If you are reading this, you are probably trying to decide between writing a $200,000 cheque to a global agency and spending a third of that on a fractional senior. I have sat on both sides of this conversation. Here is the honest number.

Crypto PR pricing in 2026 falls into four models: traditional agency retainers, fractional senior operators, single-event sprints, and per-market regional pushes. They are not interchangeable, but they are usually mis-sold. The agency model is sold to every founder, when it actually only fits a narrow band of them. The fractional model is barely advertised, even though it is the right fit for most pre-Series A protocols.

Below is the 2026 pricing landscape as I see it from inside the room, having scoped engagements with 50+ Web3 protocols across Tier-1 outlets — Forbes, CoinDesk, Cointelegraph, Decrypt, The Block, Blockworks, Bitcoin Magazine — and six APAC markets.

The four pricing models, side by side

Numbers below are 2026 market rates from active engagements and competitor quotes I have seen this year. They will move with the market, but the brackets are stable.

ModelMonthly costIncludesBest fit
Boutique Web3 agency $7K – $15K 1 account exec, 2-3 Tier-1 outlet relationships, basic press release, junior strategy Seed-stage with steady news flow
Mid-tier crypto specialist $15K – $30K Account team, Tier-1 + Tier-2 outreach, founder profiling, KOL intro, weekly reporting Series A with TGE on horizon
Global firm with crypto desk $30K – $60K+ 5+ person team, tradfi crossover, executive ghostwriting, regional offices, paid wire bundled Post-Series B, multi-market launches, regulated entities
Fractional senior operator $5K – $12K One senior, founder-direct line, Tier-1 outreach, narrative work, founder profiling — same scope as boutique-to-mid agency, no team overhead Pre-Series A through TGE, founder-led companies, < 50 headcount

The gap between the boutique agency bracket and the fractional bracket is the most-mis-sold line item in Web3 PR. The boutique agency charges you $10,000 a month to put a 26-year-old account executive in front of you for 60 minutes a week and a senior on the call once a month. The fractional operator charges you $8,000 for the senior, full stop. Same Tier-1 placements, smaller bandwidth ceiling.

What a Web3 PR retainer actually covers

The marketing copy on every agency website is identical. Once you sign and read the SOW, the deliverables tend to look like this for the $15K to $30K mid-tier bracket:

  • 2 to 4 Tier-1 placements per month at steady state — CoinDesk, Cointelegraph, Decrypt, The Block, Blockworks, Forbes. The first 60 days are usually slower while the team builds the journalist list.
  • 1 founder op-ed or thought-leadership byline per month — ghostwritten, placed in a contributor network (Forbes Crypto Council, Cointelegraph Innovation Circle, Entrepreneur).
  • Press release drafting and distribution — most agencies bundle Cointelegraph PR or CoinDesk press partner, others bill it as a pass-through.
  • 2 to 4 podcast bookings per quarter — varies wildly. Some agencies don't book podcasts and outsource it.
  • Weekly reporting and 1 strategy call per week with the account lead.
  • Crisis comms availability — usually buried in the SOW, usually capped at a number of hours.

Three things are almost never in the base retainer and almost always sold as add-ons:

  1. Paid wire distribution beyond one outlet ($1,500 to $8,000 per release).
  2. KOL fees ($500 to $25,000 per creator, paid separately to the talent on top of agency coordination fees).
  3. Regional placements outside the agency's home market.

Token launch PR: the sprint model

A pre-token Web3 protocol going through a TGE is a different pricing animal. The retainer model is too slow — you need a concentrated 6 to 8 week window — and too cheap for the volume of coordination required.

A full TGE communications sprint in 2026 runs $25,000 to $75,000 for the window, broken roughly into:

WorkstreamTypical shareWhat it covers
Pre-launch narrative + briefings20-25%Positioning, embargo packages, journalist briefings 7-14 days out
Launch day Tier-1 coverage25-30%Embargoed exclusives, sympathetic write-ups, exchange announcement timing
KOL waves (global + regional)20-30%Coordination only; paid creator fees layered on top
Regional pushes (APAC + MENA)15-20%Native-language placements in Korea, Japan, India, UAE
Post-launch sentiment + crisis5-10%Reactive comms, FUD response, secondary cycle planning

The variable that moves the budget hardest is regional count. A single-market launch (US only) sits at the bottom of the bracket. A six-market global push — US, EU, Korea, Japan, Singapore, UAE — sits at the top. Doubling markets doesn't quite double cost (strategy fee is fixed) but it gets close on coordination, translation, and KOL spend.

Operator noteThe two clients I have worked with who spent $250K+ on agency PR for a token launch did not get materially better Tier-1 coverage than the three who spent $40K with focused sprint pricing. They got more sustained noise across more outlets. Whether that noise translated into post-launch retention is a different conversation.

APAC PR: per-market, not bundled

APAC is the line item most Western agencies underprice and over-promise on. The reality is regional PR is sold per market because the journalist lists, KOL platforms, and event circuits are completely separate.

MarketPer-launch costAnchor outletsKOL platforms
Korea$8K – $20KBloomingBit, Tokenpost, Hankyung, Aju BusinessKakaoTalk groups, Naver Cafe, YouTube
Japan$7K – $15KCryptoTimes JP, CoinPost, Iolite, Cointelegraph JapanX JP, YouTube, Voicy
Vietnam$5K – $12KCoin68, CryptoViet, Forbes VietnamTelegram, TikTok, YouTube
Singapore$6K – $14KThe Business Times, e27, Tech in Asia, ChainCatcherX, LinkedIn, YouTube
India$5K – $12KInc42, YourStory, Economic Times Tech, CoinGapeX, YouTube, LinkedIn
UAE / MENA$7K – $16KGulf News, Khaleej Times, ArabianBusiness, Forbes MEX, LinkedIn, regional podcasts

A bundled six-market APAC contract with a single operator who has on-ground relationships in each region tends to come in 30 to 40 percent cheaper than stitching six regional agencies together — because you are paying for one set of strategy hours, not six.

The hidden costs nobody puts in the SOW

  1. Paid wire distribution. A Cointelegraph PR placement is $2,500 to $4,500 per release in 2026. CoinDesk press partner is $5,000 to $8,000. Yahoo Finance syndication via Issuewire or AccessWire runs $400 to $1,500. Stack three of these and you have spent $10,000 before any earned coverage lands.
  2. KOL talent fees. The strategy retainer covers coordination, not the creator's invoice. A Twitter KOL with 100K+ Web3 followers runs $1,500 to $8,000 per post. A YouTube creator with 50K+ subs runs $3,000 to $25,000 per dedicated video. Build a wave of 10 creators and the talent line is bigger than the agency retainer.
  3. Translation and localisation. Korean translation done properly (not a Google Translate pass) runs $300 to $800 per release. Japanese, $400 to $1,200. Vietnamese, $200 to $500. These are per-release, per-market.
  4. Conference and event PR. Token2049, Consensus, ETHDenver, Korea Blockchain Week, WebX — agencies almost always scope event presence separately at $8,000 to $20,000 per event for press logistics, media lunch coordination, and post-event coverage.
  5. Crisis comms surge. When a depeg or exploit hits and you need 48 hours of war-room coordination, the retainer cap gets blown through fast. Agencies that bury this in the SOW will send a surge invoice; the operators who don't bury it will warn you ahead of time.
  6. AI search visibility (GEO / AEO). A separate $500 to $2,500 per month line item in 2026 that almost nobody scopes in cleanly. It covers inline source-attribution rewrites, FAQPage schema, named-statistic injection, and prompt-panel tracking across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude and Google AI Mode. Princeton's GEO study (Aggarwal et al., arXiv:2311.09735, ACM SIGKDD 2024) measured a 30 to 40 percent uplift in citation rates from these structural moves alone — the same moves a senior PR operator can fold into existing op-eds and founder essays at marginal cost.

So how much should you actually spend?

The three numbers I give founders as a starting frame:

StageRecommended monthlyWhat you should get
Pre-seed / seed$3K – $8K (fractional only)Narrative, 1 funding announcement, founder profiling start
Series A, pre-product$8K – $15K2 placements/mo, founder op-eds, 1 podcast tour
Series A, product live$12K – $25K3-4 placements/mo, KOL coordination, 1 regional push
Pre-TGE (3 mo out)$25K – $50K, plus $30K-$60K sprintRetainer + dedicated launch sprint, 6-market push
Post-TGE, growth$15K – $30KSustained narrative, sentiment management, executive visibility

If you are in the first three rows and you are being quoted $30,000 a month by an agency, the math doesn't work — you don't have enough news flow to absorb that retainer productively. Walk.

If you are in the last two rows and you are being quoted $5,000 a month by a freelancer, the math also doesn't work — you don't have enough bandwidth on one person's calendar to cover a six-market TGE. The fractional model has a ceiling.

What I price at, and why

For full transparency: my fractional retainers in 2026 sit in the $5K to $12K bracket depending on scope, with TGE sprints scoped separately at $25K to $50K for the window. The reason it's not higher is that I run 4 to 6 active engagements at a time, not 20 — there is no account team to fund, and I am the only senior you are paying for. The reason it's not lower is that the work is senior-only — narrative, journalist relationships, founder-direct briefings — and that is what actually moves Tier-1 placements.

If you want the precise number for your stage and scope, the 30-minute teardown is the right next step. Bring your roadmap, your funding round, and the publication you want to be in. You'll leave with a scoped quote and an honest read on whether fractional is the right model — or whether you should be talking to a full agency instead.

SJ
Shilika Jain

Senior Web3 & AI PR consultant. Previously APAC at CoinMarketCap, currently Head of PR at Myosin DAO. 50+ protocols placed in Forbes, CoinDesk, Cointelegraph, Decrypt, The Block and Blockworks. View full profile → · Book a 30-min teardown →

Frequently asked questions

How much does crypto PR cost per month in 2026?
A traditional Web3 PR agency retainer in 2026 typically falls in three brackets: boutique crypto agencies run $7,000 to $15,000 per month, mid-tier specialists $15,000 to $30,000, and global firms with crypto desks $30,000 to $60,000+. Fractional PR — one senior operator embedded with the founder — usually lands between $5,000 and $12,000 per month for equivalent scope, because there is no account-team layer to fund.
What does a crypto PR retainer actually include?
A standard retainer covers monthly narrative direction, journalist outreach to 5 to 15 Tier-1 outlets, 2 to 4 placements per month at steady state, founder profiling (op-eds, podcast bookings, LinkedIn), press release drafting and distribution, crisis comms availability, and weekly reporting. APAC localisation, KOL waves, and paid wire distribution are usually separate line items.
How much does PR for a token launch cost?
A full TGE communications sprint typically costs $25,000 to $75,000 for a 6 to 8 week window, covering pre-launch teasing, embargoed Tier-1 exclusives, launch day coverage, KOL waves, regional placements in APAC and MENA, exchange announcement coordination, and post-launch sentiment management. Regional count is the variable that moves the budget hardest.
Is fractional PR cheaper than a Web3 PR agency?
Yes, materially — roughly 40 to 60 percent of an equivalent agency contract for the same scope. The cost difference comes from removing the account-executive, account-manager, and account-director layers an agency funds with your retainer. The trade-off is bandwidth: a fractional operator can handle 4 to 6 active engagements at a time, not 20.
When is hiring a crypto PR agency a bad idea?
Hiring a full agency is rarely the right call pre-seed or seed-stage, before you have a token, product, or named pilot customer. The agency model assumes 12-month retainers and steady news flow. A pre-product founder gets better leverage from 8 to 12 weeks of focused fractional support at one-third the cost. The agency conversation makes sense after Series A and a product launch.
How does APAC crypto PR pricing differ from Western markets?
APAC PR is sold per-market, not as a bundle. A Korea-only campaign runs $8,000 to $20,000 per launch. Japan adds $7,000 to $15,000. Vietnam, Singapore and India each run $5,000 to $12,000. Bundled six-market APAC contracts with a single operator typically come in 30 to 40 percent cheaper than stitching individual regional agencies together.