Pricing pages are where curiosity becomes revenue — or quietly evaporates. The Price Table widget for Elementor is built to handle both ends of that conversion: a single, focused price card for one-product pages, and a full multi-tier pricing section with billing toggles, popular badges, and a guarantee bar for sites that sell several plans. Sentio designed it so editors stop stitching three or four blocks together and instead control the whole pricing experience in one place. The result is fewer moving parts, fewer style mismatches, and faster iteration when marketing wants to test a new offer or rework an existing tier.
What Is the Price Table Widget?
It is a two-mode pricing block for Elementor. Mode one is a single card — heading, currency, price, period, feature list, optional sale badge, and a call-to-action — for offers that have one obvious price. Mode two is a full pricing section: hero copy, billing toggle (annual or lifetime, monthly or yearly, single or season), three or more plan cards, a “most popular” badge, a lifetime savings note, and a guarantee bar. Both modes live inside the same instance — switch the layout dropdown and the same block reshapes itself without losing your styling work.
Key Features of the Price Table Widget
- Two layouts in one widget — single-card for focused offers, pricing-section for tiered comparison pages.
- Billing toggle with rename-able labels and a second price field — annual vs. lifetime, monthly vs. yearly, hourly vs. retainer, whatever your model needs.
- Sale badge, ribbon, popular badge, eyebrow text, and guarantee bar — every persuasion element you would normally bolt on with extra widgets, built in.
- Per-feature availability and tooltips in the feature repeater, plus three CTA styles (solid, ghost, gradient) to match your brand.
Why Use the Price Table Widget on Your Site?
Generic pricing blocks make pricing pages look like every other pricing page. This one exists because real pricing decisions involve more than a number — they need context, anchoring, and a clear next click. A catering company can publish a single-card price for corporate lunches with a per-head rate, dietary inclusions, and a “book a tasting” CTA. A surf school can run a three-plan pricing section with a single-day vs. season-pass toggle, a most-booked badge on the improver tier, and a guarantee bar across the bottom. A cybersecurity audit firm can show a single high-ticket card with a sale badge, a quarterly retainer toggle, and a ghost CTA that reads “request scope call” — pricing that signals consideration, not impulse. Every Elementor Price Table instance is keyboard accessible, screen-reader friendly, and adapts smoothly from desktop to mobile, which matters more than ever now that more than half of pricing-page traffic comes from phones.
Getting Started With Price Table in Minutes
Install Sentio Addons, drop the Price Table widget on any page, and pick a layout from the dropdown. For single-card, fill in the heading, price, period, and feature list, then style the card. For pricing-section, edit the plans repeater — add as many tiers as you need, set one as popular, and turn the billing toggle on. Use the Style tab to match your brand: card background, accent colour, button style, ribbon colour, and feature divider weight. Save, preview on mobile, ship it the same afternoon.
See the Price Table Widget in Action
The widget page above this article shows three distinct examples: a single-card catering quote in a deep navy palette, a three-tier surf-school pricing section in vibrant pink, and a minimal black-on-white security audit card with a sale badge and quarterly toggle. Same widget, same Style tab, three completely different revenue stories.
Pricing is the page where every decision compounds. Use the Price Table widget for Elementor and you stop wrestling with stacked columns, off-brand defaults, and inconsistent CTAs — and start shipping pages that look intentional. Sentio Addons keeps building practical, design-system-friendly components like this because publishing teams need real tools, not toy widgets and stacked column hacks.