1. Plan structure
BOOST supports three main ways to subscribe so you can match your pricing to how you actually work:
- Individual tool subscriptions – subscribe to just a few key tools you use most frequently.
- Pre-packaged bundles (tiered plans) – group tools together in tiers such as Starter or Pro for broader coverage.
- Build-your-own custom bundles – combine individual tools and bundles to align with your team's specific workflow.
All examples on this page are representative. Final prices, names, and limits will be configured in your BOOST account and billing provider. Not legal advice. Not financial advice.
2. Individual tool subscriptions
Individual tool subscriptions are ideal if you are starting small or know exactly which BOOST tools you rely on most.
- Each tool (for example, Listing Description Generator or Open House Follow-Up) can be subscribed to separately.
- Each subscribed tool includes a defined monthly allowance of generations.
- If your usage grows across multiple tools, you can move into a bundled plan or add additional tools without losing access.
You manage active tools and plan changes in the Billing & Subscription section of the app.
3. Bundled plans (tiered)
Bundled plans group tools together and are designed for active agents or small teams who use BOOST as part of their daily workflow.
- A Starter-style bundle might focus on listing descriptions, social media content, and simple follow-up tools.
- A Pro-style bundle might include all tools: intake, listings, follow-up, explainers, and neighborhood comparison tools using safe criteria.
- Each bundle includes higher limits than individual tool subscriptions alone.
The Pricing page at /pricing gives an overview of example bundles and how they differ.
4. Build-your-own custom bundles
Custom bundles let you combine individual tools and bundles in ways that reflect your exact mix of listing, marketing, and follow-up work.
- For example, you could combine a Pro bundle with extra usage for follow-up tools if your team sends large numbers of messages.
- Over time, you can add or remove tools and adjust usage levels while keeping a single billing relationship.
Custom bundle configuration will be managed in the app when billing is fully live. Until then, this section defines the intended structure and behavior.
5. Usage metering
BOOST uses usage-based metering so that you can clearly understand how many generations you have used under your plan.
- Each tool run (for example, generating a listing description or follow-up sequence) counts as a generation.
- Plans can set separate limits per tool, per bundle, or per account per billing period, depending on how your pricing is designed.
- Usage is tracked consistently whether you use the BOOST web app, API, or MCP integrations under the same account.
In the app, usage details are surfaced in the Dashboard (Usage overview) and in Billing & Subscription.
6. Invoices and payment methods
BOOST relies on a billing provider to handle subscriptions and payments. Within BOOST, you will see a summary of:
- Your current plan or combination of plans.
- Active payment method used for subscription charges.
- A list of past invoices that can be downloaded for your records.
From the Billing & Subscription screen you will typically:
- Change plans or move between individual tools and bundles.
- Update your payment method in a secure billing portal.
- Download previous invoices.
BOOST does not store full card numbers. All underlying processing is handled by the billing provider. Not legal advice. Not financial advice.
7. Billing webhooks and events
When you integrate BOOST into your own systems through the API, you may want to respond to subscription or usage changes. For this, billing webhooks can be configured.
- Events include subscription updates, plan changes, and relevant usage thresholds.
- Events are sent to HTTPS endpoints that you configure in your account or billing provider.
- Each event payload includes a type, timestamp, and structured data so you can react (for example, adjust access in your systems).
Webhook payload shapes and signature verification details are described in the API reference.
8. Compliance and responsibility
Billing and usage do not change the fundamental rules about how BOOST should be used with clients and marketing channels.
- All content generated, regardless of plan, is intended to avoid crime statistics, school ratings, demographic targeting, and neighborhood “quality” language.
- You remain responsible for reviewing all content before use and ensuring it complies with Fair Housing, CREA, and local regulations.
- Plan choice and usage levels do not affect compliance safeguards—they apply consistently across all tools and tiers.
Fair Housing/CREA compliant; no protected-class criteria used. Not legal advice. Not financial advice. Always verify with your broker, brokerage policies, billing provider, and applicable authorities.