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Software Testing Cost: Pricing Models and What QA Really Costs in 2025

Astaqc Team

Astaqc Team

June 11, 2026

Software testing cost guide

Software Testing Cost: Pricing Models and What QA Really Costs in 2025

Software testing costs typically run 15–25% of total development budget for standard products, rising to 30–40% for safety-critical or compliance-heavy domains. Where your project lands depends on scope, automation maturity, and whether QA is in-house or outsourced.

What Drives Testing Cost

  • Application complexity — number of user flows, integrations, and platforms to cover
  • Release frequency — each release re-incurs regression cost unless automated
  • Platform matrix — browsers, devices, and OS versions multiply effort
  • Compliance requirements — documentation, traceability, and audits add overhead
  • Quality bar — a consumer fintech app and an internal tool justify different investment

In-House QA Costs

A fully loaded in-house QA engineer costs roughly $70,000–$130,000+/year in the US and Western Europe (salary, benefits, tooling, management). Automation engineers command 15–30% more. Add infrastructure: device labs, browser grids, CI capacity, and test management tooling.

Outsourced QA Pricing Models

  • Hourly — $25–60/hour for offshore/nearshore specialists; flexible for variable workloads
  • Dedicated team — monthly rate per tester, typically 40–60% below equivalent in-house cost; best for ongoing engagement
  • Project-based — fixed price for a defined scope (e.g. a release certification or automation build-out)

Our QA outsourcing guide covers how to choose between these models and evaluate vendors.

The Cost of Not Testing

Defect cost grows by roughly an order of magnitude at each lifecycle stage: a requirement-stage fix costs minutes; a production defect costs engineering firefighting, support load, customer churn, and — in regulated industries — penalties. For revenue-critical systems, a single checkout-breaking defect can exceed the annual QA budget in hours. Testing is not a cost centre; it is insurance with a measurable premium and a measurable payout.

How to Reduce Testing Cost Without Reducing Quality

  1. Automate regression — the highest-volume repetitive cost; the payback math is in our automation ROI guide
  2. Use no-code automation tools — platforms like TestInspector eliminate the framework-engineering cost that dominates traditional automation budgets, and let existing manual testers build the suites
  3. Prioritise by risk — deep coverage on revenue and data-integrity flows, lighter coverage elsewhere
  4. Blend in-house and outsourced — keep product-critical QA close, outsource device coverage and release peaks
  5. Shift left — developer unit testing and CI quality gates catch defects at the cheapest stage (see our CI/CD testing strategy guide)

Frequently Asked Questions: Software Testing Cost

What percentage of a development budget should go to testing?
15–25% is the common range for standard products; safety-critical and compliance-heavy software justifies 30–40%. Below 10% usually signals defect-driven costs are being paid elsewhere.

Is outsourced QA cheaper than in-house?
Usually 40–60% cheaper per tester for equivalent seniority, with no recruitment or management overhead. The trade-off is product knowledge ramp-up, which good vendors mitigate with stable dedicated teams.

Does test automation reduce testing cost?
After payback (typically 6–12 months), substantially — each automated regression run displaces manual hours. The exception is poorly maintained automation, which can cost more than the manual testing it replaced.

How much does it cost to test a mobile app?
More than web, due to the device matrix — see our mobile app testing checklist for the coverage areas that drive the effort.

Want a QA cost model for your product? Contact Astaqc for a scoped estimate or explore our software testing services.

Astaqc Team

Astaqc Team

June 11, 2026

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