Proprietary Decision Scorecard
Architectural evaluation of Jira (SaaS) vs. Taiga (Open-Source).
Navigating the myriad of SaaS tools for project management can quickly become a significant financial drain. Jira, while a powerful industry standard, often introduces unexpected costs, making its true total cost of ownership (TCO) a recurring concern for financial planners and engineering leads alike.
Jira Cloud Official Pricing Tiers (as of June 2026)
| Tier | Per | Monthly Price | Annual Price (per month equivalent) | Key Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | Up to 10 users | $0 | $0 | Scrum and Kanban boards, Backlog, Basic roadmaps |
| Standard | User/month | $8.15 | $7.75 | 250GB storage, Project roles, Advanced roadmaps (basic) |
| Premium | User/month | $16 | $15.25 | Advanced roadmaps, Capacity planning, Sandbox, 24/7 support |
| Enterprise | Custom pricing | N/A | N/A | Unlimited sites, SAML SSO, Data residency, Enterprise support |
Hidden Costs of Jira
Beyond the advertised per-user pricing, Jira’s ecosystem frequently introduces additional expenditures that can inflate the total cost:
- Atlassian Marketplace Apps: Many essential functionalities, such as advanced reporting, custom workflows, or integrations, are provided by third-party apps, often adding $3–20/user/month per app. These can quickly compound.
- Confluence: For comprehensive documentation and knowledge base management, Confluence is frequently required but licensed separately, adding another per-user cost.
- Jira Service Management (JSM): If your teams need IT service management or customer support capabilities, JSM is a separate product with its own pricing structure.
- Storage Overages: While the Standard tier offers 250GB, larger teams or those with extensive attachments can quickly exceed limits, potentially forcing an upgrade or incurring additional fees.
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Analysis for Taiga (Self-Hosted Open Source)
Taiga offers a compelling open-source alternative to Jira, providing robust Kanban and Scrum boards, issue tracking, and backlogs. While it eliminates direct SaaS subscription fees, it introduces infrastructure and maintenance costs.
Hosting & Server Resource Estimation
Estimates for cloud hosting (e.g., AWS EC2, Azure VMs, Google Cloud Compute Engine) for a typical Taiga deployment (web server, database, real-time backend).
- Small Teams (Up to 20 users):
- Requirements: 2-4 vCPU, 4-8 GB RAM, 50-100 GB SSD.
- Estimated Monthly Hosting Cost: $30 - $60
- Medium Teams (21-100 users):
- Requirements: 4-8 vCPU, 8-16 GB RAM, 100-200 GB SSD.
- Estimated Monthly Hosting Cost: $80 - $180
- Large Teams (100+ users):
- Requirements: 8-16+ vCPU, 16-32+ GB RAM, 200+ GB SSD (potentially distributed setup).
- Estimated Monthly Hosting Cost: $200 - $500+
Maintenance & Engineering Support Estimation
The “free” aspect of open source often translates into internal engineering effort. These estimates assume an average DevOps/System Administrator hourly rate of $100/hour.
- Small Teams (Up to 20 users):
- Effort: 2-4 hours/month (setup, updates, backups, minor troubleshooting).
- Estimated Monthly Engineering Cost: $200 - $400
- Medium Teams (21-100 users):
- Effort: 4-8 hours/month (more frequent updates, monitoring, performance tuning, scaling).
- Estimated Monthly Engineering Cost: $400 - $800
- Large Teams (100+ users):
- Effort: 8-16+ hours/month (dedicated support, advanced scaling, security audits, potentially custom development).
- Estimated Monthly Engineering Cost: $800 - $1600+
Comparative TCO Table (Monthly Estimates)
| Team Size | Jira (SaaS Fees - Standard Tier) | Taiga (Infrastructure Cost) | Taiga (Engineering Support) | Taiga (Total Self-Host TCO) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 users | $38.75 | $40 | $300 | $340 |
| 20 users | $155 | $100 | $600 | $700 |
| 100 users | $775 | $300 | $1200 | $1500 |
Note: Jira costs are based on annual pricing equivalent for optimal comparison.
Scenarios: Cost Comparison
Scenario 1: Small Team (5 users)
- Jira Free: $0/month (Limitations: 10 users, 2GB storage, basic roadmaps)
- Jira Standard: 5 users * $7.75/user = $38.75/month
- Taiga (Self-Hosted): ~$340/month ($40 infrastructure + $300 engineering)
For a small team, Jira’s Free tier is undoubtedly the most cost-effective option if its limitations are acceptable. If more features or storage are needed, Jira Standard is significantly cheaper than self-hosting Taiga, primarily due to the engineering overhead.
Scenario 2: Medium Team (20 users)
- Jira Standard: 20 users * $7.75/user = $155/month
- Jira Premium: 20 users * $15.25/user = $305/month
- Taiga (Self-Hosted): ~$700/month ($100 infrastructure + $600 engineering)
Jira Standard remains a very competitive option. Even Jira Premium, with its advanced features and 24/7 support, is less than half the cost of self-hosting Taiga for a team of this size.
Scenario 3: Large Team (100 users)
- Jira Standard: 100 users * $7.75/user = $775/month
- Jira Premium: 100 users * $15.25/user = $1525/month
- Taiga (Self-Hosted): ~$1500/month ($300 infrastructure + $1200 engineering)
At this scale, the TCO for self-hosting Taiga becomes comparable to, or even exceeds, Jira’s Premium tier. While Taiga offers full control, the cumulative cost of infrastructure and dedicated engineering effort closes the financial gap with Jira’s SaaS offerings.
When Does Paying for Jira Actually Save Money?
Paying for Jira often provides a net saving when:
- Lack of Internal Expertise: Your organization lacks dedicated DevOps, SRE, or backend engineering talent to set up, secure, maintain, and troubleshoot a self-hosted application. The cost of hiring or allocating such talent often far outweighs SaaS fees.
- Focus on Core Business: If your engineering team’s primary focus should be on product development, not infrastructure management for internal tools. The opportunity cost of diverting engineering resources can be substantial.
- Need for Enterprise Features & Compliance: Jira’s Premium and Enterprise tiers offer features like advanced roadmaps, sandbox environments, capacity planning, SAML SSO, data residency, and enterprise-grade support, which are critical for larger, regulated organizations and not easily replicated with open-source tools without significant custom development.
- Extensive Integration Ecosystem: Jira’s vast Atlassian Marketplace and robust API support a wide range of integrations with other business tools (CI/CD, CRM, reporting). While Taiga offers integrations, Jira’s ecosystem is generally more mature and plug-and-play.
- Scalability & Uptime Guarantees: SaaS providers like Atlassian handle scalability and provide uptime SLAs, offloading this critical responsibility from your internal teams.
Final Purchasing Recommendation
- For very small teams (up to 10 users) with basic needs: Jira Free is the most cost-effective solution, offering a robust feature set without any financial commitment.
- For small to medium-sized agile teams (10-50 users) focused on product delivery: Jira Standard offers a clear value proposition. Its per-user cost is significantly lower than the total cost of self-hosting Taiga when accounting for engineering time, and it provides a reliable, scalable platform.
- For medium to large organizations (50+ users) requiring advanced capabilities, high availability, and dedicated support: Jira Premium or Enterprise are strong contenders. While the per-user cost is higher, it includes features and support that would be extremely expensive and complex to replicate with a self-hosted solution.
- For organizations with strong internal DevOps capabilities, strict data sovereignty requirements, or a philosophical preference for open source and complete control: Self-hosted Taiga can be a viable option. However, financial planners and engineering leads must accurately budget for the full TCO, including significant engineering effort for setup, maintenance, security, and potential custom development. The “free” aspect of open source often masks substantial operational costs.
In most scenarios for modern engineering teams without a dedicated internal IT/DevOps team for internal tools, the managed SaaS offering of Jira provides a better TCO and allows teams to focus on their core product development rather than infrastructure maintenance. The cost savings from avoiding internal IT overhead typically outweigh Jira’s subscription fees, particularly as team size grows beyond the free tier.
Cost and pricing analysis verified as of 2026-06-24. Self-hosting costs are estimates based on standard cloud providers.
Editor's Technical Verdict
When comparing Jira against Taiga, the decision rests on integration capability vs. data sovereignty. Choose Jira for immediate scale and zero-maintenance pipelines. Choose Taiga if you want data sovereignty, lower recurring seats cost, and complete database control.