Odoo ERP implementation
from $7,000
Learn moreOdoo ERP implementation at GreatSoft (Tashkent, Uzbekistan) starts at $7,000; most projects land between $20,000 and $50,000, and complex multi-branch rollouts reach $100,000. Below are the published ranges we actually work with — and what moves the figure.
Odoo implementation starts at $7,000 for a first working contour — for example POS plus inventory — and each additional module typically adds $2,500–3,500. The exact figure is fixed in a written scope after a free process audit, before any work starts.
| What | Range | What's inside |
|---|---|---|
| First working contour | from $7,000 | e.g. POS + inventory: configuration, data migration, training |
| Additional module | $2,500–3,500 | accounting, HR, purchasing, manufacturing — per module |
| Typical full project | $20,000–50,000 | multi-branch company, several modules, integrations |
| Complex rollout | $50,000–100,000 | many branches, 1C/Didox integrations, custom workflows |
| Support after launch | from $500/month | fixes and adjustments, response times fixed in the agreement |
Five things move an ERP budget: module count, branch count, data volume, integrations, and how far your workflows are from standard. On top of that comes the Odoo Enterprise license — an annual subscription priced per user.
Modules: each area — POS, inventory, accounting, HR — adds configuration and training time.
Branches and users: more locations mean more hardware, more data, and more people to train.
Data migration: clean Excel imports are quick; years of history in legacy systems take longer.
Integrations: 1C, Didox/ESF, Payme, Click, Uzum, Telegram — each adds a defined block of work.
Custom workflows: the further your process is from standard, the more configuration it needs.
Licenses: the Odoo Enterprise subscription is priced per user — one subscription covers every module, shown as a separate line in your quote.
Over a 3–5 year horizon Odoo usually offers the best value for operations-heavy companies: one Enterprise subscription covers every module, and you pay once for implementation. 1C stays strong for statutory accounting, and cloud SaaS wins only while your team is small.
| Criterion | Odoo | 1C | Cloud SaaS (amoCRM, MoySklad…) |
|---|---|---|---|
| License | Enterprise — annual per-user subscription, every module included | Paid platform plus per-seat client licenses | Monthly subscription per user, indefinitely |
| Implementation | From $7,000 (GreatSoft, Tashkent) | Comparable — through franchisee partners | Low — but so is the room to adapt it |
| Customization | Full source access — any workflow | Possible, tied to the platform and its updates | Limited to the vendor's settings |
| Uzbekistan localization | VAT, ESF via Didox, soliq.uz data — configured by us | Strong statutory accounting out of the box | Varies by product; often built for the Russian market |
| Cost at 50 users over 3 years | Enterprise subscription + implementation + support | Licenses + seats + partner support | Subscription × users × 36 months |
A common setup in practice: operations run in Odoo, statutory accounting stays in 1C — we build that integration.
Every GreatSoft service has a published floor price: CRM implementation from $4,000, custom software from $10,000, mobile apps from $10,000, business automation from $2,000 per process, and IT outsourcing from $500 per month.
from $7,000
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Learn moreERP implementation in Uzbekistan costs from $7,000 for a first working contour up to around $100,000 for complex multi-branch rollouts; most GreatSoft projects land between $20,000 and $50,000. The figure is fixed in a written scope after a free process audit — before any work starts.
Because two companies asking for "Odoo implementation" can differ tenfold in modules, branches, and data — an honest exact price requires an audit first. The ranges on this page are real project boundaries, and your exact figure is fixed in writing before work begins, so it never moves after the start.
We implement Odoo Enterprise: the license is an annual per-user subscription, and one subscription covers every official module — POS, inventory, accounting, HR, and more. The exact amount depends on your user count; we show it as a separate line in the quote, with no hidden fees.
The written scope covers everything needed to go live: process audit, configuration, data migration, integrations, staff training, and launch support. There are no surprise line items — hardware such as scanners and POS terminals is quoted separately, and you buy it directly.
Yes — that's our default recommendation: start with a first contour around $7,000–10,000 that solves the most painful area, then add modules as they pay off. Every stage runs on the same database, so nothing spent early is thrown away.
Support starts at $500 per month, with the scope and response times fixed in the agreement. You can also run without a retainer and pay per request — we'll recommend whichever is cheaper for your actual usage.
For operations — POS, inventory, CRM, purchasing — usually yes: one Odoo Enterprise subscription covers every module, while 1C requires platform and client licenses plus partner support, each billed separately. For statutory accounting alone, 1C remains a strong and often cheaper choice — which is why many of our clients run both, integrated.
No — the consultation and the estimate are free. You get a written scope with deliverables, timeline, and price; whether you proceed is then your decision, with no obligation.