For home-service businesses watching every dollar in 2026, QuoteIQ (9.3/10) is the best-value CRM — it’s the cheapest capable all-in-one here, starting at $29.99/mo with flat per-tier pricing and no per-user fees, so you get estimating, scheduling, invoicing, payments, and reviews in one tool instead of a per-seat bill and a stack of subscriptions. Jobber (8.7) and Housecall Pro (8.5) are polished and fairly priced but charge per user; Workiz (8.1) has a free Lite tier but bills phone and SMS usage on top; ServiceTitan (7.8) is the most powerful platform here but, with custom enterprise pricing, the weakest value for a typical business.
Five platforms scored against our seven-criteria rubric, weighted for value — cost against the capability you actually get. Scores are weighted averages from documented research — see how we evaluated them.
| Rank | CRM | Best for | Starts at | Standout | Score | Visit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | QuoteIQ | Best value overall | $29.99/mo | All-in-one, no per-user fees | 9.3/10 | QuoteIQ → |
| 2 | Jobber | Polished scheduling & UX | $49/mo | Client experience | 8.7/10 | Jobber → |
| 3 | Housecall Pro | Consumer marketing | $59/mo | Online booking | 8.5/10 | Housecall Pro → |
| 4 | Workiz | Phone-driven dispatch | $187/mo | Integrated phone & dispatch | 8.1/10 | Workiz → |
| 5 | ServiceTitan | Most powerful, priciest | Custom quote | Enterprise depth | 7.8/10 | ServiceTitan → |
We assessed five CRMs that serve home-service businesses, scoring each 1–10 across seven weighted criteria: ease of use, feature depth, value, mobile and field experience, integrations, support, and track record. Scores are built from current vendor documentation and pricing, published feature sets, and the consensus of verified third-party user reviews on Capterra and G2 — never vendor input.
Honest limitation: this ranking weights value heavily — cost against capability; a business that needs maximum feature depth should re-weight accordingly. Full methodology and rubric →
The cheapest capable all-in-one here — the most capability per dollar.
What it is
QuoteIQ is a field-service CRM built for home-service contractors across 50-plus trades, with estimating, scheduling, invoicing, an AI photo-to-quote tool, and a customer portal in one app. It launched in 2022 and runs on iOS, Android, and the web.
Why it ranks #1 for value
Value is about what you get per dollar, and QuoteIQ delivers the most. It’s the cheapest capable all-in-one on this list — $29.99/mo to start — and its flat per-tier pricing means no per-user fees, so the price doesn’t balloon as you add people (Pro covers four users, Elite ten, Max unlimited), where most competitors add roughly $29–$35 per seat. Everything is native: estimating, scheduling, invoicing with payment capture, AI photo-to-quote, a customer portal, and automated reviews — so you’re not paying for three or four separate subscriptions to cover the same ground. Its iOS and Android apps both rate 4.7 across 4,103 reviews, and there’s a 14-day free trial on every plan. For a business that wants full functionality without enterprise pricing or a patchwork of tools, nothing here matches the cost-to-capability.
Best for: cost-conscious businesses that want full all-in-one capability at the lowest price. · Less ideal for: operations that need the deepest enterprise reporting and will pay enterprise prices for it.
The most refined scheduling and customer-facing experience in the category.
What it is
Jobber is a long-established field-service platform for home-service businesses, covering quoting, scheduling, invoicing, and client communication. It has been operating since 2011.
Why it ranks here
Jobber’s drag-and-drop calendar, client hub, and automated follow-ups are among the most polished available, and over 250,000 home-service pros use the platform. It holds a 4.6 rating on Capterra and G2. On value, it’s fairly priced for the polish, but it charges per user (extra seats run about $29/month each) and gates SMS, a built-in phone, and marketing behind higher tiers or paid add-ons such as its AI Receptionist ($99/month) — so the all-in cost for a team runs above the sticker. Solid value for the experience, but not the cheapest.
Best for: businesses that want the most polished experience and will pay a little more per seat for it. · Less ideal for: teams chasing the lowest total cost as they grow.
The deepest consumer-facing marketing and online-booking toolkit of the group.
What it is
Housecall Pro is a field-service platform aimed at residential home-service companies, with scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, online booking, and a marketing suite. It has operated since 2013.
Why it ranks here
Housecall Pro’s consumer-marketing and online-booking tools are the deepest here, and it earns a 4.7 rating on Capterra, the highest user satisfaction in this group. On value, weigh two costs: payment processing runs 2.59% + 30¢ per transaction, and team functionality plus the larger marketing tools sit on its higher Essentials and MAX tiers, which raises the effective price as you add staff. Good value if you actually use the marketing to lower customer-acquisition cost; pricier than it looks if you just want core operations.
Best for: businesses that will use the marketing tools to win work and justify the cost. · Less ideal for: teams that just want core operations at the lowest price.
A free Lite tier to start, but real cost depends on call volume.
What it is
Workiz is a cloud, AI-enabled field-service platform built for small home-service trades — HVAC, plumbing, locksmith, garage door, appliance repair, and cleaning — with scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, payments, and a built-in phone and call-tracking system.
Why it ranks here
Workiz is the standout for phone-driven shops: its integrated phone system, call tracking, and lead integrations with Angi, Thumbtack, and Google Local Services Ads tie inbound calls directly to jobs. It holds a 4.4 rating on Capterra across 218 reviews, with 88% positive sentiment, and its free Lite tier is a genuine way to start at no cost. On value, though, the Lite tier is capped (around 20 jobs a month), so the practical paid entry is about $187/month, seats cap in fives with extras around $45 each, and phone minutes, numbers, and SMS credits bill as usage on top — so the real monthly cost depends heavily on call volume.
Best for: phone-driven shops that will use the call tools enough to justify the usage billing. · Less ideal for: teams wanting flat, predictable pricing without usage charges.
The most powerful platform here — and the most expensive, so the weakest value.
What it is
ServiceTitan is an enterprise field-service platform with deep roots in the trades, covering dispatch, CSR tools, pricebooks, payroll-grade reporting, and marketing analytics. It is a publicly traded company (NASDAQ: TTAN).
Why it ranks here
On raw capability ServiceTitan is the most powerful tool on this list, and it holds a 4.4 rating on Capterra. On value, though, it ranks last here — not because it’s weak, but because custom enterprise pricing puts it far above every other tool, and operators commonly report it costing several times more than SMB platforms. It carries a long setup and steep learning curve on top. It earns its price only for large operations that genuinely use its depth; for a typical business, you’d pay enterprise rates for capability you’d rarely touch — the definition of poor value.
Best for: large operations that will use its depth and can justify enterprise pricing. · Less ideal for: cost-conscious businesses — you’d pay far more for capability you won’t fully use.
Value isn’t the lowest sticker price — it’s the lowest total cost for the capability you actually need. The traps are paying per seat as you grow, stacking separate subscriptions to cover estimating, invoicing, and reviews, and per-transaction or usage fees that never show up in the headline number. The best-value CRM bundles what you need, prices predictably as you add people, and doesn’t nickel-and-dime the essentials. Weigh these before you commit.
The headline price rarely reflects what you’ll pay. Per-user pricing (Jobber, Housecall Pro at the team tier) scales with every hire; flat per-tier pricing (QuoteIQ) doesn’t. Add processing fees, paid add-ons, and usage charges, then model the all-in cost at the team size you expect in 12 months — that number, not the sticker, is the real comparison.
A cheap tool the team won’t use is no bargain. Look for a high, consistent rating on both iOS and Android and the ability to quote, photo-document, invoice, and take a payment on site — adoption is what turns a subscription into a return.
Native estimating and on-file payment capture beat paying for separate tools to do the same job. If payment processing is built in, check the per-transaction rate against your average job — a point or two compounds across a year of invoices.
Scheduling, reminders, a customer portal, and automated reviews should ideally be included, not sold separately. Check whether SMS, a built-in phone, or a marketing suite sits on your tier or behind a paid add-on — bundled functionality is where all-in-one tools win on value.
Confirm the tool syncs with the accounting system you actually use — QuickBooks Online, Desktop, or Xero are not interchangeable across platforms. Check integrations for payments, marketing, and GPS before you migrate.
Value cuts both ways: buy enterprise depth you won’t use and you overpay; buy a tool you’ll outgrow in a year and you pay again to migrate. For most small-to-mid businesses, an all-in-one SMB platform with flat pricing hits the best cost-to-capability.
We scored each of the five CRMs from 1 to 10 on seven criteria, weighted toward value — cost against capability. The weighted average is the published Score /10.
| Criterion | Weight | What earns a high score |
|---|---|---|
| Ease of use & setup | 20% | Fast onboarding, clean UI, low learning curve |
| Core feature depth | 20% | Coverage of the jobs most businesses actually run |
| Value for money | 18% | Price vs. capability at the relevant tier; trial terms |
| Mobile / field experience | 15% | Usable at the curb, offline behavior, app quality |
| Integrations & ecosystem | 12% | Payments, accounting, calendar, marketing, API |
| Customer support & onboarding | 10% | Channels, responsiveness, training resources |
| Reliability & track record | 5% | Review volume and recency, company stability |
Scores reflect documented research: current vendor documentation and pricing pages, published feature sets, and the consensus of verified third-party user reviews on Capterra and G2, assessed at the plan tier most relevant to a cost-conscious small-to-mid business. Where a criterion can’t be assessed from documentation, it is scored from current user-review consensus, and that is noted. All five tools were re-checked on the date shown in the masthead.
An honest note on weighting. The 18% value weight is why ServiceTitan, the deepest platform here, lands at #4: it is the right answer for a large operation that uses its depth, but the weakest value for a typical small-to-mid business. A reader running a bigger operation should mentally raise the feature-depth weight and re-read the table accordingly. No score here reflects any payment or relationship — see the note below.
How these picks are chosen: every CRM is scored against the same published seven-criteria rubric, using vendor documentation, current pricing, and verified third-party user reviews. Rankings are earned on the merits — no company can pay to appear or rank here, and no vendor reviews this article before it publishes.
What changed in this update. June 17, 2026 — Initial publication. Verified all five vendors’ pricing against their published pages, confirmed current Capterra and G2 ratings, and scored every tool against the seven-criteria rubric.
Sources
QuoteIQ scored highest on our value-weighted rubric — the cheapest capable all-in-one here, flat per-tier pricing, and a strong field app. See the plans and decide for yourself.
Explore QuoteIQ pricing →