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Human ISA vs AI ISA: The Real Cost Math (2026)

Last updated: July 2026

Every agent doing volume eventually asks the same question: who answers the leads? There are four honest answers — hire someone, outsource to a service, use AI, or keep doing it yourself. Each has a real price. Here is the math, with sources, so you can run it for your own business.

The four ways to buy lead response

In-house ISAOffshore VAISA serviceAI ISA
Typical monthly cost$4,600–7,100 fully loaded$900–1,600 full-time; PowerISA part-time dedicated from $1,150$1,400–5,000+$199.99 (Cadence) to ~$500+ (others)
Setup / ramp3–6 months to full productivity, plus recruiting costWeeks of training and script-building — on youOnboarding fees common; 12-month contracts commonSame day to ~1 week; Cadence has $0 setup
CoverageA shift — 40 hours of a 168-hour weekA shift, often offset time zonesExtended hours; varies by tier24/7
Speed to first contactMinutes to hours, when on shiftMinutes to hours, when on shiftTypically minutes, per SLAUnder 2 minutes, every time
Turnover riskHigh — ISA is a classic burnout seatHigh — retraining loopTheir problem, but your leads feel itNone
Management overheadHiring, scripts, QA, comp plansDaily supervision, call reviewVendor management, lead-flow plumbingConfigure a playbook, review transcripts

What each option really costs

In-house ISA: $4,600–7,100/mo

A US-based ISA base salary sits around $36–48k, but the fully loaded number — payroll taxes, benefits, appointment bonuses, dialer and CRM seats, and the recruiting cost you amortize across their tenure — lands at roughly $4,600–7,100 per month (NurtureOS ISA cost benchmark, 2026). And that buys one shift: your leads still go unanswered two-thirds of the week.

Offshore VA: $900–1,600/mo

Offshore virtual assistants are the budget human option. PowerISA, one of the better-known providers, starts part-time dedicated ISAs at $1,150/mo. The trade-offs are the ones you’d guess: you own the training, the scripts, and the quality control, and turnover restarts the loop.

US ISA services: $1,400–5,000+/mo

  • Verse.ai runs roughly $1,800–5,000+/mo on 12-month contracts depending on lead volume (ITQlick pricing analysis).
  • Conversion Monster runs about $1,400–2,200/mo — and carries BBB complaints worth reading before you sign.
  • Call Porter sells human answering by the minute at $2–4.50/min (Real Estate Skills review). At 200 minutes a month, that’s $400–900 in minutes alone — for context, that same 200 minutes is included in Cadence’s $199.99 flat rate.

AI ISA: from $199.99/mo

Cadence is $199.99/mo month-to-month: 200 voice minutes included, then $1/min with a spending cap you set, $0 setup, no contract. Other AI ISAs run higher — Structurely is $499/mo with a $2,000 setup fee on annual terms (see the honest tool ranking for the full field).

The quote nobody puts in their deck

From a real-estate coach quoted in the NurtureOS cost benchmark: “I have yet to speak with a real estate team… that have found success” with ISA programs. That’s one practitioner’s view, not a law of nature — but the economics behind it are real. A $5,000/mo human ISA has to set enough appointments-that-close to clear their own cost before they make you a dollar, and the seat has brutal turnover. Many teams cycle through two or three ISAs before concluding the model wasn’t the problem — the math was.

When a human ISA still wins

Fairness matters here, because the answer isn’t “never”:

  • Complex multi-listing conversations. A buyer weighing four properties with contingencies across two of them needs a human who holds all of it in their head and knows your inventory cold.
  • Luxury clients. At the $2M+ tier, white-glove expectations are part of the product. A skilled human ISA who sounds like your office is worth the premium.
  • Sphere and past-client calls. Relationship calls to people who know you are not a lead-response problem, and AI is the wrong tool for them.

Notice what’s not on the list: answering a portal lead at 9:42 pm in under two minutes. That job is speed and consistency, not relationship depth — which is exactly why it’s the job AI took first.

The cost that never makes the spreadsheet: you at 9:30 pm

For most solo agents, the real comparison isn’t human ISA vs AI ISA — it’s AI vs yourself, because you are the current ISA. That has a price too:

  • Your evenings and weekends are on call, indefinitely. Portal leads peak at night — exactly when you’re at dinner, at your kid’s game, or asleep.
  • Every showing, closing, and inspection is a window where new leads ring out. The busier you get, the worse your response time — success degrades your own funnel.
  • The highest-paid person in your business is doing shift work. If your time is worth even $100/hour, ten hours a month of night-and-weekend lead triage is $1,000 of labor — before counting the leads you missed anyway (the industry misses roughly half of them).
  • Burnout compounds. The 40th consecutive week of answering at 9 pm changes how you answer at 9 pm.

The bottom line

For lead response, qualification, and booking specifically — the speed jobs — an AI ISA at $199.99/mo is roughly 4% of the fully loaded cost of an in-house hire, with 24/7 coverage neither a human hire nor most services can match. With a median commission around $10k, a single closed deal that would otherwise have rung out pays for about four years of it. For relationship-depth work, keep humans in the loop; that’s what your calendar is for.

Related: The verified speed-to-lead statistics · The best AI ISA tools, honestly ranked · Structurely alternative

Don’t take our word for it — call the AI yourself.

This number rings straight to Cadence playing a fictional brokerage’s agent. Grill her like a real lead would.