GitHub Enterprise lists at $21 per user per month, and most enterprise buyers pay less than they think they should but more than the best quartile. Enter your numbers to see where you stand.
No login. No file upload. Aggregates from real, anonymized agreements; your inputs are not stored with your name on them.
Your deal is placed against the same anonymized reference agreements our analysts use, matched to deals of similar size. Every number on the dial comes from that cohort.
If your deal falls outside the sizes the dataset actually covers, or too few comparable deals exist, the check says so plainly instead of inventing a percentile.
The check returns market quantiles, never another customer's deal. And your own inputs stay yours; nothing here identifies you until you choose to leave an email.
The per-seat Enterprise price is the visible number, but Advanced Security is where GitHub deals swell: it can double the effective per-developer cost, and its discount is negotiated separately.
GitHub sells through Microsoft, so EA attach, Azure commit drawdown, and Microsoft's June 30 fiscal year end all apply. GitLab quotes are taken seriously.
Want the trajectory, not just a spot check? The quarterly GitHub price index publishes the median paid price and the negotiated corridor, quarter by quarter, with the observation counts behind every figure.