Pricing

California campaign voter data pricing starts at $99 per race.

The pricing goal is simple: make modern voter-data tooling accessible to local campaigns and first-time candidates, not only large statewide operations.

Pricing is structured for California campaigns that need a usable voter-data workflow before a broad public launch.

Starts at $99 per raceCalifornia campaign workflowsHuman follow-up
What you are paying for

The actual workflow, not just another pricing grid.

Pricing only matters if the workflow is usable. These are captured product screens from the current private beta for California campaigns and consultants.

CA Voter segment builder with live voter table and filter chips.
STEP 01

Build the universe

Captured from the product

Filter county, party, turnout, and propensity in one place, then inspect the actual voter rows before you commit the list to field or mail.

CA Voter voter review screen with CRM panel and issue notes.
STEP 02

Review the voter record

Captured from the product

Inspect voter-level context with turnout and BISG signal detail instead of treating every segment like a blind export.

CA Voter field packet board with packet ownership and status.
STEP 03

Build the field packet

Captured from the product

Move from segment to field-ready packet with a printable route structure the campaign can actually hand to canvassers.

CA Voter copilot chat screen with a natural-language voter targeting prompt.
STEP 04

Ask in plain language

Captured from the product

Use the copilot to translate campaign questions into a usable filter instead of rebuilding the segment by hand every time.

Private beta pricing

Private beta access starts at $99 per race. Final launch pricing may change as more reporting, API, and firm-level controls ship.

  • Filter and segment California voters
  • Voter CRM, saved universes, and consultant workspaces
  • Walk packets, canvass mode, and survey reporting
  • Per-voter AI briefings and transparent chat
  • Email send plus CSV, direct-mail, SMS, ad-audience handoff, and phone-bank click-to-call

Who the beta is for

The beta is for California campaigns, committees, candidates, and consultants who can verify qualification to use voter registration information for permitted campaign purposes.

  • City, county, district, and local California races
  • Candidates, committees, campaign managers, and consultants
  • Teams that need targeting and export now rather than after a long implementation
  • Campaigns that can verify permitted voter-file use

Best fit and not-best-fit

CA Voter is the best fit when the campaign mainly needs the California voter-operations layer: segmentation, saved universes, voter CRM, canvassing, consultant reporting, and portable outreach handoff.

It is not the best fit when the buyer is really shopping for a broader fundraising stack, website platform, generic supporter CRM, or a full legacy vendor bundle around the voter-data layer.

  • Best fit: local California campaigns, consultants, and field teams that need usable voter universes quickly
  • Best fit: races that want lower-overhead list review, canvassing, and client-separated reporting
  • Not best fit: buyers who mainly need fundraising, websites, or broad supporter management
  • Not best fit: teams that want one broader vendor to own every outreach-service layer

What happens after an access request

The access request is meant to start a real qualification and pricing conversation, not trap the campaign in a long sales sequence. The team reviews the role, race, geography, and intended workflow before discussing fit and onboarding.

If the beta is a fit, the follow-up is supposed to answer practical questions quickly: whether the workflow matches the race, what the current pricing path looks like, and what the campaign would need before using the product.

  • Share the role, race, and campaign context
  • Get human review of campaign fit and permitted use
  • Review the current per-contest pricing path
  • Decide whether onboarding makes sense before committing further

What the $99 entry point is meant to prove

The entry point is designed for campaigns that need to answer a practical question before buying a heavier stack: can this team build the right voter universe, review it, and move it into real campaign work quickly?

That is intentionally different from quote-only enterprise procurement. The beta should let smaller campaigns and consultants evaluate the voter-operations workflow without assuming a statewide budget.

  • Whether the campaign can build useful segments without spreadsheet cleanup
  • Whether the field team can turn a segment into walk packets or canvass work
  • Whether the manager can review list logic before budget is spent
  • Whether a consultant can separate client workflows cleanly

How to compare total cost

The cheapest tool is not always the lowest-cost workflow. Campaigns should compare setup time, consultant time, list cleanup, export friction, and the cost of contacting the wrong voters.

CA Voter is strongest when the campaign wants the voter-data layer to become usable quickly, while keeping the rest of the campaign stack portable.

  • Ask how long it takes to build the first usable voter universe
  • Ask whether field, CRM, and export steps stay connected
  • Ask whether consultant workspaces are separated by client
  • Ask whether the campaign can leave with portable exports
Pricing question

Need pricing context before requesting beta access?

Send the race, role, expected timeline, and number of contests so the team can answer whether the current beta pricing path fits.

Private beta

Ready to price this for a real California campaign?

Request a pricing review for eligibility, rollout timing, and the current per-contest beta pricing path.

Starts at $99 per raceCalifornia campaign workflowsHuman follow-up

Questions

Do I need a credit card to request access?

No. The access request only collects enough information to verify the campaign, role, and race before follow-up.

Is there a firm or consultant plan?

Consultant workspaces are live. Early beta pricing still starts with per-contest access while broader firm reporting and billing controls keep expanding.

Who should actually join from the pricing page?

Candidates, campaign managers, committees, and consultants who already know they need voter-data filtering, segmentation, and export for a real California race are the clearest fit.

What is included in the $99 beta entry point?

The entry point is meant to evaluate the voter-operations workflow: segmentation, saved universes, voter CRM, walk packets, survey reporting, and export review for a qualified California contest.

Is this priced for city council and school board campaigns?

Yes. The public entry price is intentionally aimed at local California races that need practical voter-data workflows without statewide or enterprise overhead.