How to White-Label a Client AI Front Office Without the $497/mo Agency Pro Plan

By Maxime Houle, Founder, SeldonFrame. Facts checked July 2026.

A branded portal, a custom domain, and your logo are what clients actually see, and in GoHighLevel all of it sits behind the $497 plan. There is a flat path to the same client-facing result.

What white-label really requires

"White-label" gets used loosely, so it helps to nail down what a client actually experiences. A truly white-labeled front office means the client never sees the platform underneath.

They log into a portal that carries your agency's brand, at a web address that belongs to you, with your logo where the vendor's logo would normally sit. When they book an appointment, check a message, or look at their reviews, it feels like your software, not a reseller's skin on someone else's product.

Break that into pieces. You need a branded client portal — the app your client logs into day to day. You need a custom domain, so the browser bar shows your address, not a generic platform URL. You need your logo and colors carried through the interface.

And underneath the branding, you need the actual front office doing the work: an AI receptionist that answers calls, chats, and texts, a website, a CRM, booking, and reviews. Branding without a working front office is a shell. A working front office without branding is just you reselling someone else's name.

This is why pricing matters here. These specific pieces are exactly what platforms like to gate. A basic sub-account is cheap to hand out. A fully branded, client-facing, custom-domain portal is the thing platforms save for their top tier, because it's what lets you look like a software company.

So when you compare platforms on white-label, the real question isn't whether they say the word. It's which of these pieces are included, at what price, and which sit behind an upgrade.

Kind of like… White-labeling is like a hotel running under a franchise brand instead of the chain's own name — the guest never sees the parent company, only the local brand on the sign, the key cards, and the staff uniforms.

How GoHighLevel gates it

In GoHighLevel, the full white-label experience is SaaS Mode, and SaaS Mode sits on the Agency Pro plan, reported at four hundred ninety-seven dollars a month. That's the gate.

The ability to resell branded sub-accounts under your own brand, with the client-facing portal and the reselling flow, lives on that top plan. The lower plans, reported at ninety-seven and two hundred ninety-seven dollars, give you the platform for your own use. On the two hundred ninety-seven dollar tier you can rebill usage at cost, but you don't get the branded reselling engine.

Rebilling with your own markup lands on the same top tier, too. Passing client usage through at cost is available on the two hundred ninety-seven and four hundred ninety-seven dollar plans, but adding your own margin on top of that usage is only on the four hundred ninety-seven dollar SaaS or Agency Pro plan.

So the two things a reselling agency wants most — a branded client-facing product and the right to charge a markup — are bundled together at the top. You cannot buy just the branding cheaply. To look like a software company to your clients, you pay the top-tier price.

There's more stacked on top of the plan, too. The AI Employee that powers the smart parts of the front office is an add-on, reported at around fifty dollars per location on Growth or ninety-seven per location on Unlimited, or roughly two to five cents a minute on usage.

Those fees are per location. A ten-client agency running flat-rate AI Employee reported around nine hundred seventy dollars a month in AI fees alone. Treat that as reported, not guaranteed. The takeaway: the true cost of a branded AI front office in GoHighLevel is the four hundred ninety-seven dollar plan, plus a per-location AI fee for every client, plus usage — before you've earned a dollar.

GoHighLevel plan tiers (reported monthly)
Starter$97/mo
Unlimited$297/mo
Agency Pro (SaaS Mode)$497/mo
Branded reselling + client portal only unlocks on the $497 Agency Pro tier.

What that gate costs a small or new agency

For an established agency with a full roster, four hundred ninety-seven dollars a month spread across many clients is defensible. For a small or new agency, the same gate is a wall.

You're being asked to pay top-tier pricing at exactly the moment you have the fewest clients to spread it across. If you have three clients, the plan alone eats a large slice of your revenue — and that's before the per-location AI fees that grow with every client you add.

The deeper problem: the gate changes what you can even try. A new agency wants to sign a first client, deliver something genuinely branded and impressive, and use that win to sign the next.

If the branded portal only exists at four hundred ninety-seven a month, you either front that cost on a hope, or you launch with an unbranded sub-account that undercuts the whole software-company pitch you were trying to make. Either way, the gate is shaping your business around the platform's pricing rather than around your clients.

This is the never-taxes idea applied to getting started. You shouldn't have to buy the most expensive plan to look professional to your first client, and you shouldn't have a per-location fee climbing before you have the revenue to carry it.

The features that make you look like a real software vendor — the portal, the domain, the branding — aren't exotic. They're table stakes for the pitch. Gating them behind the top tier taxes the exact agencies that most need them to grow: the small and the new.

The flat alternative

The flat model unbundles the branding from the price. On SeldonFrame, the branded client portal and custom domains are included at twenty-nine dollars a month. They aren't a top-tier feature.

The client logs into a portal with your brand, at a domain that's yours, with your logo, and the platform underneath stays invisible — all on the flat price. There's no four hundred ninety-seven dollar plan standing between you and looking like a software company to your first client.

Underneath the branding, the front office is the whole point. The AI receptionist is the product, included, answering across voice, chat, and SMS. The website, CRM, booking, and reviews are included at the same flat price.

Workspaces are unlimited and the first one is free forever, so you can build and demo a real branded client environment before you've spent anything.

There's no per-location AI seat to buy, because the AI runs on your own AI keys and your own Twilio at raw provider cost — this is BYOK. That means the smart parts of the front office don't carry a per-client platform fee that climbs as you grow, which is exactly the line that hurts on the per-location model.

The honest way to say it: the flat model moves the money. Instead of paying a high plan plus per-location AI fees to unlock branding, you pay a small flat fee for the orchestration and run the AI and telephony on accounts you own.

The branding your client sees is the same or better. The cost you subtract from your resale price is far smaller and doesn't grow with your roster. And because the keys and numbers are yours, the work stays portable rather than locked to one vendor's billing. You keep the margin, and you keep your options.

For the mechanics of turning that margin into a repeatable client offer, see white-label AI agents.

Kind of like… BYOK (bring your own key) is like using your own gas card instead of the rental car's prepaid fuel option — you pay the pump price directly instead of a marked-up flat fee baked into the rental.

Where the branding sits
GoHighLevel
  • Branded portal: $497/mo tier only
  • Custom domain: same top tier
  • AI: ~$50-97/location + usage
  • Markup rights: top tier only
SeldonFrame
  • Branded portal: included at $29/mo
  • Custom domain: included
  • AI: your own keys, raw cost
  • Unlimited workspaces, first free

Setup, and where GoHighLevel is still stronger

Setup on the flat model is deliberately fast. A full client workspace — branded portal, custom domain, AI receptionist configured, website up, CRM and booking wired in — comes out of a single conversation in about three minutes.

You describe the client and the workspace gets built. You're not assembling snapshots, configuring a metering system, or wiring a reselling flow before you can show a client anything. For a small agency signing clients one at a time, that speed is the difference between demoing today and demoing next week.

That said, GoHighLevel is genuinely more mature in two areas that matter, and it would be unfair not to say so.

Its SaaS configurator is deeper. If you want granular control over building multiple pricing tiers, gating specific features into specific plans, and running a fully productized signup and billing flow, GoHighLevel has years of iteration behind that machine and it shows.

And its snapshot and template marketplace is a real asset. You can drop in a mature, niche-specific configuration built and refined by other agencies and be running fast, with a library no newcomer can match on breadth.

So the recommendation is specific. If your agency's edge is a finely tuned, multi-tier SaaS product built on the snapshot ecosystem, and the per-location AI math works for your client mix, the four hundred ninety-seven dollar plan buys you a mature machine and you should stay.

If you're a small, new, or growth-stage agency and your goal is to give each client a genuinely branded AI front office — portal, domain, and all — without paying a top-tier gate and a growing per-location fee to do it, the flat path gets you the client-facing result for twenty-nine dollars flat, and keeps your margin intact as you scale. Choose based on which problem is actually yours.

Put a number on it

Use the free tool that pairs with this guide — no signup required — then build the AI front office that handles it for you.

Open the free toolBuild freeTry it inside ChatGPT ↗
Run an agency? Sell AI agents instead of renting software

Agencies reading GoHighLevel comparisons are often really pricing an agency stack. The other side of that decision is selling AI agents to clients at a flat platform cost instead of per-sub-account fees — this site's builder library covers pricing, white-labeling, and where to sell.

Selling AI agents: the guidesWhite-label AI agents

Frequently asked questions

Do I need the $497 plan to white-label GoHighLevel?

For the full branded reselling experience, yes. White-labeling client sub-accounts under your own brand is SaaS Mode, which is the Agency Pro plan, reported at four hundred ninety-seven dollars a month. Rebilling usage with your own markup lives on that same top plan. Lower plans give you the platform, but not the branded client-facing reselling engine.

Can I white-label a CRM for clients cheaply?

Yes, on a flat-priced platform. SeldonFrame includes a branded client portal and custom domains at twenty-nine dollars a month, with unlimited workspaces and the first one free forever. The AI receptionist, website, CRM, booking, and reviews are included, and the AI runs on your own keys at raw provider cost, so there is no per-location fee climbing as you add clients.

What's included in SeldonFrame's white-label?

At twenty-nine dollars a month flat you get a branded client portal, custom domains, your logo carried through, and the full front office: an AI receptionist across voice, chat, and SMS, a website, CRM, booking, and reviews. Workspaces are unlimited, the first is free forever, and each full client workspace is built from one conversation in about three minutes.

Sources

Related: go deeper, or browse all guides.