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What Wrike Really Costs

The subscription is only 34% of what Wrike actually costs your team. Here's the full picture.

By Shawn Yeager

Total Cost of Ownership

A 50-person team at Wrike's published rate of $10/seat/month. The subscription is 34% of the real cost.

Subscription cost

$10/seat x 50 seats x 12 months

$5,880/yr

Labor cost

15 hrs/month x $50/hr loaded rate x 12 months

$9,000/yr

Error & rework cost

$200/month x 12 months

$2,400/yr

Total Cost of Ownership

$17,280/yr

Labor rate based on BLS ECEC June 2025 ($45.65/hr private industry total compensation, rounded to $50). Your actual numbers depend on team size, role mix, and usage. Run it with your own data.

What the invoice doesn't show

Wrike's Team plan ($9.80/user/mo) lacks Gantt charts, time tracking, custom fields, and request forms. Business ($24.80/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.

Why this category is changing

Wrike is caught between two worlds: too complex for teams that want simplicity (ClickUp and Monday.com are easier to adopt) and not specialized enough for teams that need depth (Jira dominates engineering, Linear is faster for product). Its enterprise pricing puts it in the same bracket as Monday.com Enterprise and Asana Business, but without the modern AI capabilities or intuitive UX those platforms offer.

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 list them for context. The decision is yours.

How we calculate TCO

Total Cost of Ownership includes subscription fees, labor (valued at $50/hr based on BLS ECEC data), and estimated error costs. Error cost is inherently speculative and can be set to $0 for a conservative estimate. All defaults are sourced from published benchmarks and adjustable in our methodology.

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