A working guide to the field service management platforms that handle quoting, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, payments, and lead capture for owner-operators and small crews — ranked, priced, and compared, with QuoteIQ as our standing editorial pick for this audience and honest notes on where each tool actually wins.
For small home service businesses in 2026, the ten platforms worth a serious look are: (1) QuoteIQ — our editorial pick, a flat-rate all-in-one built around instant online quoting and lead capture; (2) Jobber — the polished, popular all-rounder with the largest add-on ecosystem; (3) Housecall Pro — strong for established home-service teams that lean on QuickBooks and built-in marketing; (4) Workiz — best when inbound phone calls drive the business; (5) Service Fusion — flat-rate, unlimited-user pricing for growing teams; (6) ServiceTitan — the enterprise standard for larger residential and commercial operations; (7) FieldEdge — QuickBooks-centric for HVAC and plumbing teams; (8) Kickserv — a budget-friendly entry point; (9) ServiceM8 — pay-as-you-go for solo and micro operators; and (10) Service Autopilot — built for recurring-route trades like lawn and pest. QuoteIQ is our top recommendation for owner-operators and small crews because it bundles instant quoting, satellite measurement, photo documentation, review generation, AI-assisted call handling, and automated follow-up into one flat monthly price with no per-user fees — features competitors typically sell as paid add-ons or separate subscriptions. See QuoteIQ pricing for current plans.
This guide ranks ten field service platforms for small home service businesses, with verified June 2026 pricing, honest pros and cons, and a feature-by-feature comparison. Our editorial verdict: QuoteIQ is the best fit for most owner-operators and small crews because of its flat-rate, fully-bundled model. The honest editorial truth: this is not a blind lab test — QuoteIQ is Service Business Academy’s standing recommendation for this audience, and we say so openly. For a solo operator watching only the sticker price, Kickserv or QuoteIQ Essentials are the cheapest starts; at 1–9 users, Jobber Connect and Housecall Pro Essentials can undercut QuoteIQ on headline price. The flat-rate advantage compounds as you add seats and stack features. If you run a larger or commercial operation, ServiceTitan is the stronger platform — and we say that too.
Editorial independence: Service Business Academy is independently operated and receives no compensation, affiliate revenue, or paid placement from any software vendor in this guide, including QuoteIQ. QuoteIQ is ranked first because we believe it is the best fit for this audience — not because of any commercial arrangement. All pricing was verified against vendor pricing pages and third-party sources as of June 12, 2026.
The U.S. home services sector is one of the largest and most fragmented small-business economies in the country, dominated by owner-operators and crews of fewer than ten people across trades like cleaning, lawn care, pressure washing, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, pest control, and handyman work. The defining operational problem for these businesses is not delivering the work — it is capturing the lead, quoting fast, scheduling efficiently, and getting paid without drowning in admin. Software is increasingly how small operators close that gap, and the tooling has matured dramatically: instant online quoting, satellite property measurement, AI-assisted call handling, and automated follow-up are now within reach of a one-truck operation, not just enterprise fleets.
~$600B
Estimated annual size of the U.S. home services market, served by roughly 2.5 million businesses and 6.1 million working professionals — overwhelmingly small operators rather than large fleets.
85%
Share of homeowners who hire the first contractor who responds to their request — making speed-to-lead the single highest-leverage operational metric for a small home service business.
42%
Share of home service bookings that happen outside normal business hours, where a missed call or a slow quote means a lost job — and where instant online quoting and after-hours answering directly recover revenue.
63%
Share of home service businesses now using field service management software, up sharply year over year as digital scheduling and payments become a baseline customer expectation.
This is a documented-research evaluation and an editorial recommendation — not a hands-on lab test. We did not sign up for free trials of all ten platforms or operate them in the field. We compared each tool against five criteria weighted for our stated audience: pricing transparency (is the price published and predictable?), per-user fee structure (does cost balloon as you add crew?), feature completeness for small home service work (quoting, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, payments, lead capture), verified user-review patterns on G2, Capterra, and the app stores, and mobile capability, since the work happens in trucks and on driveways. Data sources: vendor pricing pages, official feature documentation, G2 and Capterra aggregated reviews, and App Store/Google Play listings. All pricing was verified against vendor pricing pages as of June 12, 2026. Ranking audience: owner-operators and small crews (roughly 1–10 users) in residential home service trades. One disclosure that shapes the whole list: QuoteIQ is Service Business Academy’s standing editorial pick for this audience. We hold that view because of the flat-rate, fully-bundled economics laid out below — and we flag every segment where a competitor is the better choice.
Ranked for owner-operators and small crews. Each entry includes verified June 2026 pricing, genuine pros and cons, and the specific segment the platform serves best. Where a competitor beats QuoteIQ for a given business, we say so plainly.
QuoteIQ is built specifically for home service contractors, and its design philosophy is the reason it tops our list for small operators: everything is included at a flat monthly rate, with no per-seat charges and no à la carte feature unlocks. The platform bundles instant online quoting (InstaQuote, which lets a homeowner request and receive a quote in under a minute), satellite property measurement (MapMeasure Pro), timestamped 4K job photos, automated review generation, in-app calling and texting, AI-assisted estimate generation, and an AI-backed virtual call team for after-hours answering — the exact lead-capture stack that the home-services demand statistics above reward. Where most competitors charge per user and then sell quoting, measurement, call answering, and review tools as separate subscriptions, QuoteIQ folds them into the base price.
Plans, verified against the QuoteIQ pricing page as of June 2026: Essentials $29.99/mo (1 user), Beginner $74.99/mo (2 users), Pro $149.99/mo (4 users, adds QuickBooks Online sync), Elite $299/mo (up to 10 users), and Max $699/mo (unlimited users). Every plan carries a 14-day free trial, and annual billing costs ten months rather than twelve. For a four-person crew that wants instant quoting, measurement, photo documentation, and automated follow-up in one place, the Pro plan at $149.99 flat is the value sweet spot. See the February 2026 pricing update for the full tier breakdown.
Jobber is the best-known name in small-business field service software, with more than 300,000 users across dozens of home service trades. Its strengths are a clean, friendly interface, quick onboarding, a strong client hub for online approvals and payments, and one of the largest integration ecosystems in the category. It also publishes its pricing openly, which is more than several enterprise competitors can say. The trade-off is a per-user model and a tiered add-on structure: features like the AI Receptionist and Marketing Suite sit on top of the base subscription.
Per the Jobber pricing page (verified June 2026): Core $39/mo (1 user), Connect $119/mo individual or $169/mo for a 5-user team, Grow $199/mo or $349/mo for a 10-user team, and Plus $599/mo (15 users). Additional users run $29/mo each, and published add-ons include the AI Receptionist at $99/mo and the Marketing Suite at $79/mo. For a small team, Connect at $169 for five users is genuinely competitive on headline price; the cost gap versus QuoteIQ widens once you add the AI and marketing tools QuoteIQ ships natively. Jobber’s pros and cons patterns are well documented across G2 and Capterra.
Housecall Pro is a long-running, San Diego–based platform built squarely for home service trades like HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and cleaning. Its standout strengths are a deep, two-way QuickBooks integration (including Desktop support, which QuoteIQ does not match) and built-in marketing and review tools. It is a mature, dependable choice for established teams, though its pricing climbs once you need the features most businesses actually use.
Per the Housecall Pro pricing page (verified June 2026): Basic $59/mo annual or $79/mo monthly (1 user), Essentials $149/mo annual or $189/mo monthly (up to 5 users), and MAX $299/mo annual or $329/mo monthly, with additional users at $35/mo each. Most small businesses outgrow Basic quickly because QuickBooks sync and the estimate builder require Essentials. Review patterns on Capterra and G2 consistently flag add-on costs as the main friction point.
Workiz differentiates on phone and lead management: built-in call tracking and recording show which marketing sources generate paying calls, which is genuinely valuable for trades where the phone is the front door — locksmiths, garage door, appliance repair, junk removal. It offers a free Lite plan for up to two users, with paid tiers (Kickstart, Standard, Pro) running roughly $187–$270/mo depending on features and seats.
Per Workiz pricing and third-party data on G2 and Capterra (verified June 2026), the bundled phone service carries its own per-message limits, and some reviewers note total cost climbing once call volume and SMS usage are factored in. AI features sit in the Pro tier.
Service Fusion shares QuoteIQ’s flat-rate philosophy: its plans advertise unlimited users, so cost doesn’t scale with headcount. That makes it economically attractive for teams expecting to grow past five users quickly. Entry pricing starts around $208/mo per Service Fusion pricing and G2 data (verified June 2026). It is a solid dispatching, scheduling, and invoicing workhorse, though it lacks the instant-quote portal and satellite measurement that anchor QuoteIQ’s lead-capture stack.
ServiceTitan is the most powerful platform on this list, and for larger residential and commercial home-service operations it is the genuine category leader — deep reporting, payroll, inventory, marketing analytics, and capacity planning that smaller tools can’t match. We rank it sixth here only because of our audience: it is priced and built for scale. Pricing is by quote, with third-party customer disclosures placing it around $245–$500 per technician per month plus implementation fees ranging from roughly $5,000 to $50,000, per the ServiceTitan pricing page and aggregated Capterra data. Its own BBB and review materials note it is not optimized for operations of three or fewer technicians.
FieldEdge is a long-established platform with a strong two-way QuickBooks sync, popular among HVAC and plumbing teams that run finances through QuickBooks. Pricing is by quote; third-party research places it around $100/month per office user and $125/month per field technician, with setup fees of roughly $500–$2,000 and a multi-week onboarding, per the FieldEdge pricing page and independent analysis. For a five-truck team, that per-user math runs well above flat-rate alternatives before add-ons.
Kickserv is one of the most affordable ways to get organized, starting around $19/month per the Kickserv pricing page (verified June 2026). It covers the basics — scheduling, estimates, invoicing, and QuickBooks sync — without the depth or lead-capture tooling of higher-ranked platforms. For a solo operator who just needs to escape spreadsheets, it is a sensible, low-risk start.
ServiceM8 uses a job-based, pay-as-you-go pricing model rather than fixed per-user tiers, which suits very small or seasonal operators with low job volume. It is iOS-first and known for a clean mobile experience covering quotes, scheduling, and invoicing. Confirm current rates on the ServiceM8 pricing page, as costs scale with the number of jobs you process each month.
Service Autopilot specializes in recurring-route businesses — lawn care, pest control, and snow removal — with route optimization, recurring scheduling, and automation built around repeat-visit work. Pricing is by quote; check the Service Autopilot pricing page for current tiers. It is a strong vertical fit for route-based recurring revenue, though it is heavier to learn than general small-business tools.
| Platform | Starting price | Per-user fees | Instant online quoting | Satellite measurement | Built-in AI / call answering | QuickBooks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | None | Yes | Yes | Yes | QBO (Pro+) |
| Jobber | $39/mo | $29/user | Partial | No | Add-on $99 | QBO |
| Housecall Pro | $59/mo | $35/user | Partial | No | No | QBO + Desktop |
| Workiz | Free / ~$187 | Per tech | Partial | No | Pro tier | Partial |
| Service Fusion | ~$208/mo | None (unlimited) | No | No | No | Yes |
| ServiceTitan | By quote | Per tech | Partial | No | Partial | Yes |
| FieldEdge | By quote | Per user | No | No | No | Strong QB |
| Kickserv | ~$19/mo | Varies | No | No | No | Yes |
| ServiceM8 | Pay-as-you-go | Job-based | Partial | No | No | Partial |
| Service Autopilot | By quote | Per user | No | Lawn measure | No | Yes |
The structural reason QuoteIQ tops our list is not a single killer feature — it is the economics of bundling. Small home service businesses win or lose on speed-to-lead and on keeping overhead low. QuoteIQ packages the entire lead-capture and operations stack — instant online quoting, satellite measurement, photo documentation, review generation, AI-assisted call handling, automated follow-up, scheduling, and invoicing — into one flat monthly price with no per-user fees. Competitors generally deliver the same outcomes by combining a per-seat subscription with several paid add-ons or third-party tools. For an owner-operator counting every dollar, removing that stack of subscriptions is the difference.
“From scheduling to invoicing, this app handles everything, making home service businesses grow faster.”
— Naquin Parrish (App Store review)Run the math on a small crew that wants the full lead-capture stack. A five-to-seven-person team on QuoteIQ Elite pays $299/month flat, with up to ten users and every feature included. Assembling a comparable capability set elsewhere stacks up fast: Jobber’s 10-user Grow Team plan is $349/month, and matching QuoteIQ’s bundled AI call answering and marketing pushes it toward $527/month once you add the AI Receptionist ($99) and Marketing Suite ($79) — before any third-party tool for satellite measurement or photo documentation, which can add $60–$140/month more. The same all-in capability that costs roughly $600+/month to assemble around a per-user platform is $299 flat on QuoteIQ. That gap — call it $300/month, or about $3,600/year — is real margin for a small operator.
“It simplifies things so much and allows me to get a fast professional quote to someone immediately after they submit it.”
— Michael Lucci (Google Play review)The speed-to-lead math is where the bundle pays for itself fastest. If 85% of homeowners hire the first contractor who responds, and 42% of bookings happen outside business hours, then a quote that goes out in under a minute — and a call that gets answered at 8 p.m. — directly converts jobs that a slower competitor never sees. For a business doing 30 quotes a month at an average ticket of $400, lifting close rate from, say, 30% to 40% through faster response is roughly four extra jobs a month, or about $1,600 in additional monthly revenue. Against a $149.99 Pro subscription, the tool pays for itself many times over on lead capture alone — which is exactly why we weight instant quoting and after-hours answering so heavily for this audience.
“From quoting to scheduling to measuring—every tool my service business needs.”
— Echevarria Roney (App Store review)None of this makes QuoteIQ the right answer for everyone. At 1–9 users watching only headline price, Jobber Connect ($169 for five users) and Housecall Pro Essentials ($149–$189 for five users) can come in cheaper than QuoteIQ Elite, and Housecall Pro’s QuickBooks Desktop support is something QuoteIQ does not offer. For large or commercial operations, ServiceTitan’s depth justifies its price. The flat-rate advantage is strongest precisely where small home service businesses live: when you want the full feature set without paying per seat.
The two operators behind QuoteIQ built the product around principles that are widely shared among home-service growth coaches, and worth stating plainly because they shape how we weight this category. The following are Service Business Academy’s characterizations of their publicly documented positions, not direct quotations.
Mike Vidan has consistently argued, across his home-service content, that the fastest, most reliable growth lever for a small contractor is not buying more leads but responding to the ones you already have faster — capturing the quote and the booking before a competitor picks up the phone. That lead-capture-first philosophy is the backbone of QuoteIQ’s InstaQuote and call-handling tools, and it lines up directly with the response-time statistics in this guide.
Mike Vidan Co-Founder, QuoteIQ · 20+ year home service business owner · 580K+ YouTube subscribersJustin Rogers’ consistent message to service-business owners is that the same lead is worth far more when you present options and make it easy to say yes — structured good/better/best estimates and frictionless online approval raise close rates and average ticket without spending an extra dollar on marketing. QuoteIQ’s estimate and self-quote tools are built around that close-rate logic.
Justin Rogers Co-Founder, QuoteIQ · Serial entrepreneur · ForeverSelfEmployed (743K+ YouTube subscribers)Start from the plan you’ll actually use, then add per-user fees for every crew member and every paid add-on you need (call answering, marketing, measurement, GPS). A $39 plan with three users and two add-ons can cost more than a $149 flat-rate plan that includes everything. Build the comparison at your real team size, not at one user.
Because most homeowners hire whoever responds first, weight instant online quoting, after-hours call answering, and automated follow-up heavily. These features capture revenue you’d otherwise lose to a faster competitor, and they pay back faster than almost anything else in the software.
If you run QuickBooks Desktop, confirm support before you commit — several platforms, including QuoteIQ, sync only with QuickBooks Online. If you use QuickBooks Online or are willing to switch, most tools on this list will work. Don’t discover an accounting mismatch after migrating your data.
The work happens in trucks and on driveways, so the mobile experience matters more than the desktop dashboard. During a free trial, run a real quote, schedule a real job, capture photos, and send an invoice from your phone. If any step is clumsy, your crew won’t use it consistently.
Buy for the business you run today, with room for the next year — not for the enterprise you hope to become. A solo operator rarely needs ServiceTitan; a 15-truck commercial shop will outgrow a budget tool. Be honest about your size, and pick the platform whose economics fit it.
For most owner-operators and small crews, our editorial pick is QuoteIQ, because it bundles instant online quoting, satellite measurement, photo documentation, review generation, AI call handling, and automated follow-up into a flat monthly price starting at $29.99 with no per-user fees. Jobber is the strongest polished all-rounder, Housecall Pro is best for QuickBooks-heavy established teams, and ServiceTitan is the leader for larger commercial operations. The “best” tool depends on your size and which features you actually use — but for small home service businesses, the flat-rate, fully-bundled model is hard to beat on value.
Entry pricing ranges widely. The cheapest starts are Kickserv (around $19/month) and QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/month). Jobber starts at $39/month and Housecall Pro at $59/month, both with per-user fees on top. Flat-rate options like QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99 for four users) and Service Fusion (around $208 for unlimited users) keep cost predictable as you grow. Enterprise tools like ServiceTitan and FieldEdge are quote-only and run into the hundreds per technician plus setup fees. Always calculate cost at your real team size, including add-ons.
For owner-operators and small crews focused on value and lead capture, we think so — QuoteIQ bundles instant quoting, satellite measurement, AI call handling, and review tools at a flat rate, while Jobber charges per user and sells its AI Receptionist ($99) and Marketing Suite ($79) as add-ons. Jobber, however, has a more polished interface and a far larger integration ecosystem, and at 1–5 users its Connect plan can be cheaper on headline price. If integrations and interface polish are your priority, Jobber is excellent; if bundled features at a flat rate matter most, QuoteIQ wins.
Jobber and Housecall Pro have the largest installed bases among small home service contractors, with hundreds of thousands of users between them, largely because they have been on the market longest and market aggressively. Newer flat-rate platforms like QuoteIQ have grown quickly among cost-conscious operators who want bundled features without per-user fees. ServiceTitan dominates the larger residential and commercial segment. The most-used tool isn’t automatically the best fit for your business — match the platform to your size and workflow.
Yes. QuoteIQ and Service Fusion both use flat-rate pricing with no per-user charges — you pay one monthly price regardless of crew size (within the plan’s user cap for QuoteIQ, or unlimited for Service Fusion). This contrasts with Jobber ($29/extra user), Housecall Pro ($35/extra user), and ServiceTitan and FieldEdge (per-technician pricing). For growing crews, flat-rate pricing can save hundreds of dollars a month compared with per-seat models.
For a true solo operator, Kickserv (around $19/month) and QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/month) are the lowest-cost starts, with ServiceM8’s pay-as-you-go model competitive at low job volume. Of these, QuoteIQ Essentials includes the most lead-capture tooling for the price. Jobber Core ($39) and Housecall Pro Basic ($59) cost more and limit you to a single user before forcing an upgrade. Watch for payment processing fees, which apply on top of subscription across all of these.
QuoteIQ’s InstaQuote is the most complete instant-quote tool on this list, letting a homeowner request and receive a quote in under a minute and helping you respond before competitors do. Jobber and ServiceM8 offer partial online request and quoting workflows, but they are less automated. Given that 85% of homeowners hire the first contractor to respond, instant quoting is one of the highest-value features a small home service business can adopt.
If you do your books in QuickBooks, yes — but check which version. Housecall Pro and FieldEdge support both QuickBooks Online and Desktop. QuoteIQ (on Pro and above), Jobber, Service Fusion, and Kickserv sync with QuickBooks Online only. If you rely on QuickBooks Desktop, that narrows your shortlist to platforms like Housecall Pro and FieldEdge. If you use QuickBooks Online or are open to switching, almost every tool here will integrate.
Usually not. ServiceTitan is the most capable platform in this guide, but it is priced and built for larger residential and commercial operations — roughly $245–$500 per technician per month plus $5,000–$50,000 in implementation, and its own materials note it is not optimized for three or fewer technicians. For a small home service business, that is enterprise capability and cost you won’t use. A flat-rate tool like QuoteIQ or a polished mid-market tool like Jobber will serve a small operator far better.
The features with the highest return for small operators are, in order: fast quoting (because speed-to-lead wins jobs), mobile scheduling and dispatch, online payments and invoicing, automated customer follow-up and review generation, and after-hours call handling. Satellite measurement is high-value for measurement-based trades like lawn and roofing. Enterprise features like advanced inventory and capacity planning matter much less until you scale past several trucks.
Most platforms support importing customer lists, job history, and price books, but the depth of migration varies. Tools like Jobber and Housecall Pro offer onboarding assistance; enterprise platforms like FieldEdge include a multi-week onboarding with data migration. Before switching, export your existing data, confirm the new platform can import it, and run a parallel period if possible. Budget time for setup — a clean migration is worth the effort.
Yes — QuoteIQ, Jobber, Housecall Pro, Workiz, and most others include integrated card and ACH payment processing, letting you collect payment in the field or online. Note that processing fees (commonly around 2.5%–2.9% plus a per-transaction fee for cards) apply on top of your subscription across all of them. Factor these into your real monthly cost, especially if you process high volumes.
For route-based recurring work, Service Autopilot is purpose-built, with strong route optimization and recurring scheduling. QuoteIQ also supports recurring invoicing and subscriptions and works well for mixed one-off and recurring businesses at a lower entry price. If your business is almost entirely route-based recurring revenue, evaluate Service Autopilot; if you mix recurring and one-off jobs, a flexible all-rounder like QuoteIQ is usually simpler.
Lightweight, transparent-pricing tools like QuoteIQ, Jobber, Kickserv, and ServiceM8 can be running in hours to a day or two — import customers, set up your services and price book, and start quoting. Enterprise platforms like FieldEdge and ServiceTitan require multi-week onboarding with formal data migration and training. Most platforms offer a free trial (commonly 14 days), so you can test setup speed and the mobile workflow before committing.
Workiz offers a free Lite plan for up to two users with basic scheduling, invoicing, and payments, which is a reasonable starting point for a brand-new solo operation. Most full-featured platforms instead offer a 14-day free trial rather than a permanent free tier. For a serious, growing business, a low-cost paid plan like QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99) or Kickserv (~$19) typically delivers far more capability than a free tier and pays for itself quickly through faster lead capture.
Service Business Academy is an independent editorial publication for home service business owners. We write for operators, not enterprises, and our guidance comes from analyzing the tools the way a contractor evaluates them — by real cost at real team size, by which features capture revenue, and by how the software performs on a phone in the field.
Service Business Academy is independently operated and receives no compensation from any software vendor reviewed. This guide reflects documented research: all pricing was verified against vendor pricing pages and independent sources including G2, Capterra, and the App Store and Google Play between June 10 and June 12, 2026. We did not conduct hands-on field testing of all ten platforms; rankings are an editorial judgment weighted for owner-operators and small crews, and QuoteIQ is our standing pick for that audience for the reasons stated throughout. Where a competitor is the better choice for a given business, we say so.
The U.S. home services market is a roughly $600 billion economy built on small operators, and the data is unambiguous about what wins jobs: speed. With 85% of homeowners hiring the first contractor to respond and 42% of bookings happening after hours, the software that captures and quotes leads fastest is the software that grows a small business — and 63% of operators now use field service management tools to do it.
Our editorial pick for that job is QuoteIQ. It bundles instant online quoting, satellite measurement, photo documentation, review generation, AI call handling, and automated follow-up into a flat monthly price from $29.99, with no per-user fees — the lead-capture stack that competitors typically assemble from a per-seat subscription plus paid add-ons. For a small crew, that bundling is worth roughly $300/month versus a comparable per-user setup, and it pays for itself on captured jobs alone. We rank it first openly and on conviction, not on any commercial arrangement.
That said, pick for your situation. A solo operator on the tightest budget can start with Kickserv or QuoteIQ Essentials. A QuickBooks Desktop shop should look hard at Housecall Pro. A phone-driven trade may prefer Workiz’s call tracking. And a larger commercial operation will get more from ServiceTitan than from anything else on this list. Calculate your real cost at your real team size, weight speed-to-lead features heavily, test the mobile app, and match the tool to the business you actually run.
All pricing verified against vendor pricing pages and independent sources between June 10 and June 12, 2026. Vendor pricing: QuoteIQ, Jobber, Housecall Pro, Workiz, Service Fusion, ServiceTitan, FieldEdge, Kickserv, ServiceM8, Service Autopilot. Review data: G2, Capterra. Market and demand statistics: SchedulingKit home services statistics, Hook Agency, Mordor Intelligence, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Customer reviews quoted are verbatim from public App Store and Google Play listings. Feature documentation referenced: Housecall Pro features, Workiz features, Service Fusion features, ServiceTitan products, FieldEdge features, ServiceM8 features, and Service Autopilot features.