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Locksmiths

The best locksmith software for a small UK operator in 2026

An honest, vendor-neutral look at the software a locksmith business actually runs - scheduling, dispatch, invoicing and call handling - and how a one-van operator should choose. Not key-cutting or key-code tools.

Max Feller Max Feller Co-Founder 6 min read
A one-van locksmith kneeling at a front door working on the lock while his phone rings unanswered on the step beside his tools

The best locksmith software is not one product but a small stack: a job-scheduling and dispatch app such as Jobber, Joblogic, Workiz or FieldPulse, plus invoicing, plus a dependable way to answer every emergency call. A one-van operator should pair one field-service app with reliable call handling rather than buying a platform that does everything.

Search "locksmith software" and the results are a mess. Half the page is single-vendor sales sites all crowning themselves number one, and the other half is key-cutting and key-code hardware that has nothing to do with running the business. Nobody lays the real options side by side. This guide does, scoped to the software a working locksmith business actually needs, and honest about where each tool fits.

What "locksmith software" means (and what it is not)

When a locksmith says "software", they usually mean one of four jobs:

  • Scheduling and field-service management - the diary, jobs, who is where, and the engineer's mobile app.
  • Dispatch - getting the nearest available van to the next callout, often with GPS.
  • Invoicing, quoting and CRM - quotes on site, invoices that chase themselves, and a record of every customer and lock you have fitted.
  • Call handling and booking - making sure the phone gets answered and the job gets booked, even when you are on your back picking a lock.

At a glance

Here is how the main business tools compare on the jobs that matter to a small locksmith. The right pick depends on your size and how much of your work is emergency callouts.

Tool Best for Scheduling & dispatch Invoicing & CRM Call handling
Jobber Small, growing teams Yes Yes No
Joblogic UK field service and compliance Yes, with GPS Yes No
Workiz Dispatch-heavy outfits Yes, with GPS Yes Built-in phone, AI add-on
FieldPulse All-round small business Yes Yes AI booking add-on
Commusoft / Tradify UK trade scheduling on a budget Yes Yes No
Hey Jodie Answering every call No No Yes, dedicated

There is no overall winner on purpose. Most operators run one field-service app from the top rows and bolt on a dedicated way to answer the phone, because the scheduling tools are weakest exactly where lockout work is won or lost.

The tools, one by one

Jobber is a polished all-rounder for small, growing service teams. Scheduling, quoting and invoicing are clean and the mobile app is good. It leans North American but works fine in the UK. Call handling is not its job.

Joblogic is built for UK field service, with strong scheduling, GPS dispatch and compliance handling. If you do volume commercial or contract work it is a serious option, though it is more than a solo locksmith needs on day one.

Workiz is dispatch-led and aimed at trades that live and die by getting a van to the door fast. It includes a built-in phone with call recording and sells an AI answering add-on, which tells you the market now treats call handling as part of the stack, not an afterthought.

FieldPulse is a capable all-round small-business app - jobs, invoicing, a customer portal - and also markets AI lead capture and booking. Good breadth for the price.

Commusoft and Tradify sit at the affordable, UK-friendly end for scheduling, quotes and invoices. Tradify in particular suits a one-van operator who wants a tidy diary without a steep learning curve.

None of these is wrong. The mistake is buying the heaviest platform you can find when a solo locksmith needs a clean diary and a phone that always gets answered.

The category most roundups miss: call handling and booking

Here is the gap every other "best locksmith software" list leaves open. Every tool above manages work you have already won. Not one of them catches the emergency lockout that calls while you are mid-job with both hands full.

That missed call is the most expensive software gap in a locksmith business, because an emergency lockout does not leave a voicemail and wait. They call the next locksmith on the list, and the job - often the best-paid, out-of-hours kind - goes to whoever answered first. Answering is its own category, and it sits in front of the whole stack. This is the one place we will mention our own corner of it: Hey Jodie answers the phone for locksmiths when you cannot, takes the address and the job, and texts it straight to you, so the callout reaches your diary instead of a competitor.

How to choose for a one-van versus a growing operation

The right stack depends on size and job mix more than features:

  • One van, mostly emergency and domestic work. Keep the scheduling side light - Tradify, FieldPulse or Jobber - and put your money into answering every call. Your bottleneck is missed phones, not a thin diary.
  • Two or more vans, mixed domestic and commercial. Now dispatch and GPS earn their keep. Workiz or Joblogic make sense, and call handling matters even more because there is more work to lose.
  • Heavy contract or compliance work. Joblogic-class platforms with audit trails and certificates are worth the extra weight.

If you are still setting the business up, choose tools last, not first - the step-by-step guide to starting and growing a locksmith business gets the training, kit and pricing right before you commit to a monthly subscription.

What it costs and where to start

Field-service apps for a small operator generally run from a low monthly fee per user up to a quote-based price for the heavier platforms, and almost all offer a free trial, so test before you commit. Two rules save money:

  1. Do not over-buy. A solo locksmith does not need a multi-crew dispatch platform. Start with the one category costing you time or jobs and add the rest as you grow.
  2. Budget for the phone. Factor answering into the running costs from the start - one captured out-of-hours callout usually covers a month of it. To size that up against your own rates, see what locksmiths charge and actually earn.

The best locksmith software is the smallest set of tools that fixes what is currently costing you money, works together, and makes sure every call gets answered so the job reaches your diary in the first place.

Part of our guides for Locksmiths See how Hey Jodie helps locksmiths answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

What software do locksmiths use?
Most locksmiths run a small stack rather than one product: a field-service or scheduling app such as Jobber, Joblogic, Workiz or FieldPulse, accounting software such as Xero or QuickBooks, a card reader or pay-by-link for payment, and a reliable way to answer every call while they are on a job.
What tools do professional locksmiths use?
There are two separate kinds of tool, and they get confused online. Physical kit means picks, bump keys, key cutters and key-code or code-generating software for cutting. Business software means the apps that run the company - scheduling, dispatch, invoicing and call handling. This guide covers the business software, not the key-cutting kit.
How much do self-employed locksmiths make?
A self-employed UK locksmith typically takes home a working wage once the van, tools, insurance and quiet weeks are paid for, with emergency and out-of-hours work carrying the best margin. The honest numbers - what to charge per callout and what is left after costs - are broken down in our locksmith rates and earnings guide.
Do you need a licence to be a locksmith in the UK?
No. Locksmithing is not a statutory regulated trade in the UK, so there is no licence you are legally required to hold. What matters in practice is accreditation: Master Locksmiths Association (MLA) membership, vetting and a recognised qualification reassure customers and insurers far more than any software does.

More locksmiths guides