Why Metafic offers unlimited design revisions on a flat monthly subscription. No revision limits, no extra charges — just better design, faster. Every great design has a moment where someone looks at it and thinks, “this is close, but it could be better.” In most agency arrangements, that thought collides with a contract: revisions are rationed, and asking for one more round means a change order, an awkward conversation, or simply settling. We built our model to remove that friction entirely, because the best ideas rarely arrive fully formed on the first pass.
The Hidden Cost of Revision Limits
The traditional agency contract caps revisions for a reason that has nothing to do with quality. Limits protect the agency’s margin by drawing a hard line around scope. The trouble is that this line quietly works against the very thing you hired them for: great design.
When revisions are scarce, every change becomes a negotiation. Teams hoard their rounds, batching feedback and second-guessing whether a refinement is “worth” using one up. Bold experiments get skipped because nobody wants to spend a precious revision on something that might not work. Designers, sensing the constraint, play it safe. The result is design optimized to survive a contract rather than to be its best possible self — competent, on-spec, and quietly mediocre. The real cost of a revision limit is not the extra fee; it is the better work that never gets attempted.
A Flat-Fee Subscription, by Design
We took a different path: a flat monthly subscription with unlimited design requests and unlimited revisions. One predictable price, no per-change billing, no scope arguments. You can request as many designs and refine them as many times as you need, and the cost does not move.
This is not a pricing gimmick — it realigns incentives. When revisions are free, the conversation shifts from “can we afford to change this” to “what would make this great.” Iteration becomes the default rather than a budgeted exception. Designers are freed to propose bold directions because exploring an idea that does not land costs nothing but a little time. The model only works for everyone if the design itself keeps getting better, which means our interests and yours finally point the same direction.
How It Actually Works
The mechanics are deliberately simple. You subscribe to a plan and get a dedicated design capability on call. You submit requests — a new landing page, a brand refresh, a set of product screens, a presentation — through a single clear channel, and they move through an active queue. Work comes back quickly, you review it, and you ask for changes. Then you ask for more, as many times as it takes, until it is right.
There are no revision counters ticking down and no surprise invoices for “out of scope” tweaks. You can pause or adjust your subscription as your workload changes, so you are paying for design capacity that flexes with your actual needs rather than a fixed contract that fits them poorly. The predictability cuts both ways: you always know what design costs next month, and we always know what we are building toward.
Who This Is For
This model fits teams with a steady appetite for design. Startups shipping fast and iterating on product and brand in the same breath. Marketing teams running a constant stream of campaigns, landing pages, and assets. Companies that have outgrown freelancers but do not want the overhead, ramp time, and fixed cost of a full in-house design hire.
It is especially powerful for organizations that have felt the sting of revision limits before — that recognize the quiet frustration of “good enough because we ran out of rounds.” If design is core to how you compete and you want it to keep improving rather than freezing at the contract’s edge, the subscription model is built for exactly that. If your design needs are a single one-off project with a hard finish line, a traditional engagement may suit you better, and we will say so.
Give Your Ideas Room to Grow
Great design is not a destination you reach on the first try; it is the product of iteration, experimentation, and the freedom to keep refining until something is genuinely right. Revision limits put a ceiling on that process. Removing them lifts it.
That is the whole idea behind unlimited design changes: take the fear out of feedback, take the math out of every tweak, and let great ideas evolve into their best form. If that sounds like the way your team wants to work, talk to Metafic about a design subscription and give your ideas the room they deserve.
