is free to turn on and charges a one-time commission of 30% of the total cost of a Boost client’s first visit. Booksy’s own FAQ advises sharing your personal profile link with existing clients so you are not charged a commission when Boost is on. If Boost brings you a genuinely new client, 30% of one visit can be a fair trade. It is worth understanding before you switch it on.
Will I lose my clients if I leave Booksy?
The clients you brought yourself are yours – they book with you, not with a marketplace. What you give up is the discovery: people browsing the Booksy app who find you and book cold. Bookafy has no marketplace and sends you zero new customers. If a meaningful share of your bookings come from Booksy search, that is real revenue and you should weigh it honestly.
Does Bookafy work for a salon or barbershop?
Yes, for the booking side – services with different durations, staff calendars, buffers, deposits through Stripe, and text reminders included. What it does not have is a till, retail inventory, or gift cards. If you sell product over the counter, you will still need something for that.
Are text reminders included in Bookafy?
Yes. SMS reminders are part of the plan rather than metered credits, and Pro+ adds a second reminder before the appointment.
Pricing above is list price taken from Booksy’s own website in July 2026 and may have changed – check biz.booksy.com/pricing before you decide.
More honest comparisons
We wrote one of these for every major booking tool, with real pricing and the parts where we lose.
- Bookafy vs Calendly
- Bookafy vs Acuity Scheduling
- Bookafy vs Setmore
- Bookafy vs Microsoft Bookings
- Bookafy vs Square Appointments
- Bookafy vs SimplyBook.me
- Bookafy vs Vagaro
- Bookafy vs Doodle
- Bookafy vs Fresha
- Bookafy vs Mindbody
- Bookafy vs Cal.com
- Bookafy vs YouCanBookMe
- Calendly vs Acuity vs Setmore vs Bookafy
Keep reading
If you have not settled on a category yet, start with the overview of appointment scheduling software — what it does, what it costs, and when you should buy something else entirely.
Written for your situation
- Salon booking software
- Barber shop appointment software
- Spa scheduling software
- Nail salon software
- Fitness appointment scheduling software
- Class booking software
Other honest comparisons
- YouCanBookMe alternatives
- Cal.com alternatives
- Mindbody alternatives
- Fresha alternatives
- Doodle alternatives
- Vagaro alternatives
Also useful: every Bookafy integration — what is native, what needs Zapier, and what we do not do — and the pricing page, where the feature matrix is the real answer to “is that included”.