The real cost of a UK receptionist in 2026
Most business owners think about receptionist costs in terms of salary. That’s only part of it. Here’s what a full-time receptionist actually costs when you add up the total employment bill:
| Cost item | Annual amount |
|---|---|
| Base salary (UK average 2026) | £26,000 |
| Employer National Insurance (13.8% above £9,100) | £2,330 |
| Employer pension contribution (3% minimum) | £780 |
| 28 days statutory holiday (cost of cover) | £2,800 |
| Sick leave (UK average 5.7 days/year) | £570 |
| Recruitment cost (amortised over 2 years) | £750 |
| Total fully-loaded annual cost | £33,230 |
And that’s one receptionist, working 9–5, Monday to Friday. No evenings. No weekends. Not available during lunch. Absent when sick. Needs managing. Might leave after 12 months.
What an AI receptionist costs
| Digital Eight AI Receptionist | Cost |
|---|---|
| Setup fee (one-off) | £497–£1,750 |
| Monthly retainer | £297–£425/month |
| Year one total (mid-range) | ~£6,290 |
| Year two onwards | ~£3,564/year |
It answers calls 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. It doesn’t take sick leave. It doesn’t need a pension. It doesn’t hand in its notice three months after you’ve trained it.
What’s the ROI?
The comparison isn’t entirely fair — an AI receptionist doesn’t replace everything a human does. But for the specific job of answering inbound calls, qualifying enquiries, booking appointments, and capturing leads out of hours:
- Human receptionist (fully loaded): £33,230/year
- AI receptionist (Digital Eight, year one): ~£6,290
- Saving in year one: £26,940
- Saving from year two: £29,666/year
Even if you keep a part-time human for in-person duties and use AI for all phone and online enquiries, you’re typically saving £15,000–£20,000 per year.
The missed call problem
The salary comparison is only part of the picture. The bigger issue for most small businesses is revenue lost to missed calls.
Research from BT Business found that 75% of callers who can’t get through first time don’t call back. For a dental practice, trades business, or solicitor with an average job value of £200–£2,000, a handful of missed calls per week adds up:
- 5 missed calls/week × £300 average job value = £1,500/week in potential lost revenue
- That’s £78,000/year in leads your business never captures
An AI receptionist that answers every call — even at 10pm, even when your team is on another call — changes that equation.
What businesses see in practice
Results from UK businesses using AI receptionist systems (via Digital Eight’s delivery partner Arkis AI):
- Healthcare: 60% reduction in admin time spent on inbound calls and scheduling
- Financial services: 40% increase in consultations booked, driven by after-hours and weekend enquiries
- Legal: 20+ paralegal hours saved per week on initial client intake and triage
When a human receptionist still makes sense
This isn’t an argument for replacing all receptionists. There are businesses where a human front-of-house is the right call:
- You have a walk-in operation where someone physically greets clients
- Your enquiries are complex or sensitive and require significant back-and-forth
- Your brand is built on a personal, high-touch experience where an automated voice would feel wrong
In those cases, the smarter move is often hybrid: a human for in-person and complex calls, AI for all routine inbound enquiries, booking requests, and out-of-hours traffic.
Is it right for your business?
The fastest way to find out is a free AI audit. We’ll look at your current call volume, the types of enquiries you get, and whether an AI receptionist would genuinely improve your conversion rate — or whether a different AI tool would do more for your business.
No commitment. Just an honest answer.
Or if you’d rather talk it through: Book a 20-minute call with Anil →
