Managed IT Services Pricing in Los Angeles: 2026 Benchmarks
This page benchmarks managed IT services pricing across Los Angeles, so you can hold a quote up against the wider market before you sign anything.
Most LA providers quote privately. Very few publish a per-seat rate. That makes a clean, firm-by-firm price table impossible to build honestly, so the ranges below are illustrative benchmark bands modeled on general US small and midsize business managed IT pricing. Treat them as a sanity check, not a rate card.
How we built this benchmark
We started from the 13 verified Los Angeles and Pasadena firms in our provider comparison. Each one was confirmed to have a real local office before it made the list.
We then looked for public per-seat rates. Almost none exist. Firms quote after a discovery call, because the price tracks your security and compliance needs, not just your headcount.
So the numbers on this page do two things:
- Set an outside range. The bands reflect what US SMBs commonly pay, so you can spot a quote that sits far above or below the market.
- Show what you get for the money. A low number with a thin stack is not a bargain.
For how we verify and score firms, see how we rank LA providers. For a plain-language walkthrough of what a bill actually includes, see our Los Angeles cost guide.
Illustrative per-user pricing (2026)
Per-user, per-month is the most common model and the easiest to compare. Figures below are illustrative.
| Tier | What you typically get | Illustrative $ / user / month |
|---|---|---|
| Help desk only | Remote support, patching, basic antivirus | $75–125 |
| Fully managed | Help desk, security baseline, backup, 24/7 monitoring | $125–200 |
| Managed + security / compliance | Everything above, plus EDR/MDR, SOC coverage, a vCIO, and HIPAA or CMMC work | $200–300+ |
All figures illustrative. Onboarding is usually billed once, on top of the monthly rate.
For a 20-to-50-person office, the fully managed band works out to roughly $2,500–$10,000 a month (illustrative). Where you land inside that spread depends far more on your risk profile than on your seat count.
The four pricing models
A quote is only comparable once you know the model behind it. These are the four you will see.
| Model | How it's billed | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Per user | Flat rate times headcount | Most SMBs; simplest to compare |
| Per device | Rate times servers and endpoints | Device-heavy sites with few users |
| Flat-fee (all-inclusive) | One fixed monthly fee | Teams that want a predictable budget |
| Hourly / break-fix | Per hour, as needed | Very small teams or one-off projects |
Break-fix and project hours in LA commonly run an illustrative $100–200 per hour. Fully managed contracts usually avoid hourly billing and fold that work into the flat per-seat rate.
How to judge a quote against the market
Run any proposal through this checklist before you compare price to price:
- Name the model. Per user, per device, or flat. You cannot compare two quotes built on different models until you normalize them to a per-user figure.
- List what's included versus billed extra. Security tools, backup, projects, onboarding, and after-hours support are the usual line items that hide outside a headline rate.
- Interrogate the low outlier. A rate well under the band almost always means a thin stack: no managed detection, no tested backups, no security operations coverage.
- Interrogate the high outlier. A rate above the band should buy something specific, such as 24/7 monitoring, a named virtual CIO, or a regulated-industry compliance program.
- Separate one-time from recurring. Onboarding and migration are project costs. Keep them out of your monthly comparison.
- Check for variable add-ons. Per-ticket fees or hourly overflow can turn a "flat" quote into a moving number.
If a provider will not itemize the stack behind the price, that is your answer. Walk through the same questions in how to choose a managed IT provider.
What moves an LA quote up or down
Two offices with the same headcount can get very different quotes. In Los Angeles, these are the usual reasons:
- Compliance load. A Westside medical clinic under HIPAA or an aerospace supplier facing CMMC pays for controls a general office does not. See HIPAA for LA businesses and CMMC for LA defense and aerospace.
- Security depth. Endpoint detection, managed response, and a security operations center add real cost and are worth confirming line by line.
- After-hours coverage. Post-production and entertainment teams that work nights and weekends pay for support windows a 9-to-5 firm does not need.
- On-site expectations. Truck rolls across LA traffic cost more than remote-only support. If you want hands on-site, expect it in the number.
- Seat count. Larger teams usually earn a lower per-user rate.
Where the LA firms sit
Pricing in this market is almost always quote-only. Most LA providers quote after a discovery call rather than from a public rate card, because the price tracks your security and compliance needs, not just your headcount. That is why the bands above are illustrative benchmarks, not a firm-by-firm rate table.
That is normal for the industry, and it is exactly why the bands above exist: to give you an outside reference before you sit down for that call. To see how each firm specializes, read our ranked LA provider comparison.
Keep going
- Estimate your own monthly cost: plug your seat count and tier into the calculator on the cost guide.
- The 2026 guide to IT consulting in Los Angeles: the full picture.
- What managed IT costs in Los Angeles: the companion cost guide.
- How to choose a managed IT provider: turn these numbers into a decision.
Frequently asked
How much should managed IT cost per month?
For most Los Angeles small and midsize businesses, fully managed IT runs an illustrative $125–200 per user per month, or roughly $2,500–$10,000 a month for a 20-to-50-person office. The figure depends on your security and compliance needs far more than on your headcount.
A help-desk-only plan can dip toward $75 per user, while a regulated business with 24/7 security operations can pass $300. Ask what the rate includes before you compare it to anyone else's. For a deeper breakdown, see our per-month cost answer.
How much do managed IT services cost per hour?
Hourly IT work in Los Angeles typically falls in an illustrative $100–200 per hour for break-fix or project work. Most fully managed contracts avoid hourly billing entirely and charge a flat per-user rate instead.
If a provider quotes you an hourly rate for ongoing support, that usually signals a break-fix relationship rather than a managed one. The tradeoff between the two is covered in how to choose a managed IT provider.