The short version: HubSpot rebuilt its Commerce Hub into something bigger called Revenue Hub, and the headline feature is an AI assistant named Breeze that writes a sales quote from a single chat prompt, on a live deal record, using your actual CRM data. It launched June 16, 2026, and it is already available to every HubSpot customer, including the free tier. If you have ever lost a day chasing a signature or an unpaid invoice, this is worth five minutes of your attention.
What Is HubSpot Revenue Hub, Exactly?
Revenue Hub is HubSpot’s answer to the “quote to cash” problem: the gap between a customer saying yes and the money actually landing in your account. Instead of building a quote in one tool, a contract in another, and an invoice in a third, Revenue Hub folds quoting, e-signature, contracts, billing, and payments into one connected system inside the CRM you may already be using.
The part that actually changes daily work is Breeze, HubSpot’s AI layer. Sit on a deal record, type something like “create a quote for this deal,” and Breeze assembles it from the structured and unstructured data already sitting in your CRM, line items, pricing, past notes, the works. HubSpot’s own announcement frames it plainly: reps build quotes with chat prompts, buyers get an interactive quote they can review, sign, and pay in the same place, and contract changes flow through the system automatically instead of requiring someone to manually update three different documents.
What Do the New AI Agents Actually Do?
Three agents ship alongside the quoting feature, and they are worth knowing by name because they solve three different bottlenecks:
The Closing Agent answers a buyer’s questions about their quote at 2 a.m. on a Saturday, without waking anyone up. The Customer Agent handles routine billing questions, why a charge looks different this month, when the next payment is due, without a human touching a support ticket. The Revenue Agent, currently in private beta with public beta coming soon, automatically follows up on overdue invoices, which is the single most avoided task in most small businesses I talk to.
None of this is exotic. It is the unglamorous, repetitive part of running a business that eats an owner’s evenings, and it is exactly the kind of task that current AI models handle well: structured, rule-bound, and forgiving of a second look before anything gets sent.
What Does It Cost?
Revenue Hub follows HubSpot’s familiar tiering: a free plan, a Professional tier starting around $95 a month, and an Enterprise tier starting around $140 a month, with the paid tiers unlocking full CPQ (configure, price, quote) functionality and the price books feature, which is currently in beta and lets you apply different pricing by customer segment automatically. Payments flow through HubSpot Payments or a connected Stripe account, and the system is built to sync outward to accounting tools like QuickBooks Online and Xero, so the quote you build in HubSpot does not become a second, disconnected bookkeeping task.
Is This Actually Good News for Small Businesses, or Just Enterprise Software Trickling Down?
Here is the honest take. AI-generated quotes are not a novelty at this point, and the individual pieces of Revenue Hub, e-signature, recurring billing, automated follow-up, have existed in other tools for years. What is genuinely new is that HubSpot is bundling all of it into the CRM tier a huge number of small businesses already use for free, rather than gating it behind an enterprise sales call.
The non-obvious part is what this does to your sales cycle’s weak point. Most small businesses do not lose deals because their product is wrong. They lose momentum in the gap between “I’ll send that over” and the buyer actually seeing a quote, and then lose cash flow in the gap between a signed contract and an invoice that never gets chased. Compressing both gaps to nearly zero is a bigger deal for a five-person company than for a five-thousand-person one, because a five-person company does not have a dedicated ops person babysitting the pipeline.
The caveat is the same one that applies to every agentic tool rolling out this year: an AI-generated quote or an automated invoice-chase email is still going out under your business’s name. Read the first few Breeze-built quotes before you send them, and decide in advance how aggressive you want the Revenue Agent’s tone to be with a customer who is thirty days late. Gartner’s widely cited prediction that over 40% of agentic AI projects will be abandoned by 2027 is not really about the technology failing, it is about businesses turning an agent loose without checking its first month of output.
How Does This Compare to Other AI Tools Small Businesses Are Adding Right Now?
Revenue Hub’s Customer Agent is answering a narrower question than the customer-service AI wave we covered when Salesforce paid $3.6 billion for Fin: it is scoped to billing and quotes rather than general support, which honestly makes it easier to trust out of the gate. And it lands at a moment when most small business owners already use AI daily but only about one in five feel confident enough to see revenue gains from it. A tool that is narrow, embedded in software you already use, and does one job (get paid faster) is exactly the kind of AI adoption that closes that confidence gap, as opposed to a general-purpose chatbot you have to figure out how to apply yourself.
How Do I Turn This On?
If you already use HubSpot’s free or Starter CRM, Revenue Hub’s quoting tools show up inside existing deal records, no migration required. Start by generating one AI quote on a real deal, checking every line against what you would have typed manually, and only then deciding whether to connect Stripe or QuickBooks for the automated billing side. If you are not on HubSpot at all, this is a reasonable moment to compare its free CRM tier against whatever you are currently cobbling together in spreadsheets and a separate invoicing app, since the AI layer is now part of the pitch, not an upsell bolted on afterward.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is HubSpot Revenue Hub free?
Yes, there is a free tier that includes the core quote-to-cash features. Full CPQ functionality and the price books beta require the Professional tier, which starts at roughly $95 a month, or the Enterprise tier at roughly $140 a month.
Does the AI actually write the whole quote by itself?
It drafts the quote from your CRM’s existing deal data when you type a prompt like “create a quote for this deal.” You still review it before it goes to the buyer, and you can edit any line the same way you would in a manually built quote.
Will this replace my accounting software?
No. Revenue Hub is built to sync with QuickBooks Online and Xero rather than replace them, so your bookkeeping stays in the tool you already use while the quoting and invoicing workflow lives in HubSpot.
What is the Revenue Agent and can I trust it to chase my customers for me?
The Revenue Agent automatically follows up on overdue invoices and is currently in private beta, with a public beta coming soon. It is worth trying on a small batch of invoices first so you can set the tone and timing before letting it run on your full customer list.
If you have used an AI quoting tool, HubSpot’s or anyone else’s, what was the first thing it got wrong that you had to catch before it went out the door?
