How Much Does Process Mining Cost in 2026? Real Pricing Breakdown
The honest answer is: it depends — and the range is enormous. Free open-source tools cost nothing but require engineering resources. Enterprise platforms like Celonis start at $50,000/year and scale past $200,000. In between, there's a real market of tools suited to different budgets and maturity levels. This guide gives you real numbers across every tier, plus the hidden costs that most vendors won't put in their pricing decks.
The "it depends" answer — and what it depends on
Process mining pricing is not structured like SaaS software. Most enterprise vendors don't publish prices, and the few that do often bury critical variables in footnotes. Before getting to numbers, you need to understand what actually drives the cost.
- Volume-based vs. seat-based pricing. Celonis, IBM, and several enterprise tools charge based on "case volume" — the number of process instances in your event logs. A modest P2P or O2C process at a mid-sized company can easily run 500,000+ cases/year. The meter runs fast, and it's nearly impossible to estimate without a pilot.
- Number of process domains. Most contracts are scoped per process domain (e.g., Accounts Payable, Order-to-Cash, HR). Adding a second domain often costs 40–70% of the first. Enterprise-wide deployments covering 5+ domains are where six-figure contracts live.
- Deployment model. Cloud SaaS costs less upfront but accumulates recurring costs. On-premise or hybrid requires infrastructure investment and internal IT support.
- Your internal capabilities. This is the variable most buyers underestimate. A tool priced at $20,000/year still costs $80,000/year if you need a consultant to set it up and a data engineer to maintain it.
The number to benchmark against: A first-year total cost for a mid-market Celonis or UiPath deployment — license, implementation, training, one domain — typically runs $100,000–$200,000. That's the real alternative to free or SMB tooling. If the ROI case can't clear that bar, start smaller.
Full pricing table: all major tools
All prices are estimates based on published list prices, market reports, and customer disclosures. Enterprise pricing is never exact — treat ranges as indicative, not contractual.
| Tool | Annual Cost | Pricing Model | Tier | Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ProM | $0 | Open source | Free | Researchers, technical teams |
| PM4Py | $0 | Open source (Python) | Free | Data scientists, developers |
| Apromore Community | $0 | Open source (self-hosted) | Free | Technical teams, universities |
| ProcessMind | $1,188–$3,588/yr | $99–$299/mo SaaS | SMB | SMB ops teams, no data engineers |
| Disco / Fluxicon | ~$2,490/yr | Per-user annual license | SMB | Analysts, consultants, process teams |
| Microsoft Power Automate PM | ~$180/user/yr | $15/user/mo (Power Automate Premium) | SMB | Microsoft 365 organizations |
| Apromore Enterprise | $12,000–$36,000/yr | Annual subscription, cloud or on-prem | Mid | Mid-market companies, full-feature PM |
| UiPath Process Mining | $18,000–$60,000/yr | Bundled or standalone license | Mid | UiPath RPA customers, mid-enterprise |
| IBM Process Mining | $24,000–$72,000/yr | IBM Cloud subscription, per-process | Mid | IBM ecosystem, regulated industries |
| SAP Signavio | $30,000–$100,000+/yr | SAP enterprise agreement | Enterprise | SAP S/4HANA & ECC environments |
| Software AG ARIS | $40,000–$150,000+/yr | Module-based licensing | Enterprise | Large enterprise, BPM + mining combined |
| Celonis | $50,000–$200,000+/yr | Case-volume based, multi-year contract | Enterprise | Large enterprise, dedicated PM team |
Free & open-source tools
ProM, PM4Py, and Apromore Community
Free / Open SourceThe free tools are genuinely capable — but they require technical investment that most organizations underestimate. ProM, developed at Eindhoven University of Technology, is the academic standard for process mining research and supports hundreds of plug-ins. PM4Py is a Python library that gives you full programmatic control over event log import, process discovery (Alpha Miner, Inductive Miner, Heuristics Miner), and conformance checking. Apromore Community is the most practical of the three for non-researchers — it has a web UI, supports XES event log import, and provides decent dashboards.
The real cost of free tools is staffing, not licensing. You need someone who can extract and format event logs from your source systems (ERP, CRM, ITSM), knows how to run process discovery algorithms, and can interpret the output. That's typically a data analyst or process engineer who understands both the data engineering side and the process side. Budget $60,000–$100,000/year for that person's time if they're dedicated; less if process mining is one of several analytical functions.
When free makes sense: You have a data team that's already doing analytical work. You want to run a proof-of-concept before committing budget to a commercial tool. You're in academia or consulting and own your own methodology. You're willing to trade setup time for zero licensing cost.
SMB tools ($99–$2,490/yr)
ProcessMind, Disco / Fluxicon, Microsoft Power Automate PM
SMB TierProcessMind ($99–$299/month) is built specifically for teams without a data engineering function. It connects to SaaS tools — HubSpot, Salesforce, Jira, QuickBooks, Shopify — via OAuth, extracts process data without requiring custom ETL pipelines, and surfaces bottlenecks through pre-built dashboards. It's not a traditional process mining engine in the academic sense (no XES import, no Petri net discovery) but it solves the same core problem for most SMB use cases: where is our process breaking down, and how often?
Disco by Fluxicon (~$2,490/year for a single-user license) is a proper process mining tool — it imports XES or CSV event logs, runs full process discovery, and produces the kind of dotted-chart and process map analysis that analysts and consultants need. It's a desktop application, not a team platform. One analyst with a Disco license can do serious process mining work; an entire organization trying to share dashboards will find it limiting.
Microsoft Power Automate Process Mining (~$15/user/month as part of Power Automate Premium) is the most accessible entry point for organizations already on Microsoft 365. It handles process discovery, conformance checking, and basic root-cause analysis. The connectors are strongest for Microsoft Dataverse, Dynamics 365, and SharePoint. If your processes live primarily in the Microsoft ecosystem, this is the lowest-friction option — you may already be paying for it.
SMB tier reality check: These tools cost $100–$2,500/year in licensing. Total cost of ownership in year one — including setup, any minor consulting, and internal staff time — typically runs $4,000–$12,000. That's a real number you can defend to finance. The tradeoff is that you won't get the deep root-cause analysis or conformance checking depth of enterprise tools.
Mid-market tools ($12K–$72K/yr)
UiPath Process Mining, IBM Process Mining, Apromore Enterprise
Mid-Market TierUiPath Process Mining ($18,000–$60,000/year) is a full-featured process mining platform acquired from ProcessGold in 2019. It supports full event log mining, conformance checking, root-cause analysis, and — most importantly — direct handoff to UiPath RPA for automation. If you're already a UiPath customer, the bundled pricing makes this significantly more competitive. Standalone pricing without the RPA bundle is less compelling.
IBM Process Mining ($24,000–$72,000/year) is part of IBM's broader automation and AI portfolio. It's a technically capable platform — solid process discovery, conformance checking, and simulation — with the strongest story for regulated industries (financial services, pharma, government) where IBM's compliance and data sovereignty credentials matter. IBM pricing is highly negotiable, especially if you're already an IBM Cloud or Watson customer.
Apromore Enterprise ($12,000–$36,000/year) is the commercial version of the open-source Apromore Community. It adds team collaboration, role-based access control, enhanced dashboards, and enterprise connectors. Of the mid-market options, it offers the most transparent pricing and the most academic rigor in its algorithms (the research team behind it publishes actively). A good fit for organizations that want serious process mining depth without committing to a six-figure enterprise contract.
Mid-market real costs: Licensing is $12,000–$72,000/year. Add implementation ($20,000–$60,000 in year one), ongoing consultant access if needed ($15,000–$50,000/year), and internal staff time. Realistic year-one total: $50,000–$150,000. Year two and beyond (license renewal + internal time): $30,000–$80,000/year.
Enterprise tools ($30K–$200K+/yr)
Celonis, SAP Signavio, Software AG ARIS
Enterprise TierCelonis ($50,000–$200,000+/year) is the market leader and the benchmark against which every other process mining tool is evaluated. Pricing is case-volume-based — the more process instances your event logs contain, the higher the fee. The platform's Action Engine, ML-based root-cause analysis, and deep SAP/Salesforce/ServiceNow connectors are legitimately more mature than any alternative. It requires a dedicated process mining team to realize value: a project lead, a data engineer for connector maintenance, and business analysts who can translate mining insights into process improvements. Without that team, even a $100,000/year Celonis license becomes expensive shelf furniture.
SAP Signavio ($30,000–$100,000+/year) was acquired by SAP in 2021 and is now the integrated process intelligence and BPM suite for SAP environments. The native SAP data access is its primary advantage — if you're running S/4HANA or SAP ECC, Signavio's pre-built process content and SAP Business Technology Platform integration eliminate weeks of connector work. It's often bundled into large SAP enterprise agreements, which can dramatically reduce the effective licensing cost. Non-SAP organizations should evaluate other options.
Software AG ARIS ($40,000–$150,000+/year) has the longest history in process management — ARIS has been the gold standard for enterprise process modeling since the 1990s. The modern ARIS Platform combines BPM, process mining, and process intelligence. It's particularly strong for organizations that need a comprehensive process repository — not just mining event logs but managing, governing, and documenting the entire process architecture. More complexity than most organizations need; the right fit for companies where process governance is a core discipline.
Why enterprise pricing is never what it seems: The contract price is just the license. Add SAP connector implementation, custom dashboard build, change management, training for 20–50 users, and a consulting partner relationship, and first-year all-in costs routinely reach 2–3x the license value. Multi-year contracts with annual escalators of 10–15% are standard. Model the 3-year cost, not the year-one number.
Total cost of ownership: 3 real scenarios
These scenarios represent realistic annual costs — not license-only figures — for three common buyer profiles. Year-one costs include implementation. Year-two costs assume the tool is running and the team is trained.
<200 employees, 1 process domain
- License (ProcessMind or Power Automate PM) $1,200–$3,600
- Data prep & setup (self-managed) $1,000–$2,500
- Training (online, self-paced) $500–$1,500
- Internal staff time (part-time, shared role) $1,500–$4,000
- No consultant required $0
500–2,000 employees, 2–3 process domains
- License (UiPath or Apromore Enterprise) $18,000–$36,000
- Data prep & connector setup $10,000–$30,000
- Implementation (partner or internal) $15,000–$40,000
- Training (team of 5–10) $5,000–$10,000
- Internal staff (dedicated PM analyst) $8,000–$40,000
5,000+ employees, 5+ process domains
- License (Celonis or SAP Signavio) $60,000–$200,000
- Data prep & multi-system connectors $30,000–$80,000
- Implementation (SI partner) $40,000–$150,000
- Ongoing consulting retainer $20,000–$60,000
- Internal team (2–3 FTEs, PM CoE) $20,000–$90,000
Year-two economics: Implementation is a one-time cost. Year two is dominated by license renewal, internal staff time, and incremental expansion to new process domains. For mid-market organizations, year-two costs typically drop to 50–65% of year-one. For enterprise, year-two is often comparable to year-one due to scope expansion.
Decision framework: which tier fits you
Match your situation to a tier before you take a single vendor call. Starting a sales process at the wrong tier wastes 6–8 weeks and anchors your expectations at the wrong price point.
- You have an in-house data analyst or engineer with Python/SQL skills
- Your primary goal is a proof of concept or academic research
- You already have clean, structured event logs in XES or CSV format
- Budget for commercial licensing is not currently approved
- You want to validate the methodology before committing to a vendor
- Your company has fewer than 500 employees
- You don't have a dedicated data engineering function
- Your processes run on SaaS tools (HubSpot, Salesforce, Jira, QuickBooks)
- You want to be operational in weeks, not months
- Your budget for the entire program is under $15,000/year
- You're in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem (Power Automate PM may already be included)
- You have 500–5,000 employees and 2–5 process domains to mine
- You have (or are willing to hire) a dedicated process analyst
- You need true event log mining — XES import, conformance checking, Petri nets
- You're a UiPath RPA customer looking to expand to process discovery
- You need on-premise deployment or strict data residency controls
- Total first-year budget of $50,000–$150,000 is defensible to your CFO
- You have 5,000+ employees and multiple complex process domains (P2P, O2C, HR)
- You're running SAP at scale and need native integration (Signavio)
- You have — or are building — a Process Excellence Center of Excellence
- You need ML-based root-cause analysis and action recommendations, not just dashboards
- You can commit a 3-year contract and dedicated internal team
- Your CFO has approved $200,000–$500,000 in year-one investment
Frequently asked questions
Celonis does not publish pricing publicly. Based on market reports and customer disclosures, contracts typically start around $50,000/year for smaller deployments and scale to $150,000–$500,000+/year for enterprise-wide licenses. Pricing is case-volume based — the number of process instances in your event logs — not seats. Implementation and consulting fees are separate and often add 50–100% on top. A realistic first-year total cost for a mid-market Celonis deployment is $150,000–$250,000 all-in.
Yes. ProM is an open-source research platform that is completely free. PM4Py is a free Python library for process mining. Apromore Community Edition is free to self-host. All three require technical expertise — data engineering or Python skills — to use effectively. They are legitimate options for organizations with analytical resources who want to run process mining without a software budget. The hidden cost is internal staff time: plan for a data analyst or engineer owning the work.
For a small company (under 200 employees), total cost of ownership typically runs $4,000–$12,000 per year. This assumes using SMB-tier tools like ProcessMind ($99–$299/month) or Microsoft Power Automate Process Mining, self-managing implementation, and doing internal training. The key advantage of SMB tools is that they're designed to work without a dedicated data engineering team, which eliminates the largest hidden cost category. First-year setup costs add $1,500–$4,000 on top of the annual license.
Process mining ROI varies dramatically by use case. Accounts payable automation projects commonly report 30–60% reduction in invoice processing time. Order-to-cash improvements often yield 15–25% faster cycle times. Celonis's published customer research suggests average ROI of 3–5x on license cost within 18 months — but that figure includes only successful deployments, and failed or underutilized implementations are common. Realistic ROI benchmark: SMB deployments targeting one process domain, 12–18 month payback; enterprise deployments targeting multiple domains with dedicated teams, 18–36 months. ROI is almost always higher when the tool drives actual workflow automation, not just visibility.
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