Director Cloud Software Development at a manufacturing company with 201-500 employees
Real User
Top 20
2024-09-04T21:21:39Z
Sep 4, 2024
The pricing depends on the tier you are in. If you’re in enterprise support, there’s always someone who can support you. But if you’re in lower tiers or starter tiers, we have crossed that barrier anyway. In the initial days, if you’re not aware of how the OpenID solutions work, it’s probably hard to get started. Once you cross that barrier, it becomes easy. But you have to pay extra for technical support, which makes sense, but adoption might become harder for people who might not have experience with either Auth0 or Okta before.
The tool is cheaper compared to competing solutions. Those alternatives tended to be more expensive. Consequently, Okta purchased it because it was considerably cheaper. The solution even offered some free services while still providing excellent functionality. However, I'm unsure about the current pricing structure since Okta acquired it. Okta aims to make money, and it has faced security issues in the past.
There are different price levels: B2B, B2C, and enterprise. The basic plan is about $1,500 per month. The basic plan is good for our requirements. In the future, we might get the enterprise plan. I think Auth0 is worth the cost.
Pricing of Auth0 is a pain point. Their pricing model is very confusing, at least for an enterprise. I don't like their pricing model. I think it's too aggressive. It's not very cheap for a service that only does authentication. There are some cheaper services, and we find the negotiations with them to be pretty tough. One of the benefits of Auth0 is the SAML integration with SSO and other IDPs but it is priced very high. I would expect this ability to be included, because we pay them good money, and not priced the way it is priced today. This is one of the areas where we are not happy with Auth0.
I am pretty happy with the pricing model of Auth0. It is very clear for me. Considering our scale, the features that we are using, and additional features that we bought, we still find it great. If you split the costs for the whole year and calculate the number of people you needed to hire, it always comes out to be much lesser than what we would have spent on building our own solution.
Auth0 is a comprehensive identity management solution that securely authenticates and authorizes users on different platforms and applications. It offers seamless integration, easy configuration, and reliable performance for managing identity and access. Users appreciate its flexibility, scalability, and support for multi-factor authentication.
With robust documentation and excellent customer service, Auth0 enables developers to efficiently implement authentication and authorization...
The pricing depends on the tier you are in. If you’re in enterprise support, there’s always someone who can support you. But if you’re in lower tiers or starter tiers, we have crossed that barrier anyway. In the initial days, if you’re not aware of how the OpenID solutions work, it’s probably hard to get started. Once you cross that barrier, it becomes easy. But you have to pay extra for technical support, which makes sense, but adoption might become harder for people who might not have experience with either Auth0 or Okta before.
The tool is cheaper compared to competing solutions. Those alternatives tended to be more expensive. Consequently, Okta purchased it because it was considerably cheaper. The solution even offered some free services while still providing excellent functionality. However, I'm unsure about the current pricing structure since Okta acquired it. Okta aims to make money, and it has faced security issues in the past.
The product is expensive. I rate the product’s pricing a seven out of ten, where one is cheap and ten is expensive.
It is a relatively inexpensive product in the industry.
There are different price levels: B2B, B2C, and enterprise. The basic plan is about $1,500 per month. The basic plan is good for our requirements. In the future, we might get the enterprise plan. I think Auth0 is worth the cost.
I cannot comment on exact licensing costs because a different department handles it, but from my understanding, the solution is priced reasonably.
Pricing of Auth0 is a pain point. Their pricing model is very confusing, at least for an enterprise. I don't like their pricing model. I think it's too aggressive. It's not very cheap for a service that only does authentication. There are some cheaper services, and we find the negotiations with them to be pretty tough. One of the benefits of Auth0 is the SAML integration with SSO and other IDPs but it is priced very high. I would expect this ability to be included, because we pay them good money, and not priced the way it is priced today. This is one of the areas where we are not happy with Auth0.
I am pretty happy with the pricing model of Auth0. It is very clear for me. Considering our scale, the features that we are using, and additional features that we bought, we still find it great. If you split the costs for the whole year and calculate the number of people you needed to hire, it always comes out to be much lesser than what we would have spent on building our own solution.
There are licensing costs for this product. We have an enterprise agreement with Auth0.