Rev Pricing Explained: What It Really Costs in 2026

Seunghun LeeUpdated Jun 13, 2026
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First-party disclosure: we build transcribe.so, a per-minute AI transcription service, so we have a horse in this race. We have worked the numbers straight from Rev's own pricing page and help center (checked June 13, 2026) and linked every figure. Verify before you buy.

Rev's pricing confuses people because there are really four price lists: pay-per-minute human, pay-per-minute AI, per-seat subscriptions, and a separate developer API. Add-ons stack on top of the human rate. Here is each price, then the real cost for five common situations.

The four Rev price lists

1. Pay-per-minute, human

  • Human transcription: $1.99 per audio minute. No surcharge for multiple speakers or accents. Claimed 99%+ accuracy, English only. (Rev pricing)
  • Add-ons stack on the $1.99 base: Rush +$1.25/min, Premium +$1.75/min, Verbatim +$0.50/min, Timestamping +$0.30/min, Instant First Draft +$0.10/min.
  • English captions: $1.99 per video minute. Spanish captions: $3.25/min.
  • Translated subtitles: $6.49–$15.99 per video minute by language ($6.49 Spanish/Hindi, $10.49 most European + Chinese, $15.99 Japanese/Korean). Video minutes are rounded up to the nearest minute.

2. Pay-per-minute, AI

  • AI transcription and AI captions: $0.25 per minute. Claimed "96%+" accuracy, delivered in minutes. No subscription required.

3. Per-seat subscriptions

From the Rev pricing page:

PlanMonthlyAnnual (per seat/mo)AI minutes/seat/moLanguagesSeats
Free$0$045English only1
Essentials$29.99$25.49 ($305.90/yr)5,000English + Spanishup to 3
Pro$59.99$47.99 ($575.88/yr)10,000, verbatim37+up to 5
EnterpriseCustomCustomUnlimitedAllUnlimited

Note the gates: verbatim AI and all 37 languages are Pro-only; API access requires a paid plan (subscription plans).

4. The Rev AI developer API (rev.ai)

A separate product with much lower rates (rev.ai/pricing): Reverb $0.20/hr, Reverb Turbo $0.10/hr, foreign-language $0.30/hr, with 5 free hours to start. If you are a developer, this is the cheapest Rev, and it is not the same as the rev.com consumer product.

Five real scenarios

For each, the cheapest correct Rev path, then the transcribe.so equivalent at the default Qwen3-ASR Flash rate of $1.44/hr ($0.024/min), checked June 13, 2026.

Scenario 1: Student, 3 hours of lecture audio a month, English

  • Rev AI pay-per-minute: 180 min x $0.25 = $45/month ($540/yr).
  • Rev Free plan: 45 minutes only, so not enough.
  • transcribe.so: 180 min x $0.024 = about $4.32/month ($52/yr), no subscription.
  • Verdict: transcribe.so, by roughly 10x. A subscription is wasted at this volume.

Scenario 2: Podcaster, 10 hours a month, English, wants speaker labels

  • Rev AI pay-per-minute: 600 min x $0.25 = $150/month ($1,800/yr).
  • Rev Essentials (annual): $25.49/mo covers 5,000 min, far more than 600. $305.90/yr. Diarization included.
  • transcribe.so: 600 min on GPT-4o Transcribe Diarize (best speaker labels) at about $0.054/min = about $32/month ($388/yr); on Qwen3 Flash, about $14/month.
  • Verdict: transcribe.so on the metered rate; if you prefer a flat plan, ours (Plus $12/mo) or Rev Essentials both work. Essentials is fine here because podcasts are usually English.

Scenario 3: Researcher, 10 hours a month of Korean interviews

  • Rev: AI Korean requires the Pro plan ($47.99/mo annual, $575.88/yr) since Essentials is English + Spanish only. Human transcription is not available for Korean (Rev human is English-only and cancels non-English files).
  • transcribe.so: 600 min on Qwen3-ASR Flash (2.07% Korean FLEURS WER) at $0.024/min = about $14/month ($173/yr), no plan gate.
  • Verdict: transcribe.so decisively. This is the scenario where Rev's language gating hurts most.

Scenario 4: Legal team needs a certified verbatim transcript of a 1-hour deposition

  • Rev human, verbatim, with timestamps: ($1.99 + $0.50 + $0.30) x 60 = $167.40 for the hour, 99%+ accuracy, human-verified.
  • transcribe.so: about $3.23 for the hour on GPT-4o Diarize, AI only, no human verification or certification.
  • Verdict: Rev. For certified legal accuracy, the human service is the right tool and we are not a substitute.

Scenario 5: Startup team, 40 hours a month across English and Spanish, needs an API

  • Rev Essentials (annual): $305.90/yr/seat, 5,000 min/seat covers 40 hr, English + Spanish included, API on paid plans. Cheapest correct Rev path.
  • transcribe.so: 2,400 min on Qwen3 Flash = about $58/month ($691/yr) metered, or Pro plan $49/mo ($588/yr); REST API and MCP included.
  • Verdict: Rev Essentials is cheaper here if you stay within English/Spanish and the 5,000-minute allowance. transcribe.so wins if you need non-EN/ES languages or prefer no per-seat lock-in.

The honest summary

You are...Cheapest correct choice
Low or irregular volumetranscribe.so pay-as-you-go
Non-English (esp. Korean/Japanese/Chinese)transcribe.so (no plan gate, measured WER)
Need certified human accuracyRev human service
High steady English/Spanish volume + want a planRev Essentials or transcribe.so Pro, roughly even
A developerRev AI API (rev.ai) or transcribe.so API

Rev is not overpriced; it is two products with two honest use cases. The mistake is paying human prices for AI work, or paying Rev AI's $0.25/min pay-per-minute when metered alternatives are cheaper.

Frequently asked questions

How much does Rev cost per minute?

Rev's human transcription is $1.99 per audio minute (English, 99%+ claim), and its AI transcription is $0.25 per minute (96%+ claim). Human add-ons like rush (+$1.25), premium (+$1.75), verbatim (+$0.50), and timestamping (+$0.30) stack on the $1.99 base.

Does Rev have a free plan?

Yes. The Free plan includes 45 AI transcription minutes per month, English only, one seat. It is a trial-sized allowance, not enough for regular use.

Why is Rev's AI cheaper on a subscription than pay-per-minute?

Rev's per-seat plans bundle large minute allowances (Essentials: 5,000 min/seat/mo at $25.49/seat/mo annual), which drops the effective per-minute cost well below the $0.25 pay-per-minute rate, as long as you use the allowance. The trade-off is plan gating: Essentials is English + Spanish only; all 37 languages need Pro.

Is transcribe.so cheaper than Rev for AI transcription?

For pay-per-minute AI, yes: transcribe.so is $1.12–$3.23 per hour versus Rev's $15 per hour ($0.25/min). At high steady English/Spanish volume, Rev's subscription plans can be competitive or cheaper per minute.

Can Rev transcribe non-English audio?

Rev's AI supports 37 languages but gates them by plan (Free: English; Essentials: +Spanish; Pro: all). Rev's human service is English-only and cancels non-English files. transcribe.so handles 30+ languages on any job.

Does Rev charge extra for multiple speakers?

No. Rev includes speaker labeling at no extra cost on both human and AI services. transcribe.so also includes diarization in the model price.

See also: the full Rev alternatives guide, the pay-as-you-go case, and our pricing page.

Rev is a trademark of Rev.com, Inc.; transcribe.so is built by Sunmoon.co Pte. Ltd. and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by Rev. All prices were checked against Rev's own pricing and help-center pages on June 13, 2026 and are linked inline. Prices are in USD and may change; re-check the source links before relying on them.

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44 Harsh Truths About The Game Of Life - Naval Ravikant (4K)
Chris Williamson
Contents
8 chapters · 513 sections
1Happiness Versus Success: Philosophical Reflections on Contentment, Desire, and Motivation
2Optimizing Sleep: Smart Temperature Regulation and the Foundations of Self-Esteem
3Decisive Action and Iterative Practice: Keys to Optimal Choices and Mastery
4Wealth Management: From Materialism to Value Creation and Fair Compensation
5Evaluating LLMs: Capabilities, Limitations, and Their Role in AI's Evolving Landscape
6Pathogens, Evolution, and Knowledge: How Humans Adapt and Defend
7Agency, Power, and the Individual: From Child Development to Cultural Conflict
8Unseen Trends: Media Oversights, Medical Limitations, and the Primitive State of Modern Biology
Q&A preview
Answer
Naval explains two distinct paths to happiness using the story of Alexander and Diogenes. The first path is through success—conquering the world, satisfying material needs, and getting what you want. The second path, exemplified by Diogenes living in a barrel, is simply not wanting in the first place. As Socrates said when shown luxuries: 'How many things there are in this world that I do not want.' Naval suggests not wanting something is as good as having it—both paths lead to the same destination of contentment [00:38–01:10]. He's not sure which path is more valid, noting it depends on how you define success [01:10–01:25].

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