My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing shows that Seeq is generally a bit pricey, but they also look to the value that they are providing and tend to negotiate based on that. It is not the cheapest. Something like Grafana, which can perform some of the charting and analytics function from historian type data sources is more out of the box and open source, so there is no cost. However, the features and collaboration that you get with the SaaS tool in Seeq are really worth the value if the company is large enough to make use of that.
ENGINEER at a computer software company with 201-500 employees
Real User
Top 10
Apr 30, 2026
Regarding pricing, I would like to start using Seeq with flexible costs since when you work in analytics, you never fully utilize the maximum potential, and it is possible to gradually increase costs.
The solution is certainly worth the investment. Some of the software licenses out there are for industrial use, such as a distributed control system. Some of the licenses are much higher than what Seeq might be. Seek is flexible in pricing; it's hard to generalize.
The pricing is average. Seeq has changed its strategy. Most likely, it's based on the number of sites, assets, or tags, and it varies depending on the customer. There's no standard pricing.
Seeq is a powerful platform designed to enhance the connectivity and visualization of industrial data, facilitating seamless workflows and intuitive user interactions. It excels in handling large datasets while enabling predictive models and real-time monitoring without requiring extensive coding skills.Seeq's ease of use and user-friendly features make it a go-to choice for professionals seeking effective time series data analysis. It supports a wide array of industries including oil and gas...
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing shows that Seeq is generally a bit pricey, but they also look to the value that they are providing and tend to negotiate based on that. It is not the cheapest. Something like Grafana, which can perform some of the charting and analytics function from historian type data sources is more out of the box and open source, so there is no cost. However, the features and collaboration that you get with the SaaS tool in Seeq are really worth the value if the company is large enough to make use of that.
I do not believe there are any improvements needed for Seeq that I have not mentioned yet.
Regarding pricing, I would like to start using Seeq with flexible costs since when you work in analytics, you never fully utilize the maximum potential, and it is possible to gradually increase costs.
It has a moderate cost compared to other tools and solutions out there in the manufacturing sector.
The solution is certainly worth the investment. Some of the software licenses out there are for industrial use, such as a distributed control system. Some of the licenses are much higher than what Seeq might be. Seek is flexible in pricing; it's hard to generalize.
The pricing is average. Seeq has changed its strategy. Most likely, it's based on the number of sites, assets, or tags, and it varies depending on the customer. There's no standard pricing.