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Property Management

Best property management software in Ireland (2026)

A vendor-neutral roundup of the best property management software for Irish letting agents and portfolio landlords in 2026, picked by the job it does: tenancy management, rent collection, maintenance, RTB compliance and reporting, plus the one job none of them do.

Matt Horner Matt Horner Co-Founder 7 min read
An Irish letting agent reviewing tenancies and maintenance jobs on property management software at a desk

The best property management software for an Irish lettings business or portfolio landlord is not one product but the right tool for each job: tenancy and lease management, rent collection and arrears, maintenance and repairs, RTB compliance and BER certificates, and landlord reporting. Pick by the job that is currently costing you time or money, not by the brand that shouts loudest. Here are the honest "best for" picks, and the one job none of them do.

This is a guide for letting agents, residential property managers and portfolio landlords managing tenancies, not for estate agents selling homes. If you are valuing and listing properties for sale rather than running tenancies, the estate agent software guide covers the sales-side CRM instead.

What good lettings software actually does

Forget brands for a moment and think in jobs. A property management system for lettings has to cover:

  • Tenancy and lease management - tenancies, renewals, notices, deposits and a clear record per unit.
  • Rent collection and arrears - automated invoicing, reconciliation, chasing, and ideally client-money handling.
  • Maintenance and repairs - logging a fault, assigning a contractor, and tracking it through to sign-off.
  • Compliance - RTB tenancy registration, BER certificates and deposit handling, with reminders before anything lapses.
  • Reporting - statements for landlords, portfolio performance, and the numbers your accountant needs.
  • Portals - somewhere tenants raise issues and landlords see what is happening.

Almost nobody buys all of that as one product, and you should not try to. The table below groups the tools by who they suit, so you can buy by job rather than by brand.

Tool Best for Watch out for
Landlord Vision Self-managing landlords who want accounting built in More than a one-or-two-unit owner needs
Arthur Small to mid portfolios wanting workflow and portals Setup takes a little time
Re-Leased Commercial and mixed portfolios Priced for portfolios, not a single landlord
PayProp Rent collection, reconciliation and client money A layer, not a full management system
MRI Larger and institutional portfolios Heavy; built for scale
Hey Jodie Answering the calls the software cannot It handles the phone, not the tenancies

There is no winner here on purpose. The right pick depends on portfolio size, whether you manage residential or commercial, and how much accounting you need.

Best for small landlords and self-managing portfolios

This is where most readers sit: one to ten units, often run alongside a day job. The sharpest need here is low cost and low friction.

  • Landlord Vision is a strong all-rounder for the self-managing landlord, with proper accounting, tax reporting and compliance reminders built in.
  • Arthur scales from a small portfolio upward, with tenant and contractor portals and a maintenance workflow that grows with you.
  • A simple tracker can work for a landlord with one or two units, but anything with RTB registrations and BER renewals to keep on top of benefits from a system that reminds you.

A note on short-term and holiday lets: if you run Airbnb-style units, a channel manager such as Hospitable or Guesty handles bookings and calendars, but it still does not replace the tenancy, compliance and accounting a longer let needs, and it still does not answer the phone.

The sole landlord self-managing a few units is also the one who loses the most to unanswered calls. There is no front desk, no colleague to pick up, and the prospective tenant who rings about a viewing simply calls the next listing if you are at your day job. That gap is covered properly in the after-hours call handling guide.

Best for lettings agents and growing portfolios

Once you are managing tenancies for landlords at scale, you need workflow, portals and audit trails rather than a spreadsheet with ambitions.

  • Arthur sits well in the mid-market for managers who want strong maintenance and communication workflows.
  • Re-Leased handles larger and mixed portfolios, and is particularly strong where commercial sits alongside residential.
  • PayProp layers in rent collection, reconciliation and client-money handling alongside your core system.

These are powerful but heavier to set up and run. Match the platform to the size of the operation: an agency platform on a ten-unit portfolio is paying for complexity it will never use.

Best for commercial portfolios

Commercial lettings has its own demands: service charges, multi-tenant buildings, lease events and tighter reporting.

  • Re-Leased is the standout for Irish commercial and mixed-use portfolios, built around lease management and automated lease events.
  • MRI serves larger and institutional commercial portfolios with deep configurability.
  • Yardi is the enterprise option where scale and integration matter more than simplicity.

Enterprise tools are powerful and complex in equal measure. If you manage a modest commercial portfolio, a mid-market platform usually serves you better than an institutional one.

Best for accounting and rent collection

If the part costing you time is money in and money out, this is the category to fix first.

  • PayProp automates rent collection, reconciliation and arrears chasing, with client-money handling built in.
  • Landlord Vision brings proper bookkeeping and tax reporting to the self-managing landlord.
  • Arthur ties rent, maintenance and reporting together for managers who want one workflow.

If you handle other people's rent, client-money protection is not optional, so check the tool supports the segregation and reporting you need. Compliance reminders for RTB registration, BER certificates and deposit handling belong here too: the best systems flag a requirement before it lapses, not after.

The job none of this software does: answer the phone

Here is the gap every "best property management software" listicle leaves open. Every tool above manages tenancies you already have and faults that have already been reported. A maintenance module logs a repair after someone tells you about it. A tenant portal does nothing for the prospective renter who picks up the phone.

That missed call is the most expensive software gap in lettings, because it happens before any of the other tools get a chance to do their job. The viewing enquiry goes to the next agent. The 11pm burst-pipe call goes to voicemail, then to an insurance claim. A repairs tool triages a fault brilliantly once it is logged, but someone still has to take the call out of hours and get it into the workflow.

Answering is its own category, and it sits in front of the whole stack rather than inside any one product. This is the one place we will mention our own corner of it: Hey Jodie answers the calls for property managers when you cannot, captures the enquiry or emergency, and texts you the details, so the call actually reaches your maintenance workflow instead of the competition.

How to choose your stack

You do not need everything on day one. A sensible order:

  1. Start with the category that hurts most. Drowning in arrears? Rent collection. Losing certificates? Compliance. Missing enquiries? Answering, first.
  2. Match the tool to portfolio size. A self-managing landlord wants Landlord Vision or Arthur; a lettings agent wants Arthur or Re-Leased; commercial leans on Re-Leased or MRI.
  3. Check the integrations. Your management system, accounting and rent collection should talk to each other, so an arrears flag does not have to be re-keyed by hand.
  4. Be honest about "free". A free plan that caps you at a few units, or drops compliance tracking, is borrowing time from your evenings at a poor rate.

The best stack is not the longest one. It is the smallest set of tools that fixes the thing currently costing you money, plays nicely together, and gets out of your way, plus something in front of all of it that makes sure the call gets answered in the first place.

Part of our guides for Property Management See how Hey Jodie helps property management answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

What software do property managers use in Ireland?
Most Irish lettings operators run a stack, not one product: a core property management system for tenancies, rent and maintenance (Arthur, Re-Leased or Landlord Vision), a rent-collection and client-money layer such as PayProp, tenant referencing, a repairs tool, and a reliable way to answer the phone. No single tool does it all.
What is the best free property management software in Ireland?
Free tiers such as Rentila suit an Irish landlord with a handful of units. Free plans almost always cap the number of properties or strip out accounting and compliance tracking, so you tend to outgrow them once the portfolio or the RTB and BER admin grows.
What is the number one property management software for Irish landlords?
There is no single number one. For self-managing landlords with a small portfolio, Landlord Vision and Arthur fit well. For lettings agents and larger portfolios, Arthur and Re-Leased lead, and commercial portfolios lean on Re-Leased or MRI. Pick by portfolio size and whether you need deep accounting, not by a vendor crowning itself.
Does property management software answer the phone?
No. A property management system handles tenancies, rent, maintenance logging and accounting, but none of them answer an inbound call or triage an out-of-hours emergency. A repairs portal only works once someone has reported the problem. You pair the software with call handling, whether a human service or an AI receptionist, so the new-tenant enquiry and the burst-pipe call at 11pm actually reach you.

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