Tableau pricing (2026): plans, costs and is it worth it?
Let's put real numbers on Tableau and what each plan gets you. As a bi platform tool, Tableau provides paid plans only; the breakdown below walks through each paid tier using its current public plans.
The reference standard for rich, governed interactive data visualization. Tableau is a paid tool, so plan to buy in once you have validated fit. Market-leading visual analytics platform (Salesforce) with best-in-class drag-and-drop data visualization, deep enterprise governance and a huge community.
Plans & pricing tiers
| Plan | Price (approx.) | What's included |
|---|---|---|
| Viewer (Standard) | $15/user/mo (billed annually) | Consume dashboards only |
| Explorer (Standard) | $42/user/mo (billed annually) | Self-service exploration |
| Creator (Standard) | $75/user/mo (billed annually) | Full authoring; min. 1 required |
| Enterprise edition | $35 / $70 / $115 per user/mo | Viewer / Explorer / Creator with advanced governance |
Prices are estimates drawn from the vendor's plans and third-party reviews, and can change at any time, so check before you commit.
Prices verified 2026-06-28 from public vendor pricing. Plans and prices change — always confirm on the vendor's own site. No price here is guaranteed.
What you're paying for
What the paid plans put in your hands with Tableau:
- Drag-and-drop visual analytics with VizQL engine, leader in interactive dashboards
- Tableau Prep for visual data preparation and cleaning
- Live and in-memory (extract) connections to most databases and warehouses
- Tableau Pulse and Einstein/Agentforce AI for metrics monitoring and natural-language insights
- Enterprise governance: row-level security, certified data sources, Tableau Catalog
Feature availability varies by tier, so cross-check the plan column before settling on one.
Which plan to pick
Tableau is built for mid-to-large enterprises and analyst teams that need deep, governed visual analytics. Match that description and the Viewer (Standard) plan ($15/user/mo (billed annually)) is where to start; a higher tier earns its cost only when you need data-visualization.
Is Tableau worth it?
Paid plans run from roughly $15 to $35 per month (or per seat, depending on the plan). If enterprise is your goal, start low: the cheapest paid tier covers it for most users, and data-visualization is what eventually pushes you up a level. If money is tight, weigh the entry tier against rival tools before you commit.
Pricing watch-outs
- Expensive at scale; every deployment needs at least one Creator seat.
- Pricing rose after Salesforce ownership; credit/consumption fees add hidden TCO.
- Priced per named user by role (Viewer/Explorer/Creator), billed annually; at least one Creator license is mandatory per deployment.
- No free internal-use plan beyond a 14-day trial.
Drawn from independent reviews and the vendor's own plan details (see sources below).
Two teams rarely pay the same for Tableau: the figure tracks the number of seats or users, so map it to your own numbers for an honest comparison.
Pricing FAQ
Does Tableau have a free plan?
Tableau is a paid tool without a standing free plan; check its site for any current trial or money-back window.
How much does Tableau cost?
Its cheapest paid plan, Viewer (Standard), lists at $15/user/mo (billed annually). Paid plans run from roughly $15 to $35 per month (or per seat, depending on the plan). The exact bill depends on billing cycle and how many seats or how much usage you need.
Is there a cheaper alternative to Tableau?
Yes — several bi platform tools do the same job at lower entry prices; our Tableau alternatives roundup compares them side by side.
Why does Tableau get more expensive as I grow?
Its pricing scales with usage (seats, contacts or channels), so the headline figure is a starting point; estimate cost at the size you expect to reach, not just today's.
Which Tableau plan should I choose?
Most readers in that situation start with the Viewer (Standard) plan ($15/user/mo (billed annually)); a higher tier pays off only when you run into data-visualization.
Sources
The Tableau plan, price and feature details above are compiled from these vendor pages and independent reviews: