| Role Based Pricing | Request a Quote | |
|---|---|---|
| Tagline | — | — |
| Description | — | — |
| Screenshots | — | — |
| Languages | ||
| Platforms | ||
| Developer | ||
| Listed | — | — |
| Last updated | — | — |
| Keyword | Role Based Pricing | Request a Quote |
|---|---|---|
| form | #143 |
| Metric | Role Based Pricing | Request a Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Rating | ★ 4.8 ★ | 4.7 ★ |
| Total reviews | 75 | ★ 159 |
| Free plan | — | — |
| Pricing | $79/year | ★ $69/year |
| Built for Shopify | — | — |
Role Based Pricing and Request a Quote are evenly matched on rating (4.8★ vs 4.7★) — the differentiator comes down to pricing fit, feature breadth, and which app's interaction pattern suits your team's workflow. Pricing sits in similar territory: Role Based Pricing at $79/year, Request a Quote at $69/year (within ~25% of each other on the entry tier). At this overlap, total cost of ownership comes from how per-tier capacity gates align with your order volume — confirm both apps' upgrade triggers against your projected scale before deciding. Request a Quote has the larger user base (159 reviews vs 75), which usually maps to broader integration coverage, faster bug-fix cadence, and a deeper bench of community workflow patterns. Role Based Pricing's smaller cohort can be an advantage for niche workflows where the bigger app has accumulated bloat. Recommended evaluation path: install both apps' free tiers (where available) and run them in parallel on a small cohort of orders for 7-14 days before committing. The data tables below show the per-feature breakdown — for most merchants the deciding factor will be a single integration or workflow detail that's hard to compare from listing pages alone. This verdict is generated from the live marketplace data on this page — rating, review count, pricing tier, and category position all refresh from the canonical WooCommerce Marketplace listing every 24 hours. AppRanks does not accept payment to influence comparison outcomes; the methodology is documented on the About page and applies identically to every pair on the site.
Read each app's audit: Role Based Pricing audit • Request a Quote audit
| #119 |
| payment | #143 | #119 |
Both Role Based Pricing and Request a Quote offer paid plans only. Role Based Pricing starts at $79/year; Request a Quote starts at $69/year. Compare the per-tier features in the Pricing section above before committing.
Role Based Pricing (4.8★, 75 reviews) and Request a Quote (4.7★, 159 reviews) are essentially tied on rating. Look at review velocity and individual reviewer quotes — both visible on each app's detail page — to differentiate.
It depends on what you're optimizing for. Role Based Pricing fits better if you prioritize rating consistency; Request a Quote is the call if you need the larger user base. Read both apps' detail pages on AppRanks for the full feature breakdown, install counts, and recent listing changes.
Both apps are one-click installs from the WooCommerce Marketplace marketplace. Request a Quote has more onboarding documentation maturity (159 reviews vs 75), which usually translates to better-tested setup wizards and quicker time-to-value. AppRanks doesn't measure setup time directly — read the recent reviews on each app's detail page for merchant-reported install experience.
Role Based Pricing typically suits early-stage and growth-mode stores based on its review-base composition (75 reviews). Request a Quote aligns more with early-stage and growth-mode stores (159 reviews). Larger review bases generally mean the app has been load-tested at scale — relevant if you're processing high order volume or handling enterprise compliance requirements.
Migration support varies by app and category. Role Based Pricing and Request a Quote both publish their export options on their marketplace listing pages (or in their support docs); some apps offer one-click import from competitors, others require CSV. The fastest check: search "import from Role Based Pricing" in each app's help center. AppRanks does not track migration tooling directly — this is a category-specific capability worth verifying before commitment.