Apollo vs Lusha (2026): an all-in-one platform vs a precision contact-lookup tool
Jobs Apollo does in one platform
Database, sequencing, and dialer live inside Apollo; Lusha does one job, contact reveal, and does it fast.
Lusha credit cost per reveal
1 credit reveals an email; a phone number costs 10 credits. You meter by reveal, not by seat capability.
What each tool covers
Apollo owns the first three; Lusha owns the last two, on the page, in seconds.
They do two different jobs (platform vs lookup)
Apollo
The all-in-one outreach platform
Find, sequence, dial, and track, all inside one platform.
Lusha
The precision contact-lookup tool
Grab a verified email or phone from the page, in seconds.
The fastest way to choose wrong is to line up feature checklists and count boxes. Apollo will win a checklist because it does more things, but that is exactly the point: it is a platform, so of course it has more surface area. Lusha is not trying to be a platform. It is a scalpel for one job, revealing a verified contact, and it does that job on the LinkedIn profile or company page you are already looking at, without making you leave for another app. Here is what each actually is in 2026:
- Best when you want one tool to run database, cadence, dialer, and reporting
- Per seat, so cost scales with headcount, not with lookups
- Deep but heavier; you commit to working inside the platform
- Best when you already run a sequencer or CRM and just need accurate reveals
- Credit-based: 1 credit per email, 10 credits per phone number
- Fast on the page; not a platform, so no sequencing or dialer of its own
Which one for your situation
Map your actual situation to the pick. This is the decision most "vs" pages skip because they treat a platform and a lookup tool as interchangeable when they clearly are not.
The real axis: per-seat platform vs per-reveal lookup
Because Apollo prices per seat and Lusha prices per reveal, the honest comparison is not sticker-to-sticker, it is about how your cost actually accrues. Apollo's cost is a function of headcount: five reps on Professional is roughly $395 a month regardless of how many contacts they touch, and every one of those seats includes sequencing and dialing. Lusha's cost is a function of reveals: a rep who pulls a few precise contacts a week barely dents a credit allowance, while a rep bulk-revealing hundreds of phone numbers, at ten credits each, burns through credits fast. The right tool depends on whether your bottleneck is workflow or data.
| Dimension | Apollo | Lusha | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | Per seat, $49 to $119/user/mo | Credit-based, ~$37 to $175/user/mo | Apollo for whole-workflow value |
| What one unit buys | Full platform per rep | 1 email / 10 phone per credit | Lusha for low, precise volume |
| Core job | Run the whole outbound motion | Reveal a verified contact fast | Different jobs |
| Where you work | Inside Apollo | In the browser, on any page | Lusha (no context switch) |
| Free tier | Free plan with limited credits | Free 40 to 70 credits | Both let you test first |
Read it as a fork, not a flip: if your reps need a system to work in all day, Apollo's per-seat model pays for itself because it replaces a sequencer and a dialer too. If your reps already have that system and the only gap is accurate contacts, paying per reveal through Lusha is far cheaper than buying a second platform. Workflow versus data is the whole decision.
Apollo prices your headcount; Lusha prices your reveals. The question is whether your bottleneck is workflow or data.Per seat vs per reveal
The stack that runs both
Many teams run Apollo as the platform and keep Lusha in the browser
Apollo is the system of work: database, cadences, dialer, reporting. Lusha rides in the browser for the moment a rep is on a high-value LinkedIn profile and wants to confirm a direct dial or a personal email before a big touch, then pushes the verified record into Apollo or the CRM. Apollo runs the motion; Lusha sharpens the contacts that matter most.
If you only have budget for one and you are building a repeatable outbound motion from scratch, Apollo is the better single buy because it collapses several tools into one seat. Add Lusha when your reps keep hitting thin or stale records on the exact contacts you most want to reach, or when a chunk of your prospecting happens live inside LinkedIn where Lusha's extension is fastest. If your only need is data and you already own the workflow, Lusha alone is the cheaper answer.
Which has better data
Neither wins outright, and it varies by region and role. Lusha is engineered for precision on individual reveals, especially mobile numbers, and its one-contact-at-a-time workflow makes it easy to trust a single result. Apollo trades some per-contact precision for sheer breadth: a very large database you filter and export in bulk, which is exactly what you want when building a list of hundreds and exactly what can leave a few stale records in the tail. So the honest read is Lusha for the hard, high-value direct dial you cannot afford to get wrong, Apollo for building and enriching a large targeted list in place. Many teams do both: export from Apollo, then verify the top contacts against Lusha before they send. If depth and intent data at enterprise scale are the real need, that is a different comparison, closer to Apollo vs ZoomInfo or ZoomInfo vs Lusha.
See the platform side in context in our Clay vs Apollo breakdown and Apollo vs ZoomInfo, the lookup side in best AI lead-gen and enrichment tools, the full field in best AI sales tools for outbound teams and best AI SDR tools, check the raw numbers in the AI GTM tools index, or read the narrower copilot slice at Nesyona's best AI sales copilots.
Frequently asked questions
Is Apollo or Lusha better in 2026?
How much does Apollo cost compared to Lusha?
Can Lusha replace Apollo?
Do teams use Apollo and Lusha together?
Is Lusha data more accurate than Apollo?
For the one direct dial you cannot get wrong, reach for Lusha; for the list of hundreds, Apollo's scale wins.Better data
Bottom line
Stop treating Apollo and Lusha as the same purchase. In 2026 the choice is Apollo's all-in-one platform versus Lusha's precision lookup. If you want one system to run database, sequencing, dialing, and reporting, Apollo collapses several tools into a per-seat plan from free to $119 per user a month. If you already own the workflow and just need accurate emails and direct dials, Lusha reveals them on the page for one credit an email and ten credits a phone, from a free tier up to roughly $175 per user a month. Many teams run both: Apollo for the motion, Lusha to sharpen the contacts that matter. Size the whole motion in the AI stack optimizer or see the field in best AI sales tools.
- Apollo.io pricing and plans (verified July 2026).
- Lusha pricing and credit model (verified July 2026).