How much does Torq cost in 2026?

Quick Answer: Torq offers a free Community Edition for individual practitioners and small SOCs, with Professional and Enterprise tiers priced via sales. Industry reports place mid-market deployments at roughly $30K-$80K/year and enterprise at $100K-$500K/year.

Torq pricing is partially published and partially quote-based. As of May 2026, the structure is:

Published tiers (verified 2026-05-06)

  • Community Edition: Free. Limited monthly workflow runs and a subset of integrations. Single user, no SSO, support via community forum and docs.
  • Professional: Quote-based via sales. Higher run volumes, full integration library, team features, standard support.
  • Enterprise: Quote-based via sales. SSO, audit logs, SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, HIPAA-readiness, custom data residency, air-gapped deployment, dedicated customer success.

Approximate ranges

Pricing is not published, but industry reports and customer references suggest:

  • Mid-market deployments: $30,000-$80,000/year
  • Enterprise deployments: $100,000-$500,000/year
  • Air-gapped or government deployments: custom, typically higher

These figures depend on workflow run volume, user count, integration depth, and contract length.

What's included

All tiers include the visual workflow canvas, the 300+ integration library, REST API access, and webhook triggers. Higher tiers add team workspaces, RBAC, audit logging, SSO, and certifications.

Implementation costs

Torq workflows are no-code and most teams self-implement. Complex SOC migrations (replacing 20+ legacy runbooks) typically engage Torq Professional Services or partners; this work is billed separately, typically $40,000-$150,000 depending on scope.

Comparison to alternatives

For an evaluating SOC team:

  • Torq Community Edition: free
  • Tines free tier: free
  • Shuffle (open source): free, self-hosted
  • Splunk SOAR: enterprise quote-based
  • Palo Alto XSOAR: enterprise quote-based

Torq is competitive on integration breadth and deployment model flexibility (especially air-gapped). Tines is often cheaper at the entry tier and stronger for low-code business workflows; XSOAR is broader but more expensive and tied to the Palo Alto ecosystem.

Last updated: | By Rafal Fila