
Super Per-Site Billing, Add-Ons & Actual Costs: 2026 Guide
Super turns a Notion page into a website from $12 a site billed yearly, but the phrase doing the work is per site. Analytics is a separate add-on too. Here is what a Notion-backed setup really costs.
Typical annual cost
$144 to $336 per site
Personal to Pro over a year, each site billed separately; add-ons sit on top
Hidden fees
Yes
billing is per site, and analytics is a separate add-on priced by page views
Free tier
Yes
a free plan with editing and a custom domain, carrying a Made with Super badge
Cost transparency
Medium
scores 4 of 6 on our transparency checklist
Super true cost, per-site and add-ons
High· Verified July 15, 2026Super really costs $12 a site for Personal billed yearly, or $16 monthly, and $28 a site for Pro as of July 15, 2026, on top of a capable free tier. The phrase that shapes the bill is per site: each Notion page you publish is its own subscription, so five sites is five plans. Analytics is a separate add-on from $10 to $30 by page views, and teammates are $5 a member. Custom sub-path hosting starts around $50. There is no sales lane below Custom, so a lower bill comes from using fewer sites and add-ons.
- Free$0
- Personal, annual$12/site
- Personal, monthly$16/site
- Pro$28/site
- Analytics add-on$10-30/mo
- Team member$5/mo
- Custom from$50
At $12 a site billed yearly, Super Personal sits below the $17 median across the 23 website builders we track. The per-site model, though, means the bill multiplies with every Notion page you publish.
The free Super plan and its Made with Super badge
Super's free plan is more capable than most, with a catch in the branding. It offers real-time editing and even custom domain support, which is rare for a zero-cost tier, so you can point your own address at a Notion page without paying. The trade is a Made with Super badge on the site and the absence of the paid tiers' unlimited pages, bandwidth, and automatic SSL.
So the free tier genuinely publishes a small Notion-backed site, and works well for a personal page or a quick test. To remove the badge and get unlimited pages, bandwidth, and SSL, you move to Personal at $12 a site billed yearly. Remember that the paid plans are per site, so the free tier is also the only truly flat option. To see what other Notion and simple-site builders charge, the Super alternatives page lists them.
Super annual billing on the Personal plan
The yearly discount here is narrow, because it lands on the Personal plan. Personal drops from $16 to $12 a site on annual billing, a 25 percent cut, while Pro is quoted at a single $28 rate. The saving is real but applies to one tier. It is also charged per site, so the discount multiplies with your site count rather than being a one-time cut.
The trade is the familiar twelve-month commitment, complicated slightly by the per-site model. Committing a year on a Notion-backed site you know you are keeping is sensible, and the 25 percent adds up across several sites. For a page you are still testing, or one that might move off Notion, the monthly rate keeps the option open. Weigh the commitment per site, not as a single account decision.
| Plan | Monthly | Annual, per month | Annual total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal | $16 | $12 | $144 |
| Pro | $28 | $28 | $336 |
Super savings inside a per-site pricing model
As of July 2026, Super's pricing shows no academic, nonprofit, or startup tier and no promo codes. The only published discount is the 25 percent annual cut on Personal. In a per-site model, though, the real saving is structural rather than a discount: not paying for more sites or add-ons than you use.
The biggest lever is consolidation and restraint. Running many small pages as separate Super sites multiplies the bill, so grouping content into fewer sites where you can is genuine money saved. Skipping the analytics add-on when a lightweight external tool would do is another. With prices set publicly and no sales desk below the Custom tier, a lower bill is a matter of design rather than negotiation. The ways to pay less below spell out those choices.
Annual billing on Personal, 25 percent
Paying yearly drops Personal from $16 to $12 a site, a quarter off. It is the only published discount, it applies per site, and it needs a twelve-month commitment on each site you keep.
Consolidate sites where you can
Because billing is per site, several small pages as separate Super sites multiply the cost. Grouping related content into fewer sites, where the structure allows, is the largest saving the per-site model offers.
Skip analytics if a free tool fits
The analytics add-on runs $10 to $30 a month by page views. A lightweight external analytics tool can cover a small site for less or nothing, so add Super's only when you need it integrated.
How to hold down a Super bill
Super's plans are fixed below the Custom tier, so there is no negotiation on a Personal or Pro site. The savings come from three decisions you make yourself: how many separate sites you run, whether you pay for analytics, and whether you commit annually on the sites you keep. Each matters more here because everything is priced per site.
The moves below address the usual situations. A single-site owner optimizes on billing and add-ons, while anyone with several pages weighs consolidation against the per-site cost. All three are settled in your own account, not in a sales conversation.
Consolidate pages into fewer sites
- Target
- Anyone running several Super sites
- Argument
- Every site is a separate subscription, so five small pages is five plans. Where your structure allows, grouping content into one Super site instead of several is the single biggest saving the per-site model offers.
Add analytics only when integrated matters
- Target
- Small or low-traffic sites
- Argument
- The analytics add-on is $10 to $30 a month by page views. A free external tool covers a small site for less. Add Super's built-in analytics only when having it integrated genuinely saves you time or matters to the workflow.
Commit annually per kept site
- Target
- Personal sites you will hold
- Argument
- Personal drops 25 percent to $12 a site on annual billing. Because it is per site, take the yearly rate on each site you are sure about, and leave a still-experimental page on monthly so you can drop it without a wasted year.
When to add or upgrade a Super site
With per-site pricing, the timing question is really how many sites you spin up and when. Each new site is a fresh subscription. So the moment to add one is when a page genuinely needs to stand alone, not for tidiness a single site could handle. Restraint at that decision saves more than any billing trick.
For the plans themselves, annual billing on a kept site is the timing lever, and it is worth taking once a site has proven it will stick around. Upgrading Personal to Pro makes sense only when you need Pro's sub-directory support or its extra features. Time both to a real need rather than in anticipation, because on Super each decision repeats per site.
Jan
Feb
Mar
Q-END
Apr
May
Jun
Q-END
Jul
Aug
Sep
Q-END
Oct
Nov
Dec
Q-END
Pro tip: Before publishing a new page as its own Super site, ask whether it could live inside an existing one. Each separate site is a separate subscription, so the count is the cost.
What you decide on Super pricing
Below the Custom tier, Super's prices are published and self-serve, so nothing bends by negotiation. What you decide is how many sites you run, whether you buy analytics and Teams, and how you bill each kept site. Only the Custom tier, for sub-path hosting and SSO, involves an actual conversation.
Usually negotiable
- How many separate sites you publishHIGH
- Whether you pay for the analytics add-onHIGH
- Annual billing on each kept siteMEDIUM
- Custom-tier terms for sub-path and SSOMEDIUM
Rarely negotiable
- Personal and Pro per-site list prices
- Analytics being priced by page views
- The dependency on a Notion subscription
Paying less for Super, in practice
There is no rep below the Custom tier and no coupon, so a lower Super bill is a design choice. Four moves cover it, and the biggest is simply not spinning up more separate sites than you need, because every one is its own subscription.
The order is worth following. Decide how many actual sites the project needs first, since that drives the whole bill, then settle billing and add-ons on each one you keep.
- Publish related content as one Super site rather than several, since each site is billed separately and the count is what multiplies the cost.
- Stay on the free tier for a personal page you can accept a Made with Super badge on, since it even allows a custom domain.
- Commit annually on Personal for the sites you are sure about, taking the 25 percent cut to $12 a site while leaving experiments monthly.
- Skip the analytics add-on when a free external tool covers a small site, and add it only where integrated tracking genuinely helps.
- Add teammates or Custom sub-path hosting only when the workflow truly needs them, since both sit outside the plan at extra cost.
Super pricing mistakes to avoid
Each of these comes from Super's per-site model and its separate add-ons, and each is simple to avoid before you publish.
Reading $12 as a flat account price, when it is per site and multiplies with every page you publish..
Spinning up several separate sites for content that could live inside one..
Buying the analytics add-on for a small site a free external tool would cover..
Paying monthly on a site you know you are keeping, when annual is 25 percent less per site..
Forgetting Super sits on top of Notion, so a Notion plan and structure sit underneath..
Reaching for Custom sub-path hosting or Teams before the workflow genuinely needs either..
Super alternatives if the sites add up
Super charges per site, so the useful comparison is what a multi-page or multi-site setup costs elsewhere. These three sit close on what a Super user weighs: simple building, custom domains, and price. All three prices are drawn from our own catalog, and a quick trial shows whether the per-site math still favours Super. The Super alternatives page holds the broader set.
Typedream
$5/mo billed annually
$7/mo
A Notion-adjacent builder with its own editor and Notion data integration. The closest comparison when Super's per-site cost starts to stack.
Framer
free tier available
$10/mo
A design-led builder with a real CMS. The move when you want more than a Notion front end and can leave the Notion workflow behind.
Unicorn Platform
$9/mo billed annually
$14/mo
A landing-page builder that bundles multiple sites on higher tiers. A fit when several small pages would each be a separate Super subscription.
Script“Super bills per site, so three Notion sites is three plans. Typedream from $5 a month and Unicorn Platform from $9 bundle more into one subscription, worth weighing before you scale up on Super.”
Is Super worth paying for? A grounded verdict
Super does one thing very well. It turns a Notion page into a fast, clean website with a custom domain, and for a single Notion-backed site it is a fair and simple product. The cost that catches people is the per-site model. The plan price is not an account fee, it is a per-site fee, so a portfolio or a set of client pages multiplies quickly.
So count your sites honestly before you commit. For one page, Personal at $12 a site billed yearly is good value, and the free tier covers a personal site if you accept the badge. For several, decide what genuinely needs to be a separate site, group the rest, and add analytics or Teams only where they earn their place.
Judged that way, Super is strong value for one or two Notion sites and expensive for a sprawl of small pages that each become a subscription. If you are running many, price a builder that bundles sites first. Study the plans on the Super pricing page and tally your sites before you buy.
Super pricing and discount FAQ
How much does Super cost for a Notion website?
+
Super's Personal plan is $12 a site billed yearly, or $16 monthly, and Pro is $28 a site, on top of a capable free tier. The key detail is that pricing is per site, so each Notion page you publish is its own subscription. Five Personal sites is five times $12, not a single flat fee. On top of the plan, analytics is a separate add-on priced by page views, from $10 to $30 a month, and teammates cost $5 a member. So budget by your number of sites and add-ons, not the single plan price.
Why does my Super total exceed the plan price?
+
Almost always the per-site model and add-ons. Super charges per site rather than per account, so if you publish several Notion pages as separate sites, each carries its own subscription and the total multiplies. Analytics is also a paid add-on, priced by combined monthly page views, so a busy site adds $10 to $30 a month automatically. Teammates cost $5 a member, and Custom sub-path hosting starts around $50. The fix is to consolidate pages into fewer sites where you can and to add analytics and Teams only when you genuinely need them.
Does Super charge per site or per account?
+
Per site. This is the single most important thing to understand about Super's pricing. Both the Personal and Pro plans are billed for each site you publish, not once for your whole account. So running four sites on Personal costs four times $12 a year-billed month, or $48 a month in total, not $12. For a single Notion-backed site the pricing is cheap and clear, but for a portfolio or a set of client pages the per-site model adds up fast. Always multiply the plan by your number of sites before judging the cost.
Is the free Super plan good enough for a real site?
+
For a simple personal site, it can be. Super's free plan is unusually capable, offering real-time editing and even custom domain support, which many free tiers withhold. The catches are a Made with Super badge on the site and the loss of the paid tiers' unlimited pages, bandwidth, and automatic SSL. So it works well for a personal page or a quick test, and it is also the only flat option, since paid plans are per site. To remove the badge and get the full feature set, you move to Personal at $12 a site billed yearly.
What does the Super analytics add-on cost?
+
It is priced by combined monthly page views across your sites, and it is separate from the plan. The tiers run about $10 a month up to 10,000 views, $20 up to 100,000, and $30 up to 200,000. The tier rises automatically as your traffic grows, so a site that takes off adds an analytics cost you did not pick at signup. For a small or low-traffic site, a free external analytics tool often covers the need for less. Add Super's built-in analytics when having it integrated into the dashboard genuinely helps your workflow.
Does Super give nonprofit or student discounts?
+
No. A look through its pricing in July 2026 turned up no nonprofit, student, or startup tier, and Super issues no promo codes. The only published discount is the 25 percent annual cut on the Personal plan. Because pricing is per site, the more meaningful saving is structural: run fewer separate sites and skip add-ons you do not need. There is also no sales lane below the Custom tier, so there is nobody to ask for a sector rate. A nonprofit is better served by consolidating sites and billing annually than by pursuing a rate Super never publishes.
Does Super ever negotiate on price?
+
Only at the Custom tier. The Personal and Pro plans are published, self-serve prices, so there is no negotiation on a standard site. Custom solutions cover sub-path hosting under paths like /docs or /blog, plus single sign-on. They start around $50 plus fees and are arranged in a direct conversation, so terms there are discussed rather than fixed. For everything else, your levers are how many sites you run, whether you buy analytics and Teams, and whether you bill annually. Those choices move more than any negotiation would on a per-site plan.
How do I keep multiple Super sites affordable?
+
Consolidate wherever the structure allows, because each separate site is its own subscription. Group related content into one Super site rather than publishing many small ones, and reserve separate sites for pages that genuinely must stand alone. Bill the sites you are keeping annually to take the 25 percent cut to $12 a site, and leave experiments on monthly. Skip the analytics add-on where a free external tool suffices, and add teammates only when needed. If you truly need many separate sites, price a builder that bundles them before scaling up on Super.
Explore Super
Every page on Super in one place, you are on cost guide.
Sources & verification
| Source | What was checked | Last checked |
|---|---|---|
| Super official pricing | Verified plan prices, renewal rates and credit allowances | July 15, 2026 |
| Super website | Official vendor website | July 15, 2026 |
| Super pricing on ComparEdge | Current prices for every plan, with the cost calculator | July 15, 2026 |
Every fact on this Super pricing page is tied to a named source and a verification date. Freshness-sensitive figures trace to the sources above; verify against the vendor before relying on them.