Dojo Card Reader Review (2026): Fees, Features and Verdict
Dojo: Fix plan £39.99/month up to £3,999 turnover, Flex quote beyond. T+1 10am settlement; rental hardware from £15; 12-month initial contract after a 30-day trial.

- Dojo offers portable, countertop, and table-service readers on rental plans.
- Fix plan at £39.99/month covers up to £3,999 in monthly card turnover.
- Next-day settlement lands in your account by 10am seven days a week.
Dojo Card Reader at a Glance
Verdict
If you run a hospitality venue or mid-volume retail business, we’d put Dojo on your shortlist. It suits operators who need tableside payment, fast next-day settlement, and a managed account rather than a self-serve reader.
The Pocket device handles orders and payments in one unit — a genuine operational win for full-service restaurants. The trade-offs are material: rates are not published, hardware is rental-only, and your initial contract runs 12 months.
Settlement is T+1 by 10am, not same-day, and weekend settlement is included for the first year on a 12-month contract only. Those are your three facts to mark before you sign.
Best For
Hospitality operators (restaurants, pubs with table service, cafes, hotels) and mid-volume retailers taking at least £3,000–£4,000/month in card turnover. If you want dedicated account management, a managed rate, and T+1 settlement by 10am, you’re in Dojo’s target market.
Full-service venues where Dojo Pocket’s combined order-and-payment capability saves table turns. Multi-site operators who already run a third-party EPOS and need a card acceptance layer with 450+ integration coverage.
Not Ideal For
Low-volume or occasional sellers where the £39.99/month Fix plan and rental hardware don’t pay back against Square’s 1.75% flat with no monthly fee.
Businesses that need transparent published rates before ordering. Operators who need true same-day settlement. Anyone unwilling to sign a 12-month initial contract after the 30-day trial.
Key Facts
Fix plan: £39.99/month (up to £3,999 monthly card turnover). Flex plan: bespoke quote for £100k+ annual turnover. Settlement: T+1 by 10am. Hardware: rental-only — Wired £15/month, Go £20, Pocket £25. Contract: 30-day trial then 12 months, then monthly rolling. Support: phone, 8am–11pm, 7 days.
Dojo Go
What Is the Dojo Card Reader?
Dojo is a UK card payment provider built around managed merchant accounts, three hardware devices, and fast next-day settlement.
The company targets hospitality and retail specifically. Its Pocket device (handheld orders plus payments) and 450+ EPOS integrations are aimed at full-service restaurants, pubs, and mid-size retailers with existing POS software.
You sign up through a quote process. Dojo assesses your card turnover and card mix, then places you on either the Fix plan (under £100k annual) or Flex (£100k+). We verified current pricing and contract structure from dojo.tech in April 2026.
That quote step is your gate to plan around.
Your reader connects over WiFi or 4G depending on the model and accepts chip and PIN, contactless, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. Amex and Discover are confirmed on Dojo Go.
Your takings are settled into your existing UK business bank account. Dojo doesn’t require you to open a new account, which is different from the Tide or Revolut model where the reader and the bank account are the same product.
Your structural commitment is the 12-month contract after the 30-day trial. We’d use that window against real trading volume rather than light test transactions. That’s the whole point of 30 days.
Fees and Costs
Card Payment Fees
Dojo doesn’t offer a published transaction rate. Your rate is set as part of the quote.
That’s the honest starting point. If you want a published rate you can compare before you pick up the phone, Dojo isn’t structured for you.
When you’re trying to forecast card fees into a VAT return or a quarterly P&L, the rate opacity forces you to negotiate before you can model costs. That’s a planning tax worth weighing honestly.
If you take up to £3,999 in card turnover per month (under £100k annual), the Fix plan is £39.99/month flat. Transaction fees are bundled into the flat monthly fee up to that threshold.
If you trade above £100k annual, you move to Flex. Flex uses a blended pricing model tailored to your business type, card mix (debit, credit, corporate, Amex), and volume. Worth getting that quote in writing before you commit.
Two per-transaction fees apply on your plan: a £0.05 secure transaction fee per authorisation, and a £0.50 refund fee per transaction processed back to a customer.
CNP (card-not-present) transactions cost face-to-face rate plus 0.5%. That covers payment links, virtual terminal, and online checkout processed through Dojo’s gateway.
If you’re comparing Dojo against Square’s 1.75% flat or SumUp’s 1.69%, we’d ask for your Flex quote in writing and compare the blended effective rate against the headline PAYG competitor rate at your actual card mix.
If you trade over £1m annual card turnover, the Pro plan applies. Pricing at that tier is fully bespoke and contract length is negotiated.
Hardware Costs
All three Dojo devices are rental-only. No purchase option is offered.
That’s the hardware model. The cost never ends.
Dojo Wired starts at £15/month. Dojo Go is £20/month. Dojo Pocket is £25/month. All figures are entry-level; larger deployments may quote differently.
Your rental covers the hardware itself, the Dojo app and management portal, and support. Transaction fees are charged separately through your plan.
The rental model has an implication worth flagging before signing. Hardware cost never ends. Over three years, Dojo Go at £20/month costs £720 before VAT.
That’s the real number if you stay three years.
You can exit on standard notice after month 12, which stops the rental. No purchase option is offered that ends the monthly cost while you keep the hardware.
Compare that against Square’s one-off £19 reader purchase. Square’s percentage rate is higher (1.75% vs your Flex quote), but hardware cost is fixed at first order.
If you run a high-volume hospitality venue, the percentage saving on Flex usually dwarfs the rental cost. If you’re a £3,000/month cafe, the maths is closer and worth running before committing.
Switching credit: Dojo covers exit fees from your previous provider up to £500 on the fixed-rate plan. Keep the original provider’s termination invoice on file; you’ll need it to claim.
Monthly Fees and Contract Terms
Your contract structure is a 30-day no-commitment trial, then 12 months, then monthly rolling.
During your trial you can walk away without penalty. That’s the window to test Dojo against real weekly card turnover, peak trading hours, and your actual card mix.
After day 30, you’re on the 12-month initial contract. Confirm early termination terms in writing before signing.
Once your initial 12 months elapses, the agreement rolls monthly. You can exit on standard notice at that point.
If you’re over £1m annual card turnover, your contract length is negotiated. Larger venues and multi-site operators sometimes secure shorter initial terms as part of the Flex or Pro deal.
Your plan pricing is flat: Fix at £39.99/month for sub-£100k businesses, Flex at a bespoke rate for £100k+. Hardware rental is on top of the plan.
Your realistic monthly cost: plan fee + hardware rental + per-authorisation (£0.05) fees + any refund fees. That’s the figure to compare against Square’s zero monthly fee or SumUp’s 1.69% PAYG.
Chargeback fees: not published publicly. Confirm current terms with your account manager before relying on a specific figure.
Refund fees: £0.50 per refund transaction on all plans. Void before settlement to avoid this charge where possible.
Other charges to watch: CNP transactions run at face-to-face rate plus 0.5%; the £0.05 authorisation fee applies per transaction regardless of card type.
Payouts and Settlement Times
Standard Settlement Times
Dojo settles by 10am the following business day, not same-day.
The transfer starts at 10am the day after you took the card. Funds land in your bank account depending on how your bank processes Faster Payments.
If your bank runs Faster Payments 7 days a week, weekend takings can settle the next day. If your bank only processes Monday to Friday, Saturday takings wait until Monday at the earliest.
If you’re relying on weekend settlement, Dojo doesn’t publish a list of compatible banks. Confirm with your own bank first.
Your bank, not Dojo, decides weekend arrival.
Weekend and bank holiday delays: on a 12-month contract, Dojo includes weekend and bank holiday transfers for the first year only.
After year one, standard business-day transfers apply unless you pay for the upgrade. We’d confirm the ongoing cost with Dojo at renewal — it isn’t published publicly.
That matters if you’re comparing Dojo against Square (settles weekends as standard without a year-one cliff) or MyPOS (settles instantly to its own wallet).
If you run a pub or restaurant on a Friday-to-Sunday sales weekend, the year-one inclusion is a real win in your first year. After that, budget for the upgrade or accept a Monday delay.
Faster Payout Options
Dojo doesn’t offer instant settlement.
Funds always flow through the overnight settlement cycle. Even on the paid weekend upgrade, the earliest you see money is 10am the following day.
If you need funds in minutes rather than hours, Dojo isn’t the right product. MyPOS settles instantly to a MyPOS wallet; Revolut Reader credits a Revolut Business balance in real time.
For a typical hospitality operator, 10am next-day is fast enough. You close Friday night, supplier invoices run Monday morning, and the Friday takings are in your account before payments go out.
For mobile selling on a cash-tight margin (market traders, pop-up caterers, event food), the 24-hour wait can bite. If your stock-buy for Sunday depends on Saturday’s card takings clearing, Dojo’s T+1 isn’t the right shape of cash flow.
Payout holds: if unusual transaction patterns or chargebacks trigger a review, Dojo handles holds through the merchant portal and the account manager. Funds in your existing bank account are not affected by Dojo-level holds.
Account reviews: Dojo runs a credit check and underwrites each merchant at signup. Seasonal spikes or irregular transaction sizes are best declared during the quote to reduce the risk of an automated review mid-trading.
Card Reader Features
Accepted Payment Types
Dojo Go accepts chip and PIN, contactless, Apple Pay, Google Pay, American Express, and Discover Global Network.
That’s the full card mix your hospitality or retail venue needs. Amex acceptance matters if you serve corporate customers or venues that attract expense-account spend.
If you choose Dojo Wired or Pocket, both accept Visa, Mastercard, contactless, and digital wallets. Amex acceptance on Wired and Pocket isn’t explicitly confirmed on the product pages we reviewed in April 2026.
If Amex matters and you’re looking at Wired or Pocket, we’d confirm with Dojo support before ordering. Don’t assume parity with Dojo Go.
Your contactless limits follow standard UK card scheme rules. Digital wallet payments run through the same rails as chip and PIN from a settlement perspective.
Your refunds process through the Dojo app against the original transaction. Each refund triggers the £0.50 refund fee. If a staff member mis-rings an item, void before settlement rather than refunding after.
Connectivity and Portability
Dojo Go runs 4G plus WiFi with a mobile SIM built in and no paired phone required. That combination means your reader keeps working at outdoor markets, catering events, and venues with weak guest WiFi.
Dojo Wired is a countertop device that runs on mains power and connects by WiFi or Ethernet. It’s tethered by design, which protects it from theft and damage. It won’t take payment at a customer’s table.
Dojo Pocket is the handheld unit built for table service. It’s carried around a restaurant floor for a full shift. Whether it uses WiFi only, a built-in SIM, or both isn’t confirmed in current public documentation as of April 2026.
If you’re committing a venue to Pocket deployment, ask Dojo to confirm connectivity in writing before ordering. A reader that drops to WiFi-only in a basement dining room creates service problems.
Offline payments: Dojo does not publish offline payment functionality in its current product documentation. Confirm capability before relying on it in venues with intermittent connectivity.
Accessories: charging docks, carry cases, counter stands, and screen protectors are available through Dojo but are not bundled with the reader rental. The 4G SIM on Dojo Go is included in the rental.
Battery Life and Reliability
Dojo doesn’t publish rated battery life figures for Go or Pocket in its current product documentation.
For Dojo Pocket deployed in table service, we’d plan for charging docks behind the pass. Handheld devices running a full Friday or Saturday service drain faster than the headline spec usually implies, and a dead Pocket mid-service is harder to recover from than a Go on WiFi backup.
Dojo Wired is on mains power, so battery is not a concern. It’s the reliable option for fixed-counter deployments where the plug socket is always available.
Dojo Go is designed for portability, but if you’re trading at a 10-hour outdoor event, we’d bring a charging cable and confirm with Dojo whether Go supports charging while in use.
Across all three devices, the 7-day tech support line (8am–11pm) covers the reliability gap. When a reader fails mid-service, you have a live phone line rather than a ticket queue.
App, Dashboard and Reporting Features
App Features
Dojo doesn’t sell a full EPOS product. It sells card readers that integrate with EPOS products.
That’s your key architectural choice. Square runs its own POS; Dojo plugs into yours.
The Dojo app gives you a transaction log, daily sales totals, refund handling, and basic reporting. For a sole trader or small independent venue, that’s enough for day-to-day reconciliation.
The management portal (accessed on web) adds merchant statements, settlement reports, and dispute handling. That’s the layer your finance person or accountant will use.
If you run a multi-cover restaurant with table plans, course timing, or kitchen display systems, you’ll pair Dojo with a dedicated EPOS vendor. The app is a payments layer, not a hospitality management system.
Inventory tools: Dojo does not offer inventory management in its native app. Stock tracking runs through your paired EPOS.
Product management: product catalogues and menu management are handled by the EPOS partner, not Dojo directly.
Reporting and Analytics
Your reporting lives in the Dojo portal and app: daily sales totals, transaction search, refund tracking, merchant statements, and settlement reports. Your finance person can pull fee breakdowns by day or by month.
Because Dojo settles into your existing business bank account, reconciliation runs through whatever accounting tool you already use. Takings land as a named deposit and card fees show as a separate line.
That’s different from your Tide or Revolut setup, where takings and banking share one app. Dojo stays out of your bank account.
If you’re a multi-site operator or restaurant with per-dish profitability tracking, the depth of reporting depends on your EPOS, not on Dojo. Dojo is your payment layer, not back-office analytics.
Accounting software: accounting integrations connect through the EPOS partner rather than directly from Dojo in most cases. If you run Lightspeed or Epos Now, your Xero or QuickBooks feed comes from them, with Dojo as the settlement source.
Integrations
Dojo integrates with 450+ third-party EPOS systems. That includes hospitality platforms (Lightspeed, Epos Now, Zonal, TISSL), retail POS, and vertical-specific products.
If your EPOS is already chosen, the integration question is usually “yes” at Dojo’s volume. We’d confirm your specific platform and version before committing.
If you run table service plus takeaway plus online booking, Dojo also has 50+ click-and-collect, online ordering, and ticketing partners. Dojo sits underneath all three channels.
Dojo’s online payment features include payment links, hosted checkout, a virtual terminal, and plugins for WooCommerce and PrestaShop. CNP transactions cost face-to-face rate plus 0.5%.
Your payment links generate in the Dojo portal and go out by email or text. Your customer pays online; funds flow into your business account on the same T+1 cycle as face-to-face transactions.
If you run a full e-commerce site with cart, product catalogue, and customer accounts, pair Dojo with a dedicated platform (Shopify, WooCommerce). The plugins cover the payment layer but not the shop.
Security, Compliance and Chargebacks
Payment Security and PCI Compliance
Dojo is a PCI DSS Level 1 certified payment service provider. That means merchants processing in-person payments through a Dojo terminal do not carry a separate annual PCI audit burden for those transactions.
All face-to-face payments use end-to-end encryption from the reader to the processor. Chip and PIN and contactless are handled at the hardware level; your merchant software never touches raw card data. That matters for any business concerned about data breach liability.
Online and card-not-present transactions through Dojo’s gateway use 3D Secure 2 (3DS2) for additional cardholder authentication. That applies to payment links, hosted checkout, and virtual terminal transactions.
Dojo’s hosted checkout handles PCI scope for online payments. If you use the hosted checkout rather than building your own payment form, you don’t need to separately certify your web infrastructure. We’d confirm scope with Dojo if you also use third-party booking or payment forms on the same domain.
Fraud Checks and Account Holds
Dojo runs a credit check and underwrites each merchant before activation. That’s standard for managed merchant services and is part of how Dojo can offer the managed rate model.
Because your funds land in your existing UK business bank account rather than a Dojo-held wallet, account-level pauses at Dojo don’t freeze your existing banking. That’s a direct advantage over Tide and Revolut, where the reader sits inside the bank account itself.
Dojo runs risk scoring on transaction patterns. If your business has seasonal spikes, event days with unusually large transactions, or irregular card mix, mention this during the quote. We’d set those expectations upfront rather than waiting for a spike to trigger an automated review mid-trading.
If a card-scheme-level anti-fraud hold applies, Dojo handles it through the merchant portal and your account manager. On Flex and Pro plans, your dedicated account manager is the escalation point — we’d use that route before calling general support for hold disputes.
Chargeback Handling
Chargebacks are managed through the Dojo merchant portal. When a customer disputes a transaction with their bank, the chargeback notice appears in your portal with supporting documentation requirements.
Your account manager handles dispute escalations on Flex and Pro plans. If you’re on the Fix plan, the portal is your primary channel for responding to chargeback evidence requests.
Specific chargeback fees are not published publicly. We’d confirm current terms with the account manager before signing, particularly if your business type has historically elevated dispute rates (hospitality, events, services).
The £0.50 refund fee applies separately to customer-initiated refunds you process through the terminal. That’s distinct from a card-scheme chargeback, which carries its own fee structure.
Who the Dojo Card Reader Is Best For
Best Business Types
Hospitality (restaurants, pubs with table service, cafes, takeaways, hotels) is the clearest fit. The Pocket device is built specifically for full-service venues, the Wired suits counter-service bars and takeaways, and the T+1 settlement lines up with how hospitality cash flow works.
Mid-size retail also fits. The 450+ EPOS integrations mean you can plug Dojo under an existing Lightspeed or Epos Now deployment without re-platforming.
Mobile services (caterers, event bars, market traders with regular high volume) fit Dojo Go specifically. The built-in 4G and Amex acceptance on Go cover the mobile use case that many competitors charge extra for.
Independent retailers with a single till and low turnover will usually do better on a contract-free PAYG reader. The rental cost and 12-month contract don’t pay back at those volumes.
Consultancies and B2B service firms taking occasional in-person payment won’t justify the plan. A phone-based PAYG option or Tap to Pay will usually be cheaper for a few transactions a month.
Best Sales Environments
Counter service: Dojo Wired at £15/month. Fixed to a mains-powered counter, takes payment at the till. Right for retail shops, takeaway counters, and bar service where payment stays in one place.
Table service: Dojo Pocket at £25/month. Carried around the floor for a full shift, takes orders and payments on one device. Right for full-service restaurants and pubs where staff move between tables.
Mobile and outdoor: Dojo Go at £20/month. Built-in 4G, no paired phone, Amex accepted. Right for market traders, caterers, tradespeople, and venues with outdoor seating where a WiFi-only reader is a liability. We’d pick Go as the default unless you specifically need table-service orders (Pocket) or a fixed counter (Wired).
At roughly £3,000–£4,000/month in card turnover, the Fix plan at £39.99 starts to pay for itself compared with Square’s 1.75% flat. Below that threshold, PAYG usually wins.
When to Consider Alternatives
If you want to own the hardware: no purchase option exists on Dojo. Square Reader is a £19 one-off; SumUp Air is £39. For low-volume sellers, the one-off cost often beats months of Dojo rental.
If you need instant funds: Dojo settles at 10am the next business day, always. MyPOS Go 2 settles instantly to a MyPOS wallet. If your cash flow depends on same-session settlement, Dojo is the wrong shape.
If you need published rates before ordering: Dojo’s quote-based model means you can’t compare rates without starting a sales conversation. SumUp, Square, and Revolut all publish flat rates upfront.
If you already bank with Tide: Tide Card Reader bundles card acceptance with your existing Tide account. That’s a simpler integration than managing a separate Dojo merchant account alongside a Tide banking relationship.
Customer Support and Reviews
Support Channels
Tech support runs 8am–11pm seven days a week. General queries run 8am–6pm seven days.
Phone is the primary channel for tech support. That’s a meaningful difference from Tide’s in-app chat or SumUp’s email-led model. When a reader fails on a Saturday evening mid-service, you have a live line to call rather than waiting for a ticket response.
The 8am–11pm window covers dinner service and late-evening trading. That’s a practical benefit for hospitality operators where failures after 6pm are the most damaging.
On Flex and Pro plans, your account manager is the escalation route for billing queries, chargeback disputes, and rate renegotiations. Fix plan holders work through the standard support line for those conversations.
Customer Review Themes
Positive review themes cluster around three areas (editorial judgement based on public review patterns, not a commissioned survey).
The 10am settlement speed is the most consistently praised feature. Operators compare it favourably against competitors with 3-day standard cycles.
The dedicated account manager relationship on Flex plans receives consistently strong feedback. Having a named contact for rate queries, device issues, and account reviews changes the managed-service experience.
The 7-day phone support window is praised by hospitality operators specifically. Evening failures have an immediate resolution path.
Common Complaints
Contract complaints are the most frequent. The 12-month initial contract and early-exit terms catch merchants who didn’t read the commitment clearly before signing. The 30-day trial window helps, but only if you test it deliberately.
Rate opacity frustrates smaller buyers. The Flex quote process works well for larger venues but reads as a sales funnel to operators who wanted a price list, not a sales call.
Hardware complaints cluster around battery life on heavy-use days and 4G signal issues in rural areas. Neither is unusual for this category of device, but both are amplified by the rental-only model: you’re paying monthly for a device that may not perform as expected in your specific venue.
Weekend settlement reversion after year one catches operators who built cash flow around the year-one inclusion. We’d mark the renewal date in the diary before committing. That cliff arrives faster than expected.
Dojo Card Reader Alternatives
The three sticking points with Dojo are the rental-only hardware, the 12-month initial contract, and the quote-based rates. Each pushes specific operators elsewhere.
Dojo vs Square Reader
Square removes the contract, the rental model, and the quote process entirely. Hardware is a £19 one-off and the rate is 1.75% flat forever. That suits low-volume, irregular, or first-time sellers.
The case for Dojo over Square is pure rate arithmetic. At £5,000+/month in card turnover, a negotiated Flex rate typically beats 1.75% flat. Below that threshold, Square usually wins all-in when you net out Dojo’s monthly plan and rental fees.
Square Reader
Dojo vs myPOS Go 2
MyPOS Go 2 solves the one thing Dojo can’t: true instant funds. It works without a paired phone and funds arrive immediately to a MyPOS wallet rather than at 10am the next business day.
The case for Dojo over MyPOS is settlement destination. Dojo settles into your existing bank account; MyPOS requires you to manage a separate wallet and withdraw funds across to your bank, adding a step and potentially a fee.
Dojo vs Tide Card Reader
Tide Card Reader bundles card acceptance with a Tide business account. If you already bank with Tide, the integration is cleaner than Dojo’s separate-account model. Plan rates from 0.79% + 3p on debit are competitive for Tide account holders.
The case for Dojo over Tide: Tide’s default settlement is 3 working days (next-day costs extra), no American Express is accepted, and the reader only works inside the Tide ecosystem. Dojo’s T+1 10am settlement, Amex on Go, and bank-agnostic model are each real advantages for operators.
Final Verdict: Is the Dojo Card Reader Worth It?
We’d recommend Dojo for the right operator: a hospitality venue or mid-volume retailer clearing £4,000+/month, willing to sign a 12-month contract, and prepared to negotiate rates rather than read a price list.
The three genuine strengths are T+1 settlement by 10am (faster than most UK competitors on a standard cycle), the Pocket device (the only UK reader that handles table orders and payment in one unit), and 7-day phone support that covers evening service when failures are most damaging.
Three structural trade-offs are real and worth stating plainly. First, rates are quote-based — you can’t model costs before starting a sales conversation. Second, all hardware is rental-only, so your device cost runs indefinitely. Third, the 12-month initial contract means a bad fit is expensive to exit.
The 30-day trial is the safety valve. We’d use it deliberately: test against your real trading volume, your actual card mix, and your busiest service day. If Dojo doesn’t perform, exit before day 30.
For hospitality operators who want the Pocket’s order-taking capability and can justify the monthly plan, we’d call Dojo among the strongest UK card reader options available. For everyone else, Square, SumUp, or MyPOS will usually offer a cheaper or simpler fit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Dojo card reader monthly fee?
The Fix plan is £39.99/month and covers card turnover up to £3,999 per month. Hardware rental is charged on top: Dojo Wired £15/month, Dojo Go £20/month, Dojo Pocket £25/month. Above £100k annual turnover you move to a Flex plan with bespoke pricing.
Those are separate line items. Budget for both.
Does Dojo offer same-day settlement?
No. Dojo settles at 10am the following business day (T+1). There is no same-day or instant settlement option. Weekend settlement is included on 12-month contracts for the first year; after that it reverts to business days or requires a paid upgrade.
Can I buy the Dojo card reader outright?
No. All three Dojo devices (Wired, Go, Pocket) are rental-only. There is no purchase option. Your monthly hardware cost runs for as long as you hold the device.
Is there a free trial with Dojo?
Yes. There is a 30-day no-commitment trial that starts once the reader is activated (not when the contract is signed). You can exit without penalty during this window. After day 30, the 12-month initial contract applies.
Does the Dojo card reader accept American Express?
American Express is confirmed on Dojo Go. Amex acceptance on Dojo Wired and Dojo Pocket is not explicitly confirmed in current product documentation (April 2026). If Amex matters to your business, confirm with Dojo before ordering.
What happens if I leave Dojo before my contract ends?
Early termination terms are not published publicly. We’d confirm the specific early-exit fee in writing before signing.
On the fixed-rate plan, Dojo covers your exit fees from a previous provider up to £500 when you switch in — that credit does not apply in reverse if you leave Dojo early.
We reviewed Dojo by checking current pricing, features, and terms directly from dojo.tech in April 2026. Key data points — fees, contract terms, hardware costs, and integrations — were sourced from the provider’s primary website and documentation, not comparison site summaries.
Where pricing requires a custom quote or is not publicly listed, we have noted this explicitly. Confirm current terms directly with the provider before purchasing.
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