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CyberSygn Pricing Math: Why Solo Is $12, Studio Is $29, and the Rest

None of these prices were guessed at a whiteboard. Each number is the deliberate answer to one specific question you can verify yourself.

CyberSygn carries four prices: Solo at $12 a month, Studio at $29 a month, Origin at $9 a month for the first hundred operators, and Lifetime at $299 paid once for the first fifty. At a glance that spread looks arbitrary. Once you understand the CyberSygn pricing math, though, you see that every tier is anchored to a deliberate calculation rather than a hunch. Each figure answers one underlying question, namely what this is worth to you weighed against what you can actually afford, and the reasoning stays plain enough that a calculator and two minutes will confirm it. In the sections below, you will see the exact math behind every price alongside an honest e-signature cost comparison against the rivals. That way you can judge whether the tier in front of you is a real deal or merely a number on a page.

Why Solo Is $12: The 7-to-1 Value Rule

Solo only has to clear one bar: an independent operator who signs roughly five contracts a month should read the price as an immediate, obvious yes. Walking through the arithmetic shows why that bar is easily cleared. Start with five contracts, and assume about twenty minutes saved on each, because field detection places everything for you instead of forcing you to drag boxes around by hand. That adds up to one hundred minutes saved every month. Now attach a number to your time. At a careful $50-an-hour effective rate, those hundred minutes represent roughly $83 of recovered value against the $12 you actually spend to capture it. That calculation returns about seven dollars for every dollar you commit, and a ratio that lopsided reads as a decisive win rather than a close call. Nobody agonizes over a seven-to-one deal, because the decision makes itself. This is value-based pricing in its plainest form, where the price tracks the hours you save rather than some arbitrary list of features bolted on to justify a higher number. Five contracts a month, importantly, is the floor of the calculation and never the ceiling. Sign fifteen and the economics tilt almost comically in your favor. Solo bundles unlimited documents, so the value compounds as your volume grows while the monthly price stays perfectly flat. There is a second, separate reason $12 holds up. Look at the indie SaaS pricing surrounding it and you will find most solo-tier rivals charging somewhere between $15 and $25 for a thinner product. So even before you run the time math, an e-signature cost comparison already puts $12 as the cheaper option on the page. Cheaper paired with better is a strong place to stand.

Why Studio Is $29: Three Seats for Less Than One Rival Seat

Studio is built for a small team rather than a single person, so the underlying e-signature pricing logic shifts accordingly. The tier costs $29 a month for three seats, which works out to under ten dollars per seat once you spread it across the people actually using it. Now run the comparison directly. Per-seat rivals routinely charge around $25 for each seat, so equipping three people through them lands near $75 a month, while the same three seats through CyberSygn cost $29 in total. That is less than half the price, and you are not accepting a stripped-down version to reach that figure. The plan still includes the shared workspace and bulk send that a real team relies on week after week. Consider who the Studio buyer actually is: a two or three person shop, a small agency, or a founder paired with an assistant or two. They process considerably more contracts than a lone operator, and they need continuous visibility into one another's work. The shared workspace consolidates the entire team into one place, so no contract gets lost in somebody's personal inbox, while bulk send dispatches many agreements at once, a feature busy teams come to depend on heavily. So $29 reads as a straightforward yes for any real team workflow, because you are spending less than one rival seat to equip three people. The same e-signature cost comparison that makes Solo look inexpensive makes Studio look like an outright bargain. That is the whole CyberSygn pricing math working exactly as designed, with the arithmetic quietly doing the selling for us.

Why Origin Is $9: The CyberSygn Pricing Math for the Early Few

Origin exists for the early operators who arrive first, and it is built to reward that early trust. The tier is $9 a month, locked for the life of your account, which works out to a $3 discount against Solo. It is capped at the first hundred operators, a limit that keeps the unit economics workable while still feeling like a real reward for showing up early, and once those hundred seats are claimed the tier closes for good. Why lock the rate forever? Because anyone who buys a young product before it is proven is taking a genuine risk, and freezing their price is how the business says thank you and actually means it. That lock is also a quiet conversion lever. An operator weighing $9 against a rival's $20-plus solo tier sees the same e-signature cost comparison that powers Solo, only with an even wider gap and a rate that can never creep upward. For the early few, the cheapest entry point on the page is also the one that stays cheapest indefinitely.

Why Lifetime Is $299: Two Years Up Front, Then Free Forever

Lifetime is $299 paid a single time. Work through the numbers and that amounts to roughly two years of Solo settled up front, after which you never pay another cent, not in year three and not in year ten. The longer you stay, the more decisively the arithmetic tips in your favor. This is precisely where the difficult pricing decisions startup founders constantly wrestle with finally get carefully balanced. The cash collected up front helps the business stay independent and advertising-free, while the locked rate and the one-time price protect the early operator, so both sides come out ahead and neither feels squeezed. It is value-based pricing pointed in two directions at once, rewarding loyalty without compromising the runway that keeps the product alive. Four prices, four clear questions, four clear answers. That is the whole CyberSygn pricing math, built on straightforward value-based pricing with no mystery, no padding, and no surprise line item arriving later. These are simply numbers you are welcome to check for yourself.

Ready to try it?

CyberSygn Solo. $12/month. Unlimited.

Solo at twelve dollars a month is the natural default for a single operator, bundling unlimited documents and automatic detection on every upload. Running a small team instead? Studio is twenty-nine dollars a month for three seats with shared bulk send included. Try CyberSygn free on your very next contract and run the math yourself before you commit a single dollar.

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