How Much Does an Odoo Implementation Cost in 2025?
Cost is the first question every buyer asks, and the hardest to find a straight answer to online. Most consultants avoid publishing pricing because scope varies. That is true, but it does not help the buyer who needs a budget range before they can start a conversation.
Here is what Odoo implementations actually cost, broken into three tiers based on scope and complexity.
Tier 1: Feasibility Assessment ($400 to $1,200)
Before committing to a full implementation, a Feasibility Assessment maps your current processes to Odoo modules and identifies gaps. You receive a written deliverable within 2 to 5 working days.
- Starter ($400, 2-day turnaround): Module recommendation and gap analysis.
- Standard ($800, 3-day turnaround): Starter plus a Stratum blueprint and phased implementation roadmap.
- Advanced ($1,200, 5-day turnaround): Standard plus a formal Scope of Work document ready for budget approval.
Tier 2: Single-Module Implementation ($5,000 to $15,000)
A focused implementation covering one core workflow: helpdesk ticketing, sales pipeline, inventory management, or accounting. Built on the Stratum Framework with proper layer separation from the start.
Tier 3: Multi-Module with Integrations ($15,000 to $60,000+)
Complex implementations spanning multiple Odoo modules with external system integrations. Field service dispatch, e-commerce sync, logistics platforms, AI document processing. Scope depends on module count, integration count, data migration requirements, and ongoing support needs.
What Drives Cost
The primary cost drivers are:
- Module count: Each additional module adds configuration, testing, and training.
- Integration count: Every external system connection requires authentication setup, retry logic, error handling, and monitoring.
- Data migration: Moving from an existing system to Odoo requires mapping, cleaning, and validation.
- Ongoing support: Post-launch support and iteration.
Start with the Assessment
If you are trying to budget for an Odoo implementation, the Feasibility Assessment is the correct first step. It gives you a clear scope, a realistic cost range, and a written document you can use for internal approvals.