Hyperzod's headline price is $286/mo for the full module stack. That number leaves out two things that materially change your annual bill: a 0.99% success fee on every order and $1,200 in one-time setup fees. At 1,000 orders/month with a $50 average order value, you're paying ~$9,372/year. At 5,000 orders/month, ~$33k. At 15,000, north of $95k. Here's the full math.
When you visit Hyperzod's pricing page, what you see is a clean grid of four module cards. Ordering Website at $29, Ordering App at $99, Merchant App at $79, Driver App at $79. Add them up and the answer is $286/month for the full stack. That number is real, and it's the number that gets quoted in sales calls and screenshots.
It's also the number that misses the other two costs. The first is the 0.99% success fee on every order, which scales linearly with your volume. The second is the $300 setup fee per module, which adds $1,200 the first time you go live.
Neither of these is hidden — both are disclosed. But neither is added up for you. So let's add them up.
Ordering Website ($29) + Ordering App ($99) + Merchant App ($79) + Driver App ($79). This is the minimum to run a real marketplace stack. Skip a module and your operation has a hole — drivers without an app, or merchants without a way to manage orders. So in practice this is the whole bill, not the menu.
$300 per module × 4 modules. This covers initial configuration, app submission, and onboarding. Year-one only — but it's a real expense you sign up for the day you start.
At a $50 average order value, this is about $0.50 per order. At 1,000 orders/month, that's $495/month or $5,940/year. At 5,000 orders/month, $29,700/year. At 15,000, $89,100/year. This single line item, alone, eventually becomes most of your platform cost.
Assuming a $50 average order value and the full module stack, here's what your year-one bill looks like at three different stages of growth:
The cost difference between Hyperzod and a flat-fee competitor like Ordering.co isn't really about the modules — it's about the per-order fee.
Ordering.co's flat-fee plan covers the entire stack (website, customer app, merchant app, driver app, plus call center, kiosks, marketing suite, BI tools) for one negotiated monthly price. There's no 0.99% multiplier. There's no $300-per-module setup. Migration from Hyperzod is included free.
At 1,000 orders/month, the two platforms cost roughly similar amounts. At 5,000, the flat-fee plan is ~50% cheaper. At 15,000, it's typically 60-70% cheaper. The bigger you grow, the more the modular model penalizes you.
THE BREAK-EVEN POINT $100k $50k $0 3k orders/mo 7.5k 12k 15k+ Hyperzod $286/mo + 0.99% × orders Ordering.co flat custom plan break-even ≈ 1.5k/mo the gap at scale → The lines cross somewhere around 1,000–2,000 monthly orders depending on your average order value. After that, the gap grows fast.Take your current Hyperzod bill. Add: ($286/mo × 12) + (0.99% × your average order value × monthly orders × 12) + $1,200 setup (year one only).
If the number surprises you, you're not alone. Most marketplace operators don't run this calculation until they look at year-two renewal — by which point they've paid the per-order fee twelve times over. The migration math gets easier every month you wait.
Hyperzod's public pricing lists the fee as 0.99% across all customers. Some enterprise customers have reported negotiated rates, but it's not the default. Always ask in sales conversations — the answer "depends on volume" is worth $5–10k/year at the right tier.
Are there modules I can skip to save money? +In theory, yes — you can run just the website at $29/month. In practice, no. Without the merchant app, your store owners have no way to manage orders. Without the driver app, your drivers can't accept dispatches. Without the customer app, you lose mobile users. So the "menu" of modules is really a single dish.
What's the 0.99% fee charged on — gross or net? +Per Hyperzod's public terms, it's charged on the total transaction value (gross), not the merchant's net after costs. This is standard in the industry but worth noting: you pay the percentage on the customer's full bill, including delivery fees and tips collected on-platform.
What's Ordering.co's pricing actually look like? +Custom flat plan built around your volume on the demo call. No public pricing list, but the framework is "one bill, no per-order fee, no per-module setup." Most operators get a real quote in their 15-minute call and walk out with a number to compare against their current Hyperzod bill.
15-minute call. Bring your current order volume. We'll show you exactly what migrating to a flat-fee model would save you — and what we'd quote for your stack.
Get your custom quote