GitLab pricing decoded: 2026 buyer's guide to tiers, hidden fees, and the right plan
What GitLab actually costs in 2026
GitLab's paid tiers are per user, with Premium and Ultimate separated by advanced security, compliance, and portfolio needs. The pricing page rarely shows the full picture, so this guide combines the published tiers with the buyer-side notes that matter: hidden fees, contract minimums, the math at common team sizes, and how the price compares against the alternatives most procurement teams shortlist.
For procurement leaders building a renewal case or buying GitLab for the first time, the key questions are: which tier delivers the value you actually need, what does the invoice look like at your team size, and what unbudgeted costs (add-ons, overages, implementation) will surface in the first 90 days. The next sections answer each one with real numbers from the vendor's own pricing page.
Every GitLab tier, side by side
GitLab publishes 3 pricing tiers. Here is the full table, including notes on what each one gates and unlocks. Numbers source from the vendor's official pricing page as of 2026-05-16.
| Tier | Monthly | Annual equiv (per user) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | $0 | Entry source control and CI/CD. |
| Premium | $29 | $29 | Team productivity and control benchmark. |
| Ultimate | $99 | $99 | Security, compliance, and portfolio management. |
The cheapest paid tier (Premium) is where most teams start. If your usage stays under the limits of that plan, there's no reason to upgrade. Where teams typically get stuck: enterprise features like SSO, advanced reporting, or audit logs are usually gated to higher tiers, which can force an upgrade two or three tiers up even when the headline usage is modest.
Real monthly cost at your team size
Per-seat math on the cheapest paid tier. Each row is GitLab Premium at the published annual-equivalent price, multiplied by the team size. If you bill monthly instead of annually, expect to pay 15-25 percent more than these numbers.
| Team size | Monthly cost | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|
| 5 seats | $145/mo | $1740/yr |
| 10 seats | $290/mo | $3480/yr |
| 25 seats | $725/mo | $8700/yr |
| 50 seats | $1450/mo | $17400/yr |
| 100 seats | $2900/mo | $34800/yr |
These figures cover seat license only. Add 8-15 percent on top for typical add-on creep (AI features, premium support, integration consulting) before the renewal lands.
Hidden fees and gotchas on GitLab
The vendor pricing page is designed to sell, not to disclose. These are the cost lines that tend to surface only after the contract is signed:
- Compute minutes, storage, Duo AI, dedicated hosting, and support can change total cost.
The fix is procedural: before signing, ask the AE for a quote that includes implementation, premium support, and any add-on that's required for your specific use case (SSO, advanced reporting, dedicated success manager). What lands in the contract should match the calculator math above, not the headline seat price alone.
GitLab alternatives worth shortlisting
If GitLab comes back over budget or feature-poor for your use case, these are the alternatives buyers in the same category typically compare:
- GitHub: competes in the same devsecops platform. Compare its entry-tier price against GitLab's Premium before committing.
- Bitbucket: competes in the same devsecops platform. Compare its entry-tier price against GitLab's Premium before committing.
- Azure DevOps: competes in the same devsecops platform. Compare its entry-tier price against GitLab's Premium before committing.
The right way to compare: use the per-seat math at YOUR team size, not the headline list price. A tool that's 30 percent cheaper at 10 seats can be 20 percent more expensive at 100 seats once volume tiers kick in.
When GitLab is the right pick
Compare Ultimate against GitHub plus Advanced Security and CI/CD usage.
And when it isn't: if your team uses fewer than 5 of the tool's core features, the alternatives above will deliver the same outcome at lower cost. Run the per-tier cost calculator on the main pricing page for both candidates before committing.
The bottom line
GitLab starts at $29 per user/month on the Premium tier and scales through 3 published tiers. The number that matters for your renewal isn't on the marketing page: it's the per-tier math at your team size, plus the hidden-fee adders for the features you actually need. Use this guide's tables to model both before negotiating.
For the live calculator and the head-to-head comparison with GitHub, see the main GitLab pricing page.
Sources
Frequently asked questions
How much does GitLab cost in 2026?
GitLab starts at $29 per user/month on the Premium tier, with 3 published tiers in total. Use the per-seat math table in this guide to see the real monthly cost at your team size.
What's the biggest hidden fee risk with GitLab?
Compute minutes, storage, Duo AI, dedicated hosting, and support can change total cost.
Which GitLab alternatives should I shortlist?
GitHub, Bitbucket, Azure DevOps are the alternatives most procurement teams compare against GitLab. Run the per-seat math at your team size for each before committing.
Is the GitLab pricing on this page current?
Yes. GitLab's tiers were last verified on 2026-05-16 directly from the vendor's official pricing page. The "Last verified" date on the main pricing page reflects every refresh.