# FullEnrich Review: Is It Still Worth It in 2026?

*Canonical: https://derrick-app.com/tools/fullenrich-review*
*Website: https://fullenrich.com*

---

## FullEnrich review — what it is, what it isn't

FullEnrich's commercial wedge is the math : if you're already paying for 2-3 enrichment tools and running them sequentially yourself (Apollo first, fall back to Dropcontact, then Hunter), FullEnrich does the same thing automatically with one subscription, one credit pool, and one bill. Most customers cite this stack-collapse — typically 3-4 separate $30-50/mo subscriptions consolidated into one — as the deciding factor.

The platform supports both API access and a web UI for one-off lookups + CSV uploads. Native integrations to HubSpot, Salesforce, Clay, and Zapier route enrichment requests automatically as records enter your CRM. The waterfall logic is configurable — you can prioritise specific providers (e.g. Dropcontact first for GDPR compliance, then fall through) or let the platform optimise for hit rate + cost.

Credits are universal — 1 credit = 1 successful enrichment regardless of which provider in the waterfall delivered the result. Failed lookups cost nothing. This is materially different from running individual subscriptions where you pay for misses.

## FullEnrich pricing 2026

FullEnrich pricing is credit-based with monthly tiers. The Starter tier at $59/mo (1,000 credits) is the typical entry point for solo SDRs replacing 2-3 individual enrichment subscriptions. Pro at $119/mo (2,500 credits) covers active sales reps or 2-3 person teams. Business tiers ($249-$399/mo) scale credits + seats + advanced workflows.

Pricing-per-credit drops at higher tiers : Starter is ~5.9¢/credit, Pro is ~4.8¢/credit, Business gets down to ~2.6¢/credit. For teams running 5,000+ enrichments/month, the waterfall stops being cheaper than per-provider direct subscriptions purely on unit economics — the value shifts to hit-rate lift + operational simplicity.
