How Much Does It Cost to Build a SaaS Platform in 2026?

One of the most common questions founders ask before starting a SaaS venture is how much it will cost. The honest answer is that it depends on dozens of variables, but that is not helpful when you are trying to plan a budget and raise capital. This article provides a realistic, itemized breakdown of what it costs to build a SaaS platform in 2026, from the initial MVP through a production-ready product with paying customers.

We have worked with startups at every stage through our custom software development and startup MVP development services, and the cost ranges below reflect real-world project data, not theoretical estimates.

The Short Answer: Cost Ranges by Complexity

Before diving into the details, here are the ballpark ranges for different types of SaaS products:

These ranges assume you are working with an experienced development team. A solo technical founder building on evenings and weekends can reduce the direct cost to near zero, but the opportunity cost of a longer timeline must be factored in.

Development Team Costs

The largest line item in any SaaS budget is the team that builds it. Here is what different team configurations cost in 2026:

In-House Team

Hiring full-time engineers is the most expensive option upfront but gives you the most control. In major tech markets, expect annual salaries of $120,000 to $200,000 for senior backend engineers, $110,000 to $180,000 for senior frontend engineers, and $140,000 to $220,000 for engineering managers. Add 25 to 35 percent for benefits, payroll taxes, and equipment. A minimum viable team of two to three engineers costs roughly $400,000 to $700,000 per year fully loaded.

Development Agency

Agencies charge anywhere from $100 to $300 per hour depending on location and expertise. A typical MVP engagement runs 500 to 1,500 billable hours, putting the total cost between $50,000 and $200,000. The advantage of an agency is speed: an experienced team can ship an MVP in eight to twelve weeks compared to three to six months for a newly hired team that still needs to gel.

Freelancers

Individual freelancers cost $50 to $200 per hour. While cheaper on an hourly basis, the coordination overhead of managing multiple freelancers and the risk of availability issues often offset the savings. Freelancers work best for well-defined, time-limited projects rather than ongoing product development.

Offshore Teams

Teams in Eastern Europe, South Asia, and Latin America charge $30 to $80 per hour. The lower rates can reduce your total budget by 40 to 60 percent, but factor in the cost of timezone differences, communication overhead, and potentially longer feedback cycles. The most successful offshore engagements pair a local product manager or technical lead with the remote development team.

Infrastructure and Hosting Costs

Cloud infrastructure costs scale with your user base, but here is what to expect at different stages:

MVP Phase (0-100 users)

Growth Phase (100-10,000 users)

Scale Phase (10,000+ users)

For guidance on optimizing your cloud spend, see our guide on cloud infrastructure for startups.

Third-Party Services and Tools

Modern SaaS products rely on a constellation of third-party services. These costs add up quickly and are often underestimated in initial budgets:

Budget $200 to $800 per month for third-party tools during the MVP phase, scaling to $1,000 to $5,000 per month as you grow.

Design and UX Costs

User experience is a competitive differentiator in SaaS. Poor UX increases churn and support costs. Here are typical design costs:

Using a pre-built component library like Shadcn, Radix, or Tailwind UI can reduce initial design costs by 30 to 50 percent while still producing a professional-looking product.

Legal and Compliance Costs

SaaS products that handle customer data must comply with privacy regulations. Budget for these common requirements:

Skip SOC 2 until you have enterprise customers asking for it. Focus on GDPR and basic legal documents from day one.

Hidden Costs Most Founders Miss

Technical Debt Repayment

Every MVP accumulates technical debt. Budget 20 to 30 percent of your post-launch development time for refactoring, performance optimization, and architectural improvements. If you skip this, your development velocity will slow to a crawl within 12 months.

Security Audits and Penetration Testing

A professional penetration test costs $5,000 to $25,000. Plan for at least one before launching to enterprise customers and annually thereafter.

Customer Support Tooling and Time

Early-stage founders often underestimate the time they will spend on customer support. Even with a small user base, expect to spend 10 to 20 hours per week on support inquiries, bug reports, and feature requests during the first year.

Data Migration and Integration

Customers switching from existing tools will need data migration support. Building import tools, writing data transformation scripts, and providing white-glove onboarding can cost $5,000 to $20,000 in engineering time per major customer.

How to Optimize Your Budget

Based on our experience building SaaS products across multiple industries, here are the most effective ways to reduce costs without sacrificing quality:

  1. Start with a focused MVP. The single biggest cost multiplier is scope. Every feature you add increases not just development cost but ongoing maintenance cost. Read our guide on how to build a startup MVP for a disciplined approach to scoping.
  2. Use managed services aggressively. Managed databases, authentication services, and serverless functions eliminate operational overhead. The higher per-unit cost is offset by zero operations staffing.
  3. Leverage open-source. In 2026, the open-source ecosystem covers nearly every SaaS component. PostgreSQL, Redis, Next.js, and hundreds of libraries are free and production-grade.
  4. Defer enterprise features. SSO, audit logs, custom roles, and compliance features are essential for enterprise sales but unnecessary until you have enterprise prospects asking for them.
  5. Use AI-assisted development. Code generation tools like GitHub Copilot and Cursor can improve developer productivity by 20 to 40 percent on routine tasks, reducing total development hours.

Building a Realistic Budget

Here is a realistic budget for a mid-complexity SaaS product from inception to first 100 paying customers:

This assumes working with an experienced development partner rather than a full-time team. Adjust upward if you are building in-house and downward if you are a technical founder building with a small team.

Conclusion

The cost of building a SaaS platform in 2026 ranges from under $20,000 for the simplest MVPs to over $500,000 for complex enterprise products. The most successful founders focus their budget on validating the core value proposition quickly and expand investment only after confirming product-market fit. Budget conservatively, scope aggressively, and always maintain enough runway for at least two iteration cycles after your initial launch.

Ready to Build?

Our engineering team can help bring your project to life.

Schedule a Free Consultation ►