Retell AI and Vapi AI are good developer products. They do what they say they do. But if you are an operations leader, not a developer, you have been paying for parts and engineering time you should not need.

ConnexŪS Ai is a voice AI platform you fund with a wallet and turn on. You pick a voice, you pick a tier, you go live. The math below is the full story. See the pricing in detail.

Per-minute, honestly priced

A single per-minute rate covers voice in, voice out, LLM reasoning, telephony, and platform access. No line-item invoices. No rounding. No per-seat tax.

Each sits 13 to 15% under Retell's public reference rate for the equivalent LLM pairing. We benchmark quarterly and publish the methodology.

Fund once. Pay what you use.

Start with $10 and we add $20 in credit. That is a first-load-only launch promo, one per customer. After the promo, minimum wallet load is $25. Credits expire 60 days after they are loaded, which keeps wallets active. Auto-refill triggers at a $10 remaining balance: you pick the refill amount, we keep your V-Reps running.

What Retell and Vapi actually charge

Vapi: a $0.05/min platform fee on top of LLM, STT, TTS, and telephony billed separately. Blended real-world cost lands $0.13 to $0.31/min depending on the stack you assemble.

Retell: $0.07+/min for voice only; LLM and telephony billed separately; enterprise tiers add monthly platform minimums.

Both are developer APIs. Both assume you are supplying engineering hours, procurement cycles, and four to six vendor invoices. That is the real cost. A V-Rep is the opposite of that.

CapabilityConnexŪS AiRetell AIVapi AI
Pricing shapeAll-in per-minute walletPer-minute + line itemsPlatform fee + line items
Who is the buyerOps leadersEngineersEngineers
Deploy timeMinutes, no codeDays to weeksDays to weeks
ContractsNone. No lock-in.Enterprise minimumsEnterprise minimums
Minimum commit$10 first loadMonthly minimumsPlatform + usage
Per-minute range$0.079 to $0.149$0.07+ voice only$0.05 platform + rest

The wallet is the product

A contract is a promise that you will spend a certain amount. A wallet is the amount you actually spent plus the amount you are ready to spend next. That shift is the whole point. You are not buying seats. You are not buying minutes in a box. You are funding the exact thing that happens on every call and nothing else.

When you should still pick a developer API

You have a dedicated voice engineer and want to hand-wire every integration. Retell and Vapi are legitimately good at that. If that is not you, the developer APIs are still fine, but most operators we talk to do not fit that description.

Start for $10

Fund a wallet. Pick a voice. Go live. That is the product. See what that looked like for Visium and Go iPower.