Clean Pipedrive-style kanban sales pipeline dashboard with deal stage cards and minimal UI design, illustrating streamlined CRM pipeline management for small agencies

Pipedrive Review for Small Agencies in 2026: Clean Pipeline Management Without the Bloat

Every agency owner eventually hits the same wall: the spreadsheet stops working, the free HubSpot tier feels like quicksand, and someone starts a Slack thread called “we need a real CRM.” Pipedrive is usually in the shortlist. It is visual, it is fast, and every review says it is built for sales teams. What those reviews rarely answer is whether it is built for your sales team — a 5-to-15 person agency juggling new business prospecting and active client relationships at the same time.

We spent three weeks setting up and testing Pipedrive across realistic agency workflows — from an initial discovery call pipeline to a multi-client retainer tracking system. Here is what we found.

Pipedrive is a visual CRM launched in 2010, now used by over 100,000 companies worldwide. It is built around a drag-and-drop pipeline interface and an activity-based selling model. Plans start at $14/user/month (annual billing) and the platform deliberately avoids built-in marketing automation, project management, and client portals — keeping the core focused on moving deals forward.

Who this is forSmall agency owners and ops leads at 2–15 person teams who need a CRM to manage new business prospecting and active client relationships — and want to know if Pipedrive actually fits that workflow.
What you’ll learnWhich Pipedrive plan makes sense for a small agency, how to set it up for dual new-business and client-delivery tracking, where the tool breaks down, and what you will actually pay once add-ons are factored in.

What Kind of Agency is Pipedrive Built For?

Pipedrive is a deal-centric CRM. Every object — contacts, emails, tasks, notes — orbits the deal. That architecture is a significant advantage if your primary challenge is closing new clients and tracking where each prospect sits in a defined sales process.

It becomes a mismatch if your primary challenge is managing 12 active retainers, logging client requests, and tracking deliverable status. The tool was not built for that — and it does not pretend to be.

  • Good fit: prospecting-heavy agencies — Digital marketing, PR, web development, and consulting firms where winning new clients requires a defined multi-stage process with active follow-up. The pipeline view earns its keep here.
  • Good fit: small teams under 15 peoplePipedrive onboards quickly and does not require a dedicated admin. Most teams get functional within a day of setup, without external configuration help.
  • Weak fit: retainer-first agencies — If you close a client once and then manage ongoing relationship and delivery for two years, the deal-centric model creates friction. Your “pipeline” after the close is a delivery queue, not a sales funnel.
  • Weak fit: agencies managing clients’ pipelinesPipedrive has no native sub-account or multi-client workspace architecture. It is designed for a single organisation managing its own sales pipeline, not for running separate CRM instances per client.
Key Insight The design philosophy of Pipedrive is deliberate restraint. It removes the features that slow sales teams down. For a focused new-business pipeline, that restraint is a competitive advantage. For agencies needing post-sale workflow management in the same tool, it is a structural gap.

What Pipedrive Actually Does Well

After three weeks of testing — including importing a real prospect list, building automations, and running deals from first contact to signed proposal — several features stood out as genuinely well-executed.

The visual pipeline is the obvious one, but the benefit is more specific than “it looks good.” When you open Pipedrive in the morning, the Kanban view shows every deal, its current stage, and the next scheduled activity — all without clicking into individual records. For an agency owner who manages both client work and new business, that at-a-glance daily view reduces the cognitive overhead of remembering where every conversation stands.

  • Activity-based selling modelPipedrive organises work around scheduled activities (calls, emails, meetings, tasks) rather than deal status alone. Every deal prompts you to log a next action. For small agency teams where new business falls through the cracks because everyone is heads-down on client work, this prompt is genuinely useful.
  • Automation on the Growth plan — Automatic deal creation from web form submissions, deal stage triggers, email follow-up sequences, and task assignment all work reliably. We built a 6-step inbound lead automation in under 20 minutes from a blank account — no Zapier required on the Growth plan.
  • Agency stack integrations — Native connections to Google Workspace, Slack, Zoom, Microsoft 365, and proposal tools like PandaDoc and DocuSign cover the majority of a small agency’s day-to-day toolkit. The marketplace lists 400+ integrations, with an open API for custom connections.
  • Clean onboarding, no admin overhead — Unlike HubSpot or Salesforce, Pipedrive does not require a dedicated configuration process. All plans include free personalised onboarding, and the default setup is usable out of the box.
Best Practice The real strength of Pipedrive for agencies is friction removal on new business. When we compared it to a team tracking prospects in a shared Google Sheet, the reduction in manual status update time was substantial. The pipeline becomes the single source of truth for where every prospect stands — without a weekly “where are we with this?” meeting.

How to Set Up Pipedrive for a Small Agency: The Dual Pipeline Method

Pipedrive allows unlimited pipelines on all plans. Most agency owners use one and then wonder why the tool starts to feel cluttered after 60 days. The reason is almost always a structure problem, not a software problem.

The setup that works best for agencies balancing active prospecting and ongoing client relationships is a two-pipeline approach: one for new business, one for client delivery. Here is how we structured it during testing, and why each stage exists.

Pipeline 1 — New Business

  • Initial Contact — First touch recorded. No proposal yet. Activity logged: follow-up call or email scheduled within 3 days.
  • Discovery Call Done — Qualification complete. Deal value estimated. Next step: proposal brief being prepared.
  • Proposal Sent — Proposal delivered. Activity: follow-up call scheduled within 5 days. Deals stall here most often — the pipeline view makes this visible immediately.
  • Negotiation — Scope or price discussion underway. Win probability updated to 70%.
  • Won / Lost — Won deals move to Pipeline 2 via an automation trigger. Lost deals are tagged with a “Loss Reason” custom field for quarterly review.

Pipeline 2 — Client Delivery

  • Onboarding — Contract signed. Kick-off scheduled. Access credentials being gathered. Target: complete within two weeks of signature.
  • Active Retainer — Work in progress. Monthly check-in activities auto-created via automation. This stage holds the majority of clients at any given time.
  • Renewal Window — 60 days before contract end, an automation moves the deal here and creates a renewal task for the account lead.
  • Offboarded / Churned — Closed with a churn reason field. Retained for reporting. Former clients can be flagged for re-engagement campaigns if the Campaigns add-on is active.
Heads Up This dual pipeline setup works well for agencies managing 3–20 active clients. At 30+ clients with complex deliverable structures, the client delivery pipeline starts to feel thin without the Projects add-on. That add-on adds Kanban-style task boards per deal — useful, but priced as an additional monthly fee on top of your base plan.

Three custom fields that matter for agencies: Add a “Service Type” field (retainer / project / one-time) to both pipelines, a “Monthly Value” field for recurring revenue tracking in the client pipeline, and a “Lead Source” field in the new business pipeline to identify which channels generate qualified prospects. These three fields unlock the reporting most agency owners actually need.

Pipedrive Pricing for Small Agencies — What You Actually Pay

Pipedrive rebranded its plans in 2025. Reviews referencing “Essential,” “Advanced,” “Professional,” or “Power” are using outdated names. The current plans are Lite, Growth, Premium, and Ultimate.

PlanPrice (annual)Key Features for AgenciesBest For
Lite$14/user/moVisual pipeline, contact management, manual email BCC — no full syncSolo freelancers; agencies not relying on email CRM sync
Growth$24/user/moTwo-way email sync, workflow automation, email sequences, AI assistantMost small agencies — where the tool becomes genuinely useful
Premium$49/user/moRevenue forecasting, custom dashboards, deeper reporting, advanced permissionsAgencies with 8+ people where pipeline reporting drives strategic decisions
Ultimate$99/user/moDedicated support, advanced security, enhanced API accessNot relevant for most small agencies at this stage

Prices shown are billed annually per user. Monthly billing is approximately 30–50% higher. Source: Pipedrive official pricing page. Prices are subject to change — verify before purchasing.

What a 5-person agency actually pays on Growth: five seats at $24/user/month equals $120/month ($1,440/year). Add the Projects add-on if you use the client delivery pipeline. That brings the realistic base to approximately $130–$135/month for a 5-person team — before any additional add-ons like LeadBooster (web forms and chatbot) or Campaigns (email marketing, priced by contact volume).

According to Capterra’s review data, 85% of Pipedrive reviewers identify as small business users — meaning the platform’s user base skews heavily toward exactly this audience. That is useful context: the pricing and feature decisions are made with small teams in mind, even when the marketing copy aims higher.

Heads Up The $14/user/month Lite price is technically accurate but excludes two-way email sync, workflow automation, and email sequences — features most agencies need from day one. Budget for Growth as your entry point, not Lite. The $10/user/month difference is worth it before you even open the app.

Where Pipedrive Breaks Down for Agencies

Several gaps became clear during extended use — not software bugs, but deliberate design choices that create friction for specific agency workflows.

  • Tiered customer support — Lite plan users receive email support and the help centre only. Live chat unlocks on Growth. Phone support does not appear until Premium or Ultimate. For an agency implementing a CRM for the first time, being limited to email-only support at the entry tier is a genuine friction point — and one that multiple G2 reviewers have flagged directly in early 2026 reviews.
  • Add-on bundling logic — Features like web forms, chatbot, and visitor tracking are bundled inside the LeadBooster add-on. If you only want web forms, you pay for the full bundle. This is a recurring complaint from small agencies who want lightweight inbound capture without the full LeadBooster package.
  • No native multi-client workspacePipedrive is built for one organisation managing its own pipeline. If your agency manages CRM on behalf of clients — running separate deal pipelines per client account — the platform does not support that architecture natively. That use case requires either separate accounts per client or a purpose-built platform like GoHighLevel.
  • Deal-centric model vs. retainer reality — A retainer client does not have a discrete “close date” or a “won” moment that recurs monthly. Forcing recurring revenue relationships into a deal-centric framework requires workarounds — the dual pipeline method above, or manually creating a new deal each renewal period. Neither is seamless.
  • Pricing trajectory — Since Pipedrive was acquired by a private equity firm in 2020, the platform has moved progressively upmarket. Features previously available on lower tiers have shifted to mid and upper plans over successive updates. This is not a current dealbreaker, but it is a consideration for agencies making a long-term CRM investment.
Common Mistake Starting on Lite to keep costs down, then discovering email sync is missing and upgrading within 30 days. The cost difference between Lite and Growth for a 5-person team is $50/month. Start on Growth and skip the upgrade friction.

Pipedrive vs. Alternatives for Small Agencies

A Pipedrive review for agencies is not complete without locating it relative to the tools it most directly competes with. The intent here is practical orientation — not a deep dive on any individual alternative.

ToolEntry PricePipeline UXAgency FitWhere It Falls Short
Pipedrive$14/user/mo (Lite)ExcellentStrong for new biz; limited for post-saleNo multi-client architecture; add-ons stack up
HubSpot FreeFree (up to 2 users)GoodGood if marketing automation mattersPaid tiers expensive fast; slower to navigate
Folk$20/user/moGoodStrong for relationship-driven agenciesLess mature automation; smaller ecosystem
GoHighLevel$97/mo (flat rate)ModerateBest if managing clients’ pipelines tooComplex setup; steep learning curve

Pipedrive wins when you want speed and simplicity for your own new business pipeline. HubSpot wins when you need marketing automation bundled in from day one. Folk wins if your agency work is relationship-driven and contact management matters more than deal tracking. GoHighLevel is the right choice only if you are managing separate CRM environments on behalf of clients — not just managing your own sales pipeline.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Pipedrive good for a small agency?

Pipedrive is a strong choice for small agencies primarily focused on winning new clients through a defined sales process. It is fast to set up, visually clear, and has solid automation on the Growth plan. It is a weaker fit for agencies whose primary operational challenge is managing ongoing client relationships and deliverables — that use case requires the Projects add-on or a supplementary project management tool.

Is Pipedrive worth it for small businesses?

At the Growth plan ($24/user/month, annual billing), Pipedrive is reasonably priced for what it delivers — particularly the combination of email sync, workflow automation, and visual pipeline management. It becomes harder to justify as team size grows and add-ons accumulate. For a 3–8 person agency on Growth without major add-ons, the value-to-cost ratio is solid compared to comparable CRMs.

Why is Pipedrive so expensive?

The headline price ($14/user/month on Lite, annual billing) understates what most agencies actually pay. Two-way email sync requires the Growth plan ($24/user/month). Web forms require the LeadBooster add-on. Project tracking requires the Projects add-on. For a 5-person team needing these features, the realistic monthly cost sits between $130–$180/month — higher than the entry price implies, though still competitive with comparable full-featured CRMs at small team sizes.

Is Pipedrive better than HubSpot for small agencies?

Pipedrive is faster to set up and cheaper at comparable feature levels for pure pipeline management. HubSpot is the stronger choice if your agency needs email marketing, landing pages, or deeper marketing automation built into the same platform. For agencies that treat prospecting and marketing as separate functions, Pipedrive delivers a cleaner experience and lower total cost at small team sizes.

What is the best CRM for a small marketing agency?

For most small marketing agencies managing their own new business pipeline, Pipedrive Growth is the best starting point. If you need email marketing built into the CRM, start with HubSpot Free and evaluate the paid tiers when you outgrow the contact limits. If you manage CRM on behalf of clients as a service, GoHighLevel is purpose-built for that architecture and worth the higher base cost.

Last updated: March 2026

The Verdict: Who Should Use Pipedrive in 2026

After testing it seriously against realistic agency workflows, our conclusion is clear: Pipedrive is the right CRM for a small agency whose primary problem is “we lose track of where our new business conversations are.” It solves that problem better than anything in its price range.

It is not the right CRM if your primary problem is “we need to manage ongoing client delivery, retainer renewals, and relationship tracking in one place” — at least not without the dual pipeline setup and the Projects add-on, which adds both cost and complexity.

  • Start with Growth, not Lite — Email sync is non-negotiable for agencies. The $10/user/month difference earns its keep before the end of week one.
  • Use the dual pipeline setup — Separating new business from client delivery prevents the pipeline from becoming a catch-all within 60 days. Build it on day one, not after the mess starts.
  • Add Projects only if you need it — If client delivery lives in a dedicated tool like Asana, Notion, or ClickUp, skip the add-on. If you want delivery visibility inside Pipedrive, add it.
  • Re-evaluate at 15+ peoplePipedrive‘s simplicity starts to create reporting gaps at larger team sizes. The Premium plan unlocks custom dashboards and revenue forecasting — worth reviewing when the team reaches that scale.

Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. Cost estimates, ROI projections, and performance metrics are illustrative and may vary depending on infrastructure, pricing, workload, implementation and overtime. We recommend readers should evaluate their own business conditions and consult qualified professionals before making strategic or financial decisions.