Stripe Atlas runs roughly $500/yr at the pro tier. MeterCall replaces the company formation workflow with pay-per-call economics — same outputs, wired the way your stack already works. Swap the line item, keep the results.
| Feature | Stripe Atlas | MeterCall | You save |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | $500/yr | Pay per call | ~70% |
| Seat fees | Per-user | None | 100% |
| Minimum commit | Annual | None | 100% |
| Setup time | Days to weeks | Minutes | ~95% |
| API access | Paid tier | Included | 100% |
| Data export | Gated | JSON anytime | — |
Stripe Atlas was designed for the seat-licensing era: you pay a flat fee whether you use 1 seat or 1,000, whether you send 1 call or 1M. MeterCall flips that. You pay for the actual work done — per call, per render, per event. For most company formation workloads, real utilization is 5–15% of what's being paid for.
If you're a small team, MeterCall typically runs under $400/yr for equivalent throughput to a $500/yr Stripe Atlas seat. If you're scaling, the unit economics stay linear — no surprise tier upgrades, no Stripe Atlas-style "contact sales" cliff.
For the core company formation workflow — yes. Incorporation + filings, pay-per-call. What MeterCall doesn't replicate: Stripe Atlas-specific certifications, white-glove account management, and any deep lock-in integrations unique to Stripe Atlas. If those matter, stay. If the output is what matters, switch.
MeterCall is pay-per-call. Free tier covers exploration. Production workloads typically hit $0.01–$0.10 per call depending on module. See current pricing →
Yes — MeterCall accepts Stripe Atlas exports (CSV/JSON) and most integrations use the same payload shape. Migration typically takes an afternoon.
That's exactly where MeterCall wins hardest. If your utilization is below 30% of your current Stripe Atlas seats, switching usually cuts cost by 70%+.
Free tier is always live. No credit card to start. You pay only when you exceed the free quota.
Most alternatives to Stripe Atlas are just cheaper seat-licensed clones. MeterCall is architecturally different — pay-per-call, not pay-per-seat. That's the structural cost advantage.