Samuenti

One price. Every currency.

We set our prices once, in Swiss Francs, then show and charge them in your own currency at the current exchange rate. No hidden markups, no stale conversions, no penalty for living in a stronger or weaker economy than ours.

Why CHF?

Samuenti is based in Switzerland, so our costs are paid in Swiss Francs. Setting prices in the same currency we operate in keeps things honest. We don't have to quietly adjust base prices when currencies move, because the live conversion handles that for us, in both directions.

Why charge in your currency?

Being charged in a foreign currency is annoying. Your bank usually adds its own conversion fee, and the amount on your statement rarely matches what you saw at checkout. Stripe's adaptive pricing settles the payment in your local currency, so what you see at checkout is what lands.

How it works

01

We set the price in CHF

Every plan and tier is priced once in Swiss Francs. That single number is the source of truth for everything we sell.

02

We display it in yours

When you load a page, we convert the CHF into your local currency. The rate reflects today's market, not last quarter's.

03

We charge in yours too

Stripe charges your card directly in your currency. Your statement matches what you saw at checkout, no surprises.

Why we think this is fair

A lot of software is priced in US Dollars regardless of where the company actually operates. That's convenient for the company, since they get a stable revenue line, but it shifts most of the currency risk onto customers. When the dollar strengthens, everyone outside the US suddenly pays more for the same product, even though nothing about the product changed.

Pricing in CHF and converting live keeps things proportional, in both directions. If your currency strengthens against ours, you pay less; if it weakens, you pay a little more. The amount you see on a renewal can shift slightly between cycles as rates move, but it always tracks the real market rather than sitting frozen on a regional price set months ago.

It's not a unique idea, and we're not pretending it is. But it's a deliberate choice, and we'd rather explain it on a page like this than bury it in a footnote.