Before committing to either Freshdesk Freddy or Intercom Fin, here are the costs and catches that won't be obvious from their pricing pages.
Freshdesk Freddy โ what to watch for
- Dual pricing model โ you pay per-seat ($35/agent/month for Copilot) AND per-session (~$0.12/session for AI Agent)
- Only 500 AI Agent sessions included free โ high-volume teams blow through this quickly
- Sessions are bought in fixed blocks of 800 ($99), so you pay for unused sessions if your volume doesn't align neatly
- The AI Agent (customer-facing bot) and AI Copilot (agent assist) are priced and sold separately
Intercom Fin โ what to watch for
- Unpredictable monthly bills โ as your AI resolution rate improves, costs go up proportionally
- You're charged $0.99 even if the AI's answer didn't actually solve the customer's problem, as long as they didn't escalate
- Reddit users report 120% billing increases after enabling Fin (e.g. $4k to $9k/month)
- Copilot is an additional $35/agent/month on top of resolution costs
The cost nobody talks about: what happens when the AI can't answer?
Freshdesk Freddy uses per-session (hybrid) pricing while Intercom Fin uses per-resolution pricing. This means they handle the 'AI can't answer' scenario very differently.
Freshdesk Freddy: Freshdesk Freddy charges per session, not per resolution. This is an important distinction โ you're billed every time the AI engages with a customer, regardless of whether the issue was actually resolved. If the AI provides an unhelpful response and the customer then escalates to a human, you've paid for the AI session and the human agent's time.
Intercom Fin: Intercom Fin charges per resolution โ if a customer asks a question and gets an AI response but doesn't escalate, you're billed $0.99 regardless of whether the answer was actually helpful. If the customer does escalate to a human, you're not charged for a resolution, but you are paying for the human agent's time.
This is why comparing headline per-session vs per-resolution costs is misleading. The metric that matters isn't how much each billable event costs โ it's what each platform counts as a billable event in the first place, and whether you're paying for outcomes (successful resolutions) or activity (any AI interaction).