AI receptionist vs. human receptionist: which is better?
An AI receptionist wins on cost, hours, and consistency: it is built to answer every call around the clock, in about a second, for a flat monthly fee from $99, and says the same right thing every time. A full-time human receptionist costs roughly $37,000 a year and works about 40 hours a week, but still reads an unusual or emotional call better than today's AI. For the routine majority of calls a small business gets, the AI is the stronger value.
First AI Employee | Human receptionist | |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Flat monthly fee from $99 | Around $37,000/year, plus hiring and turnover |
| Hours | Around the clock, ~1s pickup | About 40 hours a week |
| Consistency | Same right answer on call 500 as call 1 | Varies with the person and the day |
| Knows your business | Trained on your business from day one | Strong, once trained and retained |
| Delicate calls | Routes them to a person you designate | Reads these better than today's AI |
| Setup | Done for you, answering in minutes | Hiring, onboarding, and training |
Salary figure is the US median for receptionists (BLS); your local cost varies.
An AI receptionist and a human receptionist do the same core job: answer the phone, book the work, take messages. What separates them is cost, hours, and the kind of call each handles best. Here's the honest head-to-head for a small business.
Cost
A human receptionist is the bigger expense by a wide margin. The median full-time receptionist earns about $37,000 a year (BLS, 2024), roughly $3,100 a month before hiring and turnover, for about 40 hours of coverage a week. And turnover is the norm for this role: the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects about 128,500 receptionist openings a year through 2034 despite little or no growth in the job, which means businesses keep re-hiring for the same desk. Filling it is getting harder, too: 33% of small-business owners reported job openings they couldn't fill in November 2025, above the historical average of 24% (NFIB Jobs Report, 2025). An AI receptionist is a flat monthly fee from $99 that answers around the clock, with no per-call charge and no overtime.
Hours and availability
A human works set hours, so nights, weekends, and the lunch rush roll to voicemail or a queue. An AI receptionist is built to answer calls the moment they ring, day or night, and doesn't park a second caller on hold when both lines light up at once. For any business that takes calls after five, that gap decides a lot of jobs.
Consistency
People have good days and off days, follow a script loosely, and sometimes move on after you've spent months training them. An AI receptionist is trained on your specific business and says the same right thing on the five-hundredth call as on the first. For the routine bulk of calls (booking, screening, answering the usual questions), that reliability is hard to match.
Where a human still wins
A skilled person still reads a room better than any AI on the market today: the upset caller, the grieving one, the situation that fits no script and needs real judgment and warmth. Most callers feel this too: in one survey, 75% said they prefer talking to a real human for customer support (Five9, a contact-center software firm, 2024). A comparison that pretended otherwise wouldn't be worth reading. The practical answer is to let each do what it's best at: an AI receptionist tells every caller up front that it's an AI and routes the genuinely delicate or complex calls to a person you designate, while it handles the routine majority itself.
Which should you choose?
For most small businesses, whose calls are mostly routine (booking, quotes, questions, after-hours), the AI's cost and coverage settle it. Choose a human, or a hybrid with a person up front and an AI catching the overflow and the off-hours, if your business turns on a handful of high-stakes conversations where one person's read is worth more than the savings. Plenty of businesses land on the hybrid: a person for the delicate calls, an AI so none of the rest go unanswered. See the plans, or start a 7-day free trial.
Key takeaways
Common questions
Is an AI receptionist cheaper than hiring a receptionist?
Yes, by a wide margin. Plans start at $99 a month flat, against roughly $3,100 a month for the median full-time receptionist (about $37,000 a year), before hiring and turnover. The full breakdown is in how much an AI receptionist costs.
Can an AI receptionist fully replace a human receptionist?
For the routine majority of calls, yes. For a few genuinely delicate or complex calls, a person still reads the situation better, which is why many businesses run a hybrid: the AI answers everything and routes the hard calls to a human.
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