The price is on the page, not behind a demo.
Counts, invoices, recipe costing, live food cost. Built for operators who do the work themselves. Count by voice in the walk-in. Photograph the invoice at the dock. From $19/month, no contract, no setup fee.
The money side
Pricing, side by side.
Craftable details from craftable.com and its terms of service as of 2026-07-02. Stockcount pricing from our pricing page.
| Stockcount | Craftable | |
|---|---|---|
| Published price (single location) | $19/mo | None. Quote-only, demo required |
| Pro tier (more credits, multi-location) | $49/mo | Quote-only |
| Public pricing page | stockcount.io/pricing | Removed. craftable.com/pricing returns a 404 as of July 2026 |
| Setup fee | None | Set per Order Form, not published |
| Extras beyond the plan price | Usage credits included; optional extra usage bills at cost | Unpublished |
| Contract | Month-to-month, cancel anytime | 1-year term, auto-renews yearly, per their terms of service |
| Leaving mid-term | Cancel from the billing page | No termination for convenience, no refunds, per their terms of service |
| Time to first count | Same day, self-serve | Team-led onboarding |
| First-year cost, one location | $228 on Starter, $588 on Pro | Quote-only |
The count is done when you stop talking.
Craftable counts with a phone or a barcode sled, shelf by shelf, tap by tap. Stockcount removes the typing. Walk the walk-in and say what you see: '2 cases chicken thighs, half a bag of flour.' Each item shows on screen as it is heard.
- A weekly count is about 15 minutes of talking
- Invoices captured by photo or PDF upload
- Food cost percentage updates the moment a count or invoice lands
A price that doesn't need a quote.
Craftable removed its pricing page. The only way to learn the price is a demo, and the contract that follows runs one year with no mid-term exit, per their terms of service. Stockcount starts at $19 per month, self-serve, month-to-month. If it does not earn its keep, cancel from the billing page.
- No setup fee, no annual commitment, no demo required to see a price
- Starter ($19/mo) covers a single location
- Pro ($49/mo) adds credit headroom and multi-location dashboards
Who should stay on Craftable.
If you run a multi-unit group with a corporate ops team, or a beverage program that lives on pour cost, Craftable remains the stronger tool. Its Bevager roots show. The beverage tooling is deep. Stockcount is built for the independent operator first.
- Perpetual inventory with automated POS depletions and theoretical-vs-actual reporting
- Connects with 1,000+ vendors, with EDI ordering for major distributors like Sysco and US Foods
- Accounting sync and built-in bill pay
Last updated 2026-07-02
Craftable pricing, explained.
Craftable removed its public pricing page. As of July 2026, craftable.com/pricing returns a 404. No page on the site links to pricing, and the only call to action is booking a demo. Any setup fees are set per Order Form and are not published. You will find numbers on third-party aggregator sites. We have not found them reliable enough to repeat here.
The contract terms are published, in the terms of service. The initial term is one year. It auto-renews in one-year increments unless you give written notice at least 30 days before the term ends. There is no termination for convenience mid-term, and no refunds on customer-initiated cancellation. One term favors you: renewal price increases are capped at 5 percent per year.
The onboarding motion matches the contract. It is team-led, and per their own testimonial, one group rolled out 48 stores over nine to ten months. That motion makes sense at 48 stores. It is a lot of process to buy when you have one.
Stockcount’s numbers are on the pricing page: $19, $49, or $149 per month, month-to-month, no setup fee, cancel from the billing page. A cafe on Pro pays $588 for the first year. We cannot tell you the gap in dollars. Craftable does not publish theirs. Finding out ours does not require a meeting.
What switching looks like.
There is no multi-week migration. Export your item list from Craftable as a CSV and import it, or skip the export entirely: photograph one recent invoice from each of your vendors and Stockcount builds your catalog from the line items. Then do your first count. Signup to a finished first count is a same-day job, not a project.
One caution before you cancel anything. Per Craftable’s terms of service, cancelling takes written notice at least 30 days before your renewal date, and there is no mid-term exit. So find the renewal date first, send the notice, and overlap: Stockcount is month-to-month, so running both for an inventory cycle costs $19 to $49 and lets you compare the counts and the food cost number before you commit. If you want help moving a large catalog, email us and we will migrate it with you.
Keep reading.
- Stockcount vs CraftableThe full feature-by-feature comparison table.
- AI inventory managementHow voice counting and invoice scanning work.
- Stockcount for barsVoice-first inventory for bar programs.
- Stockcount pricingStarter, Pro, and Business, all month-to-month.
Frequently asked questions.
- How much does Craftable cost?
- Craftable removed its public pricing page. As of July 2026, craftable.com/pricing returns a 404, no page on the site links to pricing, and the only call to action is booking a demo. Any setup fees are set per Order Form and are not published. Stockcount starts at $19 a month, listed on our pricing page.
- Does Craftable have voice counting?
- No. Craftable counts are manual mobile entry or barcode scanning, with hardware scanner sleds supported. Stockcount counts by voice: you walk the shelves and say what you see, each item shows on screen as it is heard, and a weekly count is about 15 minutes of talking. Open bottles work like anything else in a voice count: say the fraction, like "well vodka, four and a half bottles", and it is recorded as-is.
- Does Stockcount have usage limits?
- Each plan includes monthly usage credits for the AI features. Starter covers roughly 1.5 hours of voice counting or 60 invoice scans a month; Pro covers about 5 hours or 180 scans. If you run out mid-month, turn on extra usage, which bills at cost with a monthly cap you set. No surprise invoices.
- What is the difference between Stockcount and Craftable?
- Craftable grew out of Bevager and Foodager, beverage and food cost tools now sold as one platform to full-service restaurants, bars, hotels, and casinos. The buying motion matches: a demo, a quote, an account manager, and a 1-year contract per its terms of service. Stockcount is built for the operator who does the count personally. You count by voice, photograph invoices, and ask questions in plain language. Sign up, pay $19 or $49 a month, cancel from the billing page.
- Can I switch from Craftable to Stockcount?
- Yes, but check your contract first. Per Craftable’s terms of service, the initial term is one year, it auto-renews in one-year increments, and cancelling requires written notice at least 30 days before the term ends. There is no mid-term termination for convenience and no refund on customer-initiated cancellation. So note your renewal date, give notice in writing, and overlap: Stockcount is month-to-month, so running both for a cycle costs $19 to $49. Bring your items over with a CSV export, or photograph a recent invoice from each vendor and Stockcount builds the catalog from those.
- Does Stockcount have every Craftable feature?
- No, and it does not try to. Craftable is deeper in several places: bar and beverage costing, perpetual inventory with automated POS depletions, theoretical-versus-actual variance reporting, connections with 1,000+ vendors (EDI ordering for major distributors like Sysco and US Foods), accounting sync, and built-in bill pay. Stockcount covers counting, invoice capture, recipe and plate costing, and live food cost. Purchase orders work through the chat agent, not a dedicated screen, and there is no vendor EDI or accounting integration yet. If you run a multi-unit group with a corporate ops team, Craftable may be the better fit.
- What happened to Bevager and Foodager?
- They became Craftable. Bevager covered beverage, Foodager covered food, and the company later folded them into one brand. If you searched for a Bevager alternative, this is the comparison you want: Craftable is the current product, and everything on this page applies to it.
Get a price without booking a demo.
Set up your catalog from a handful of invoice photos and do your first count this week. Plans from $19/mo, no contract, cancel anytime.