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Jira vs Wrike

Side-by-side total cost of ownership: subscription fees, labor, hidden costs, and AI alternatives.

By Shawn Yeager

Published pricing

The subscription is only part of the cost.

 JiraWrike
Published rate$8/seat/mo$10/seat/mo
Team size modeled5050
Annual subscription$4,746/yr$6,000/yr

What the invoice doesn't show

Jira

Jira's base functionality is deliberately limited. Time tracking, roadmaps, test management, and advanced reporting all require paid Marketplace plugins at $3-10/user/month each. A team running 5-6 plugins can easily double their effective Jira cost. Most teams actually pay $20-30/user/month after add-ons.

SSO and SCIM provisioning aren't included in any Jira plan. Atlassian Guard Standard costs $4.20/user/month on top of your subscription. For a 200-person company, that's $10,080/year just for basic identity management that most competitors include for free.

Atlassian killed Server licenses in 2024 and ended new Data Center sales on March 30, 2026. Data Center licenses expire March 2029. All customers are being forced to Cloud with no on-prem escape hatch. One enterprise with 2,000 licenses reported their costs would triple after migration. DC-to-Cloud migrations cost ~28% more on average.

Maximum Quantity Billing (mandatory since 2025) charges the peak user count during the billing cycle, not the count at billing time. Onboard 10 contractors for a week and you pay for all 10 for the entire month. Marketplace apps adopted this same model.

Wrike

Wrike's Team plan ($10/user/mo) lacks Gantt charts, time tracking, custom fields, and request forms. Business ($25/user/mo) adds those features but caps integrations. Enterprise pricing is quote-based and typically $30–40/user/month.

Wrike's AI features (Work Intelligence) are limited to Business and Enterprise tiers. Automated risk prediction, smart task assignment, and document processing require 2.5x the base price — AI is an upsell, not a foundation.

Users consistently report a steep learning curve. G2 and Capterra reviews frequently cite 2-4 weeks of onboarding time per team member, with ongoing frustration around navigation complexity and unintuitive workflows.

Wrike's proofing and approval features (useful for creative teams) require a paid add-on even on Business and Enterprise plans. Digital asset management, custom item types, and advanced reporting are also separate add-ons at $5-10/user/month each.

What teams are switching to

Replacing Jira

Linear

Free (unlimited members), $8/user/mo Standard, $16/user/mo Enterprise

Keyboard-driven, opinionated defaults. Built-in AI for issue creation, auto-labeling, and duplicate detection. SSO included in Plus — not a separate add-on. Enterprise pricing dropped 45% in Feb 2026 (from $29 to $16/user/mo).

Plane (open source)

Free (self-hosted or cloud), Pro $6/user/mo

Open-source (AGPL-3.0), self-hostable on Docker/Kubernetes for full data control. A 10-seat Pro team costs $720/year vs ~$1,086/year for Jira Standard alone — before any marketplace add-ons.

Shortcut

Free (10 users), Team $8.50/user/mo, Business $16/user/mo

Roadmaps and reporting included — no marketplace add-ons needed. Lower per-seat cost at Team tier than Jira Standard. Free for up to 10 users.

Replacing Wrike

Monday.com

Free (2 users), $9–$19/seat/mo

AI-powered workflows with Monday AI assistant that generates formulas, summarizes updates, and composes emails. More intuitive interface with significantly shorter onboarding time. All views (Gantt, Kanban, timeline) included from Standard ($9/seat).

ClickUp

Free, $7–$12/member/mo

ClickUp Brain AI included at no extra cost on paid plans — generates tasks, writes updates, and creates standups. Built-in time tracking, Gantt charts, and docs that Wrike charges extra for or gates behind higher tiers.

Asana

Free (10 users), $10.99–$24.99/user/mo

AI Smart Fields, Smart Status, and Smart Summaries automate project oversight. Cleaner interface with shorter learning curve than Wrike. Portfolio management and workload views available on Business ($24.99/user).

StackCut doesn't sell or recommend any of these tools. We show them for context. The decision is yours.

Total Cost of Ownership

Subscription fees plus labor and error costs, modeled at $50/hr loaded rate (BLS ECEC).

Cost ComponentJiraWrike
Annual subscription$4,746$6,000
Labor cost$9,000$9,000
Error & rework cost$2,400$2,400
Total Cost of Ownership$16,146/yr$17,400/yr
Est. AI alternative$3,888/yr$3,888/yr

Labor rate based on BLS ECEC June 2025 ($45.65/hr private industry total compensation, rounded to $50). Team sizes differ because each vendor targets different market segments. Your actual numbers depend on team size, role mix, and usage. Run it with your own data.

Which one fits your team?

Both Jira and Wrikecost more than their published pricing suggests. The right choice depends on your team size and how you weigh each tool's trade-offs.

Jira starts at $8/seat/mo , but watch for Jira's base functionality is deliberately limited. Time tracking, roadmaps, test management, and advanced reporting all require paid Marketplace plugins at $3-10/user/month each. A team running 5-6 plugins can easily double their effective Jira cost. Most teams actually pay $20-30/user/month after add-ons.

Wrike starts at $10/seat/mo , but watch for Wrike's Team plan ($10/user/mo) lacks Gantt charts, time tracking, custom fields, and request forms. Business ($25/user/mo) adds those features but caps integrations. Enterprise pricing is quote-based and typically $30–40/user/month.

An AI-native alternative may replace the workflow at a fraction of the TCO.

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