// Verified rate reference, July 19, 2026

Reducto Pricing: Cost Per Page and Per 1,000 Pages

Reducto prices in credits at $0.015 each, so nobody quotes dollars per page. Converted, a standard parse is $15 per 1,000 pages, agentic runs $30 to $60, and Deep Extract starts at a $0.45-per-document minimum. Here is every operation in dollars, plus the two billing traps.

  • Every operation in dollars per 1,000 pages
  • How the $0.015 credit converts
  • The Deep Extract 30-credit minimum
  • The extract double-charge trap
Upload a document, no signup

PDF, JPG, PNG, BMP, HEIC, TIFF

Upload a document to extract

A credit rate says nothing about whether the fields come out right on your documents. Drop one in and check the output before you commit.

SOC 2 Type II
256-bit encryption
US data handling
Fields, not just text
$15
standard parse, per 1,000 pages
$30 to $60
agentic parse, per 1,000 pages
$0.45
Deep Extract minimum, per document
15,000
free credits, granted once
// The short answer

What Reducto costs

Reducto bills in credits at $0.015 each, and every operation spends a fixed number of credits per page. A standard parse is 1 credit ($15 per 1,000 pages), complex and agentic parsing run 2 to 4 credits ($30 to $60), standard extraction is 2 credits ($30), and Deep Extract is 4 credits per page plus 0.1 credit per field, with a 30-credit-per-document minimum that works out to $0.45 for a single-page document. Every account gets 15,000 free credits, but only once, unlike LlamaParse's monthly renewal. Against plain cloud OCR at $1.50 per 1,000 pages, Reducto is about 10 times more on a standard parse and up to 40 times more agentic. You are paying for a vision-language reasoning pass, not for cheaper OCR.

// Every operation, converted to dollars

Reducto pricing per page and per 1,000 pages

The credit column is Reducto's own published rate. The dollar columns convert it at $0.015 per credit.

Operation Credits Per page Per 1,000 pages What it is
Parse, standard 1 credit / page $0.015 $15.00 Baseline OCR to markdown
Parse, complex 2 credits / page $0.030 $30.00 Dense or multi-column layouts
Parse, agentic standard 2 credits / page $0.030 $30.00 VLM reviews and corrects the OCR pass
Parse, agentic complex 4 credits / page $0.060 $60.00 Agentic on the hardest layouts
Parse, text files 0.5 credit / page $0.0075 $7.50 Digital text formats, no OCR
Extract, standard 2 credits / page $0.030 $30.00 Structured fields from a parsed doc
Deep Extract (beta) 4 cr / page + 0.1 cr / field min $0.45 / doc $60.00+ Minimum 30 credits per document
Split, standard 2 credits / page $0.030 $30.00 Document boundary detection
Deep Split 4 credits / page $0.060 $60.00 Agentic splitting
Classify 0.5 credit / page $0.0075 $7.50 Document type classification
Edit (beta) 4 credits / page $0.060 $60.00 Programmatic document edits
Advanced chart agent +4 credits / chart +$0.06 +$0.06 / chart Add-on, per chart
Batch Queue 20% fewer credits varies $12.00 (std parse) The only published discount

Rates read from the Reducto pricing page and credit-usage documentation on July 19, 2026. Spreadsheets bill 1 credit per 1,000 cells. Free tier is 15,000 credits, granted once. Re-verify before quoting.

// Read this before you budget

Two billing rules that change the real cost

The headline rates are honest, but two rules in the credit-usage docs can multiply your bill if you do not plan for them.

The Deep Extract 30-credit minimum

Deep Extract is 4 credits per page plus 0.1 credit per field, but it never bills less than 30 credits per document. On a single-page document, that floor is the whole bill: 30 credits is $0.45 for one page, or $450 per 1,000 single-page documents. That is 30 times the $15 standard parse rate. Deep Extract only pays off on long documents, where the per-page cost climbs above the 30-credit floor.

The extract double-charge

If you send a raw file or a URL straight to the Extract endpoint, Reducto charges Parse credits on top of the extract cost. So a standard extract on a raw file is 2 extract credits plus 1 parse credit, or $45 per 1,000 pages instead of $30. Parse the document first, then call Extract with the returned job id, and the parse is billed only once. It is a 50 percent difference on every extraction you run.

// In context

Reducto versus the other extractors

Reducto sits at the higher-price, higher-accuracy end of the agentic category. See the full breakdown on the agentic document extraction pricing comparison, or the head-to-head on Reducto versus LlamaParse.

Tool Per 1,000 pages Output Free credits
Reducto standard parse $15.00 Markdown, agentic optional 15,000, one time
Reducto agentic complex $60.00 VLM reasoning, hardest layouts 15,000, one time
LlamaParse Fast $1.25 Spatial text only, no markdown 10,000 / month, renews
LlamaParse Agentic $12.50 Markdown, tables, reasoning 10,000 / month, renews
Landing AI DPT-2 parse $30.00 Markdown, agentic 1,000, expire in 90 days
Cloud OCR (Textract, Azure, Google) $1.50 Raw text and key-values Free tier varies

Frequently asked questions

How much does Reducto cost?
Reducto charges by credit, at $0.015 per credit, and every operation spends a fixed number of credits per page. A standard parse is 1 credit per page, which is $15 per 1,000 pages. Complex and agentic parsing run 2 to 4 credits per page ($30 to $60 per 1,000 pages), standard extraction is 2 credits ($30), and Deep Extract starts at 4 credits per page but carries a 30-credit-per-document minimum. Your first 15,000 credits are free, one time.
How much does Reducto cost per page?
A standard Reducto parse is 1 credit per page, and each credit is $0.015, so a page costs $0.015 with standard parsing. Complex parsing is 2 credits ($0.03 per page), agentic standard is 2 credits ($0.03), agentic complex is 4 credits ($0.06), and standard extraction is 2 credits ($0.03). Multiply the credits-per-page by $0.015 for the per-page price, or by $15 for the price per 1,000 pages.
How do Reducto credits work?
You buy credits and every API call spends a set number of them based on the operation and the number of pages. Credits cost $0.015 each, so a 1-credit standard parse is $0.015 per page or $15 per 1,000 pages. Parsing spends 1 to 4 credits per page, extraction 2 or more, splitting 2 to 4, classification 0.5, and editing 4. The Batch Queue spends 20 percent fewer credits, which is the only volume lever Reducto publishes.
Is Reducto free?
Reducto gives every new account 15,000 free credits, but that allowance is a one-time grant, not a monthly renewal. At the standard 1-credit parse rate, 15,000 credits covers about 15,000 pages, then you pay $0.015 per credit. This differs from LlamaParse, which renews 10,000 credits every month, and from Landing AI, whose 1,000 free credits expire after 90 days. For an ongoing workload, budget Reducto as paid from the start.
How much does Reducto agentic parsing cost?
Agentic parsing doubles the credit cost. Standard parse is 1 credit per page and agentic standard is 2 credits, so agentic runs $30 per 1,000 pages against $15 for standard. Complex documents cost 2 credits standard and 4 credits agentic, which is $60 per 1,000 pages. The agentic mode runs a vision-language model that reviews and corrects the first OCR pass, which is why it costs roughly twice the standard rate.
What is Reducto Deep Extract pricing, and why is it more than the headline?
Deep Extract costs 4 credits per page plus 0.1 credit per field, with a minimum of 30 credits per document. That minimum is the catch: a single-page document bills the full 30 credits, which is $0.45 for one page, or $450 per 1,000 single-page documents. That is 30 times the $15 standard parse rate and 15 times the $30 standard extract rate. Deep Extract only becomes economical on long documents where the per-page cost outweighs the 30-credit floor.
Does Reducto charge for parsing when I extract?
It can, and this trips people up. If you send a raw file or URL straight to the Extract endpoint, Reducto also charges Parse credits on top of the extract cost, so a standard extract on a raw file is 2 extract credits plus 1 parse credit, or 3 credits ($45 per 1,000 pages) instead of 2 ($30). To avoid the double charge, parse the document first and then call Extract with the returned job id so the parse is not billed twice.
Is Reducto cheaper than LlamaParse?
For a plain parse, no. Reducto standard parse is $15 per 1,000 pages against LlamaParse Cost-effective at $3.75 and LlamaParse Fast at $1.25. For an agentic parse the gap narrows: Reducto agentic standard is $30 while LlamaParse Agentic is $12.50, so LlamaParse is still cheaper. Reducto counters with a stronger accuracy reputation on complex enterprise layouts, and LlamaParse counters with a free tier that renews monthly. Price favors LlamaParse; buyers pick Reducto for accuracy.
Is Reducto cheaper than AWS Textract or Azure?
No. AWS Textract, Azure AI Document Intelligence and Google Document AI all charge $1.50 per 1,000 pages for plain OCR, while Reducto standard parse is $15, about 10 times more, and Reducto agentic complex is $60, about 40 times more. Reducto is not competing on OCR price. You pay the premium for a vision-language reasoning pass that produces cleaner markdown and structured output on complex tables and layouts than raw cloud OCR returns.
Does Reducto have a volume discount?
Reducto publishes one cost lever: the Batch Queue, which spends 20 percent fewer credits than real-time processing. So a standard parse in batch is 0.8 credits per page, or $12 per 1,000 pages instead of $15. Beyond that, the self-serve Standard plan is flat pay-as-you-go at $0.015 per credit with no tiered volume discount; larger commitments move to the Growth and Enterprise plans, which are custom-quoted.
What does a chart-heavy document cost on Reducto?
Charts add cost through the advanced chart agent, which is an extra 4 credits per chart, or $0.06 per chart, on top of the per-page parse rate. A financial report with a dozen charts can therefore cost far more than its page count suggests. If you do not need chart data digitized, leaving the chart agent off keeps you on the base 1-to-4-credit-per-page parse rate.

Test the output on your own documents

A credit rate tells you nothing about accuracy. Upload a document to DocuOCR, see the extracted fields, and compare before you build a pipeline around any parser.

From the same family of tools