Network as a Service Pricing

How NaaS is priced, what a typical monthly bill includes, and the factors that move your number. For a quick estimate on your own footprint, use the pricing calculator →

NaaS is billed as a recurring subscription — usually per square foot, per user, or per port, per month — that rolls hardware, software, installation, monitoring, and support into one predictable fee. There's no upfront equipment purchase; the provider owns the gear and refreshes it over the term.

Because NaaS replaces several separate line items — hardware, licenses, install labor, and ongoing support — with a single monthly charge, comparing it to traditional networking means looking at total cost over the full term, not just sticker price. The sections below break down the common models, typical ranges, and what actually drives the number on your quote.

For the broader picture — benefits, providers, and use cases — see the complete Network as a Service guide →

How it's billed

The three common pricing models.

Per square foot

A monthly rate applied to the area you cover — typically $0.08–$0.25 / sq ft / mo. Simple to budget and scales cleanly across offices; the per-foot rate often drops as total footprint grows. Best when coverage area drives your network size.

Per user

A flat monthly rate per active user or seat. Predictable for headcount-driven organizations and easy to reconcile against HR numbers. Best when your density (people per square foot) is high or variable.

Per port / per device

Priced by the number of switch ports or managed devices (APs, switches). Closest to traditional hardware accounting and precise for fixed installations. Best when device count is well-defined and stable.

Most providers anchor on one model and may layer a per-site base fee on top. See how providers price side by side →

Typical ranges

What NaaS tends to cost.

Model Typical range Best fit
Per square foot$0.08–$0.25 / sq ft / moOffices, retail, multi-site footprints
Per user$10–$80 / user / moHigh-density or headcount-driven sites
Per access point$15–$120 / AP / moWi-Fi-heavy environments
Per-site base fee$0–$1,000 / site / moAdded on top for multi-location management

Ranges are directional — actual quotes depend on the factors below. Plug in your own numbers with the calculator →

What moves the number

Factors that drive your price.

Coverage & density

Square footage, number of users, and devices per area set the baseline. Dense, high-traffic spaces need more access points and switching.

Service tier

Standard vs. premium tiers (faster SLAs, guaranteed performance, advanced security) can raise the rate by 1.3–1.5×.

Security scope

Built-in firewall, zero-trust, or segmentation requirements add capability — and cost — versus a network-only package.

Number of sites

Multi-site deployments may carry a per-location base fee, offset by volume discounts on the per-unit rate.

Contract term

Longer commitments (3–5 years) typically lower the monthly rate; shorter terms cost more per month for the flexibility.

Add-ons

Internet/ISP management, SD-WAN, or advanced analytics may be bundled or billed separately depending on the provider.

NaaS vs. buying

Why the cheaper sticker isn't always cheaper.

Buying hardware outright can look less expensive on day one, but the honest comparison spans the whole refresh cycle. A purchase means upfront CapEx, separate license renewals, install labor, support contracts, and another large purchase in 5–7 years — plus the IT time to run it all. NaaS folds those into one monthly figure and includes the refresh.

The right answer depends on your team, cash position, and how much control you want. An independent advisor can model both paths on your exact footprint at no cost — talk it through →

Common questions

NaaS pricing, answered

It depends on how you're billed. Per-square-foot pricing commonly runs $0.08–$0.25 / sq ft / mo, per-user models $10–$80 / user / mo, and per-AP models $15–$120 / AP / mo, sometimes with a per-site base fee. Your actual quote depends on coverage, density, service tier, security scope, and contract length. Use the calculator for a quick estimate, then an advisor for exact numbers.
Typically no. The provider owns the hardware and includes it in the subscription, so there's no large capital purchase to start. That's one of the defining differences between NaaS and buying equipment outright — you convert CapEx into predictable monthly OpEx.
There's no universal best — it depends on what drives your network size. Per-square-foot suits offices and multi-site footprints; per-user fits high-density or headcount-driven organizations; per-port/per-device works when device counts are fixed and well understood. The same network can come out cheaper under one model than another, which is why comparing quotes on a common basis matters.
Sometimes. Most NaaS covers in-building switching and Wi-Fi; some providers bundle internet/ISP management, firewall, or zero-trust security, while others treat those as add-ons. Confirm scope provider-by-provider — see what's generally included vs. optional.

See what your network should cost.

Get an instant estimate from the calculator, then a free exact quote from an independent advisor — no vendor pitch, no obligation.

Estimate your price Talk to an Advisor