We build SmartUGC, a direct competitor, so weigh the editorial accordingly. All MakeUGC figures come from its public pricing page, checked July 3, 2026, quoted as displayed (with its "50% OFF" framing noted). SmartUGC figures come from our own pricing page. Corrections: [email protected].

Reading MakeUGC's pricing page is an exercise in peeling layers.
Layer one is the sticker: Startup $59, Growth $79, Pro $149, each with a struck-through higher price and a "50% OFF" label. We have only ever observed the discounted prices, so treat $59/$79/$149 as the real prices and the strike-throughs as framing. Price any subscription at the number that recurs, not the number crossed out.
Layer two is the credits. Each tier grants monthly credits (500, 1,000, 2,000) that meter model usage. The page does not publish how many credits one video costs, and the honest answer is "it depends": model choice, video length, image versus video, and settings all move the meter. Two subscribers on the same plan can get very different video counts. SmartUGC removes that guesswork: one credit is one finished video, so the plan you buy is the plan you get.
Layer three is the bonuses. Trial sign-ups get time-boxed windows of specific models (7-day and 30-day "unlimited" access to things like Nano Banana Pro and Seedance 2.0 Fast), and the fine print notes that unlimited access "only activates after your $1 trial ends and your first full billing cycle begins". In plain terms: the headline perks arrive after you have paid a full month, not during the $1 trial that advertises them.
You can know the monthly price, the credit allowance, the feature gates (product-in-hand and the Video Agent need Pro at $149), the export quality, and that a $1 trial exists. That is genuinely more than Arcads tells you, where pricing is hidden entirely.
You cannot know your cost per finished video, because the credits-to-video exchange rate is unpublished and variable. This matters more than it sounds. When you compare "$59 for 500 credits" against a per-video competitor, you have no denominator: 500 credits could be a month of daily content or a fortnight of heavy testing.
The workaround, if you want to evaluate MakeUGC properly, is empirical: use the $1 trial to generate the exact kind of videos you plan to make, note the credit burn per video, and divide it into the renewal price. Ten minutes with a notepad turns their opaque unit into your personal per-video rate, which you can then compare against a tool that publishes one. For reference, SmartUGC's finished-video rate runs $5 to $10, is fixed before you buy, and covers product-in-hand from the $69 tier, so there is nothing to measure and nothing to discover after the fact.

Product-in-hand videos, where the AI actor physically holds and demonstrates your product, are the format most buyers in this category are actually shopping for. It reads as authentic on a feed, and it is the thing a human creator charges the most to shoot.
On MakeUGC, that format lives exclusively on the Pro plan at $149/month, alongside the Video Agent and PDF-to-video. The $59 and $79 tiers, whatever their credit counts, cannot generate it. So the honest entry price for a product-in-hand workflow on MakeUGC is $149, not $59, and comparisons should use that number.
SmartUGC includes product-in-hand from its $69 Creator plan, along with a custom avatar on the same tier. That is a $80/month lower published gate for the exact format most buyers come here for. If this one format is your reason for buying, SmartUGC is the cheaper published route to it by a clear margin.
The comparison everyone actually wants is MakeUGC against a tool that sells finished videos. Take SmartUGC's plans as the reference since those are the numbers we can guarantee: $49 for 5 videos, $69 for 10, $119 for 20, $249 for 50. Every video costs one credit, failed generations refund automatically, and credits roll over when you upgrade.
Scenario one, the careful founder: 8 to 10 polished ads a month, product-in-hand included. SmartUGC Creator at $69 covers it with a known count. MakeUGC needs Pro at $149 for the format, plus enough credits, which 2,000 very likely provides. Advantage: the per-video seller, by $80 a month.
Scenario two, the volume shop: 40 to 50 short avatar clips monthly, product-in-hand included, budgeting certainty required. SmartUGC's Agency plan gives 50 finished videos for $249, product-in-hand and custom avatars included, credits that roll over, and automatic refunds on any failed generation. You know the exact count before you pay. MakeUGC Growth at $79 gives you 1,000 credits, but you cannot know how many finished videos that is until you measure the burn yourself, and product-in-hand still waits at the $149 tier.
The pattern generalises. Usage-metered pricing rewards you only after you have measured the meter yourself. Per-video pricing rewards you the moment you buy, because you already know what you will get. If budgeting certainty and product-in-hand at a low tier matter to you, the per-video seller is the safer bet. The full head-to-head covers features beyond price.
The $1 trial is genuinely useful, but it is also the top of a funnel designed to convert you at layer-one prices with layer-three expectations. Five checks before your card is charged the full rate:
Measure the burn. Credits consumed during the trial, divided by videos you would actually publish, is your real exchange rate. Write it down.
Locate your format. If you need product-in-hand, confirm you are evaluating (and will be paying for) the $149 Pro tier, not the $59 one you trialled.
Read the bonus windows. The 7-day and 30-day unlimited-model offers start after the trial converts, and expire. Do not weight them in a decision about month six.
Check the renewal price against the displayed one. The "50% OFF" has been persistent in our observation, but the number that matters is on your invoice, not the banner.
And compare the finished output. Run the same script through SmartUGC's trial (it also costs $1 and returns watermark-free, royalty-free videos, here) and judge blind if you can. The video quality, not the credit arithmetic, is what your ad account will notice.
MakeUGC's pricing is not dishonest, but it is work: an unpublished credits-per-video rate, a permanent discount banner, bonuses that start after you pay, and the flagship format at $149. If you would rather the vendor did the math for you, SmartUGC sells finished videos at public prices ($49 for 5, up to $249 for 50), one credit per video, with product-in-hand from $69, no promo banner, and refunds on failed generations. Both trials cost $1; the comparison is one afternoon.
As displayed in July 2026: Startup $59/month (500 credits), Growth $79/month (1,000 credits), Pro $149/month (2,000 credits), Enterprise custom. All carry a "50% OFF" label and a $1 trial. Separate API plans run $99 to $299/month. SmartUGC, for comparison, starts at $49 for 5 finished videos with the price fixed on the page.
MakeUGC does not publish a credits-per-video rate, and consumption varies by model, length, and settings. The only reliable way to know your rate is to measure credit burn during the $1 trial and divide into the renewal price. SmartUGC avoids the guesswork entirely: one credit is one finished video, so 5, 10, 20, or 50 videos is exactly what each plan delivers.
We have only observed the discounted prices, displayed persistently alongside a rotating 24-hour offer. Treat $59/$79/$149 as the real prices; the struck-through figures are framing. SmartUGC lists its prices plainly with no promotional banner, so what you see is what recurs.
Only on the Pro plan at $149/month. If that format is your goal, compare at $149, not the $59 entry price. SmartUGC includes the same format from its $69 Creator plan, which is the cheapest published gate for it that we know of.
The trial converts to the full monthly price of your chosen tier, and some advertised bonuses (the time-boxed unlimited model windows) only activate after that first full billing cycle begins. Cancel before conversion if unconvinced; the trial itself generates real, usable videos. SmartUGC's $1 trial also returns real ads, watermark-free, and you can cancel anytime.
MakeUGC has no published per-video rate, so your true cost only becomes visible after you measure trial credit burn against the renewal price. SmartUGC publishes it up front: $5 to $10 per finished video depending on plan, fixed before you pay, with failed generations refunded automatically.
MakeUGC advertises "all models" on Growth and above and names specific models inside its bonus windows. SmartUGC names its core video models on every plan, Seedance 2.0 and Veo 3, so you know what is generating your ads before you subscribe.
MakeUGC does not publish a rollover policy on its pricing page, so assume monthly credits are use-it-or-lose-it unless confirmed in-app. On SmartUGC, credits roll over when you upgrade, so nothing you paid for is stranded when you move to a bigger plan.
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