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Decagon review: Is it the right AI agent for you in 2025?

πŸ‘ Kenneth Pangan
Written by

Kenneth Pangan

πŸ‘ Katelin Teen
Reviewed by

Katelin Teen

Last edited May 7, 2026

Expert Verified
πŸ‘ Decagon review: Is it the right AI agent for you in 2025?

Disclosure: This article is published by eesel AI, a competitor of Decagon. We encourage you to read Decagon's own materials for their perspective.

AI agents have moved from experiment to production infrastructure for enterprise support teams. Decagon is one of the clearest examples of what large-scale deployment looks like: a platform built around autonomous AI agents that resolve customer issues end-to-end across chat, email, and phone.

Founded in 2023 by Jesse Zhang and Ashwin Sreenivas, Decagon has raised $481M total, including a $250M Series D at a $4.5B valuation in January 2026, led by Coatue Management and Index Ventures. It signed 100+ enterprise customers in 2025 alone and appears on the Forbes AI 50 list.

This review covers what the platform does, how it's priced, what the setup process actually involves, and who it's realistically a fit for. Because we're a competitor, read Decagon's own materials alongside this.

What makes Decagon different

Decagon doesn't build chatbots. The platform is designed to deploy agents that connect to your internal systems and take action: processing refunds, verifying identities, modifying accounts, or generating quotes, without routing through a human. They call this approach the "AI concierge."

The customer list runs across fintech, e-commerce, travel, and SaaS: Chime, Duolingo, ClassPass, Hunter Douglas, Rippling, Hertz, Figma, Dropbox, Notion, Substack, and 30+ others. Published results from case studies include:

CustomerResult
Chime70% resolution across chat and voice
Duolingo80% deflection rate
ClassPass10x deflection increase; 24/7 chat scaling
Hunter Douglas$1M revenue from fully AI-handled conversations
Rippling32% deflection increase

Decagon at a glance

CriteriaDecagon
PricingNot publicly disclosed; requires a sales call
Pricing modelPer-conversation or per-resolution
Key featuresAOPs, voice agents, proactive outbound agents, Agent Workbench, analytics
Ideal userLarge enterprises with high support volume and in-house engineering capacity
ImplementationWeeks to months; dedicated Agent Engineers required
IntegrationsCustom API integrations, CRM, ticketing, knowledge base

Decagon features in depth

Agent Operating Procedures (AOPs)

AOPs are Decagon's core differentiator. Rather than building decision trees or writing code, CX teams write agent instructions in plain English. Decagon's system compiles these into executable, auditable workflows with guardrails. A typical AOP might read: when a customer reports a billing discrepancy, verify their identity, check transaction history, and issue a credit if the issue matches a known pattern, all without a human in the loop.

The model separates business logic (owned by CX teams) from technical implementation (owned by engineers). CX teams can update agent behavior without waiting for an engineering cycle; engineers maintain security and integration stability.

Trace View (introduced to address early complaints about limited visibility into agent decisions) shows how a specific AOP was executed for a given customer interaction, making it possible to audit agent reasoning after the fact.

A diagram of the Decagon AI Agent Engine.

Voice agents and proactive outbound

Decagon Voice (launched 2025) extended the platform into inbound phone support. Voice agents handle natural, multi-turn conversations (not IVR-style menus) and run the same AOPs as chat agents. Chime achieved 70% first-contact resolution across chat and voice combined.

The Spring 2026 update added outbound voice capability and persistent user memory. Agents can now initiate calls for follow-ups, payment reminders, renewals, and upsell conversations. They also remember customer context across interactions (previous issues, preferences, account history), so customers don't re-explain themselves. Hunter Douglas used this outbound capability to generate $1M in revenue from fully AI-handled order calls.

Platform tooling

Beyond the agent itself, Decagon includes several supporting tools:

  • Agent Workbench: Autonomous debugging and root cause analysis for agent performance issues.
  • Agent Versioning: CI/CD-style governance for agent updates: every change is tracked, tested, and deployed systematically.
  • Watchtower: Always-on QA monitoring that surfaces performance regressions in production.
  • Duet (March 2026): An AI partner tool that helps CX teams draft and refine AOPs with AI suggestions, reducing manual effort.
  • Decagon Labs (March 2026): Decagon reports that over 80% of its model traffic now runs on in-house trained models, reducing reliance on third-party APIs.

Setup: the Agent Engineer model

Decagon's setup process is a close partnership between Decagon's team and your internal engineers. The company promotes the role of "Agent Engineer", a dedicated function for building and maintaining AI agents, alongside an "Agent Product Manager" role.

The typical sequence: a discovery phase to map your existing workflows, a prototyping phase where Agent Engineers build and test the agent, then a phased deployment with ongoing optimization. The full process generally takes four to twelve weeks before the agent handles live traffic.

The Decagon AI setup process.

What works well: The end result is tightly adapted to your specific systems and business logic. Decagon's implementation team is consistently praised in customer feedback for being responsive and for driving fast time-to-deflection once the agent is deployed.

What to plan for: The model assumes you can allocate internal engineering resources and that you can wait weeks before seeing ROI. Business users cannot update integrations or guardrails themselves; those changes require engineering involvement. Teams that need to move faster, or that don't have an engineering team available, will find this constraint real.

For those teams, eesel AI works differently. A no-code dashboard lets support managers connect their help center, past tickets, Google Docs, Confluence, or Slack, write the agent's behavior in plain English, and launch without involving engineering. Setup typically takes hours.

Pricing

Decagon pricing is not publicly disclosed. You'll need to schedule a discovery call. Based on industry estimates, contracts combine a fixed annual platform fee with variable usage costs:

Cost componentDetail
Pricing modelPer-conversation or per-resolution
Estimated contract range$95,000 to $590,000+ per year
Estimated median contractAround $400,000 per year
Free trialNot available

These figures come from industry benchmarking, not from Decagon's own published pricing. Actual costs depend on ticket volume, channel mix (voice costs more than chat), and integration complexity.

Beyond the contract itself, budget for the implementation phase. Deploying a Decagon agent typically requires weeks of internal engineering capacity plus Decagon's implementation team. Ongoing AOP refinement and integration maintenance add to that after launch. Customer results show strong ROI at scale: ClassPass reported a 95% reduction in chat support costs after six months; Duolingo achieved 80% deflection. The business case is real, but it requires enterprise-level support volumes to justify the investment.

What users report

Direct community discussion of Decagon is limited. The platform's enterprise-only positioning means fewer public reviews than older, more broadly distributed tools. Feedback available through aggregated review sources consistently surfaces a few themes:

Positive:

  • High deflection rates immediately after deployment (75-80% is common in the first weeks)
  • Responsive implementation and customer success team
  • Measurable cost and time savings at scale

Concerns:

  • Limited visibility into why the agent made a specific decision, even with Trace View available
  • Agent performance can degrade during high-volume periods, with more tickets routing to humans than expected
  • Per-conversation and per-resolution pricing makes monthly costs difficult to forecast, particularly for voice-heavy deployments

Comparison summary

FeatureDecagoneesel AI
Ideal userLarge enterprises with engineering teams and high ticket volumesSMBs, mid-market, and enterprise teams across industries
PricingNot publicly disclosed; estimated $95K-$590K+/year$0.40/task; usage-based
SetupWeeks to months; requires dedicated Agent EngineersHours to days; self-serve, no code required
Key strengthDeep custom workflows and API actions across voice, chat, and emailFast, accurate answers from existing knowledge sources and past tickets
FlexibilityStructural changes require engineering involvementBusiness users update prompts, sources, and behavior from a dashboard
Value propositionLong-term, high-investment AI agent deploymentAccessible, quick-to-deploy tool that layers on your existing stack

Verdict: who Decagon is actually for

Decagon is a strong platform for a clearly defined customer: a large, well-funded enterprise with high support volumes, complex internal workflows, and an engineering team to dedicate to a months-long implementation. Companies in fintech, e-commerce, travel, and SaaS have published real results using the platform, and the 2026 additions (proactive outbound voice, persistent user memory, and AI-assisted AOP authoring via Duet) extend what the platform can do.

For smaller teams, or for companies that need to move quickly, Decagon's model doesn't fit. The contract size, the implementation timeline, and the ongoing engineering requirement put it out of reach for most organizations. Most support teams don't need agents that connect to internal APIs and process transactions. They need AI that can answer questions accurately from the knowledge they already have.

eesel AI: an alternative worth considering

eesel AI is designed for teams that want serious AI support capability without a multi-year procurement and setup process. You connect your existing tools: help center, past tickets, Confluence, Google Docs, Slack, and 100+ other sources. Write the agent's behavior in plain English and launch without code.

Pricing is transparent and usage-based: $0.40 per support task, with no per-agent fees and a $50 free credit on signup to test it out.

Free trial or book a demo to see how quickly eesel can start working with the tools you already have.

eesel AI knowledge source integrations.

Frequently asked questions

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πŸ‘ Kenneth Pangan

Article by

Kenneth Pangan

Writer and marketer for over ten years, Kenneth Pangan splits his time between history, politics, and art with plenty of interruptions from his dogs demanding attention.

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