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CostFigure data license

Citation-first rules for datasets, benchmark pages, and research outputs

Use this page when you want to know whether you may quote, cite, or reuse something from CostFigure. You may cite and link to published CostFigure pages. You may not republish the underlying dataset work as your own product, mirror, or commercial feed without permission.

Quote with attributionNo dataset resaleUpdated March 2026
Minimal editorial illustration of dataset notes, citation pages, and documentation cues for the CostFigure data license page.

Quick answer

You may do this

Cite CostFigure pages, quote short excerpts, and link directly to the original route.

You may not do this

Repackage CostFigure tables, normalized benchmark outputs, or research pages as a competing dataset.

Ask first

Contact CostFigure before bulk reuse, commercial redistribution, or productized API access.

What you can do

You may read, cite, and link to CostFigure dataset pages and research pages for editorial, research, or planning purposes.

You may quote short excerpts with attribution and a live link back to the original CostFigure URL.

You may reference CostFigure methodology, cost-index pages, and supporting research when you need to explain where a published benchmark came from.

What you cannot do

You may not republish CostFigure datasets, benchmark tables, or research pages as a standalone commercial dataset, scraped mirror, or competing index.

You may not remove attribution or present CostFigure normalization work as your own.

You may not bulk-export CostFigure benchmark pages into another search surface, scraping product, or training dataset without written permission.

Scope

Public source documents cited by CostFigure keep their own licensing terms. CostFigure only claims rights over its selection, normalization, page structure, and original explanatory material.

If you need reuse permission beyond normal citation, contact CostFigure directly before redistributing the material.

Best way to cite CostFigure

Link to the exact CostFigure URL you used, not only the homepage. That helps readers verify the benchmark, the assumptions, and the date on the page.

If you cite a dataset-style page, also link to the related methodology page when the modeling context matters.

If you want a broader view of how CostFigure publishes benchmarks, see the methodology page and the 2026 Cost Index.

Updated .