
Most Indianapolis businesses pay $110 to $225 per user, per month for fully managed IT services in 2026. A 20-person company should expect roughly $2,200–$4,500 a month depending on how much is covered, how regulated the industry is, and how much of the stack the provider manages. That’s the short answer — the rest of this guide explains what moves the number, what should be included, and how to compare quotes that look wildly different.
How do MSPs price their services?
- Per user, per month — the most common model. One flat fee covers each employee and their devices. Typical Indianapolis range: $110–$225/user.
- Per device — $30–$100 per managed device. Looks cheaper until you count every laptop, server, and phone; makes budgeting harder as you grow.
- Tiered packages — bronze/silver/gold bundles. Watch the fine print: the tier that looked affordable often excludes the things you’ll actually need, like after-hours support or security monitoring.
- Break/fix hourly — $125–$200/hour when something breaks. Not really managed IT: nobody is preventing the problems, and the provider earns more when you’re down, not less.
| Pricing model | Typical Indianapolis range | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Per user, per month | $110–$225/user | Most businesses — predictable as you grow |
| Per device | $30–$100/device | Device-heavy shops with few users |
| Tiered packages | Varies by tier | Comparing bundled scopes — read the fine print |
| Break/fix hourly | $125–$200/hour | Businesses that can absorb downtime |
What drives the price up or down
Two 20-person companies can get quotes 40% apart and both quotes can be fair. The difference is almost always one of these:
- Compliance requirements. HIPAA, PCI, SOC 2, or CMMC obligations add documented controls, audits, and reporting — typically 15–30% over baseline.
- Servers and infrastructure. On-premises servers cost more to manage than a cloud-first setup. Businesses fully in Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 usually land near the bottom of the range.
- Coverage hours. 8×5 help desk vs. true 24/7 monitoring and response are different products with different prices.
- Security depth. Basic antivirus is not the same as managed detection and response, phishing training, and tested backups. If a quote is dramatically cheaper, this is usually what’s missing.
- Age of your equipment. A fleet of 7-year-old machines generates more tickets. Some MSPs surcharge for out-of-warranty hardware; all of them quietly price the risk in.
What should a managed IT quote include?
- Unlimited help desk (remote support) without per-ticket fees
- Proactive monitoring and patching for every covered device
- Managed backups — with documented, tested restores, not just “backups”
- Endpoint security beyond consumer antivirus
- A named point of contact and quarterly technology reviews
- Clear onboarding and offboarding for employees
If any of those show up as add-ons, price the add-ons in before comparing totals.
The break/fix math most businesses get wrong
Break/fix looks cheaper in a quiet month, and that’s exactly the trap. The real cost of IT problems is downtime, not the repair bill: a 10-person office losing half a day to a server failure burns more payroll than a month of managed service. Managed IT is priced to make problems rare; break/fix is priced to respond after they’ve already cost you. If your business can genuinely absorb a full day offline without pain, break/fix may be fine. Most businesses past ten employees can’t. Doing the bigger build-vs-buy math? Here’s the full in-house IT vs. managed IT cost comparison.
Red flags when comparing quotes
- A price with no listed device counts, coverage hours, or response times
- “Security included” with no specifics — ask exactly what tools and who watches them
- Long contracts (3+ years) with no exit clause for missed service levels
- Backups mentioned without restore testing
- A quote dramatically below market — the missing 30% is usually the security controls on this checklist.
Frequently asked questions
Is managed IT cheaper than hiring an IT person?
For most businesses under about 75 employees, yes: managed IT for a 30-person company runs roughly $40K–$80K a year, while one fully loaded in-house hire costs $95K+.
What is a fair managed IT price for a 10-person business in Indianapolis?
Roughly $1,100–$2,250 a month at typical $110–$225 per-user rates, depending on compliance needs, servers, and coverage hours.
Why do managed IT quotes vary so much?
Because scope varies: compliance requirements, on-premises servers, 24/7 vs. 8×5 coverage, and security depth each move the price 15–30%. Dramatically cheaper quotes usually omit security.
What we charge
QOS MSP prices the boring, predictable way: a flat monthly fee based on your user count and what we manage, with security and tested backups in the base price rather than sold back to you as add-ons. Current plans are on our pricing page, and if you want a number for your exact situation, a 30-minute conversation gets you one — no cost or obligation.