Best roofing software for Irish operators (and the layer everyone forgets)
An honest, priced buyer guide to the roofing software stack an Irish operator actually needs, from measurement and estimating to CRM and scheduling, plus the front-of-funnel layer the directories ignore: who answers the call.
There is no single best roofing software. The right stack is a few tools covering distinct jobs: measurement and estimating, a CRM or job-management app, scheduling and invoicing, and the layer the directories leave out, call handling. Pick by the job you most need solved, not by whoever crowns themselves number one.
Search "roofing software" and you get the same two things every time: single-product homepages each insisting they are the best, and big directories listing twenty-five tools with star ratings, no pricing, and no actual recommendation. Neither tells you what a working roofer needs or what it costs.
So here is the honest version, by category, with prices the directories hide, and the one part of the stack nobody else treats as a category at all.
How to choose roofing software
Start from the job, not the brand. Most Irish roofing firms need four or five things covered, and almost no single tool does all of them well:
- Measurement - pull accurate roof dimensions without climbing up with a tape.
- Estimating and quoting - turn measurements into a priced proposal fast.
- CRM and job management - track every lead, job and customer in one place.
- Scheduling and invoicing - book crews, send invoices, take payment.
- Call handling - answer the enquiry the moment it rings, before any of the above gets used.
The trap is buying a do-everything suite you half-use, or a directory's "top pick" that does not fit how you actually work. Match the tool to the gap that is costing you most right now, then add the next one when it starts to bite.
The stack at a glance
Here is what the categories cost and who each suits. Prices are indicative starting points per user per month and move around, so confirm with the vendor, but the directories omit them entirely, so even a ballpark beats a star rating.
| Category | Tools worth knowing | Best for | Indicative price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Measurement | Roofr, RoofSnap, EagleView | Quoting without a roof climb | Free tier to ~45 euro/mo |
| Estimating | Roofr, RoofSnap, Leap | Fast priced proposals | ~30-55 euro/mo |
| CRM / job management | JobNimbus, AccuLynx, Jobber, Tradify | Tracking leads and jobs | ~30-110 euro/mo |
| Scheduling / invoicing | Jobber, Tradify, Commusoft | Crews, invoices, payments | ~25-110 euro/mo |
| Call handling (Hey Jodie) | Hey Jodie | Answering every enquiry, 24/7 | Flat monthly fee |
Measurement and estimating
This is where most roofers start, because climbing up to measure every roof is slow and the quote is where you win or lose the job.
Roofr is the loudest name here: it bundles aerial measurement reports (free on a limited tier, then paid per report), instant estimates and proposals into one suite. RoofSnap does measurement and estimating with credit-based reports, usually in the 25 to 45 euro per user range plus report costs. EagleView is the heavyweight for measurement accuracy, priced per report and aimed at higher-volume firms.
For a small Irish firm, a measurement tool with a free or cheap entry tier plus a simple estimating flow covers most jobs without overpaying.
CRM and job management
Once you are quoting regularly, you need somewhere every lead and job lives so nothing slips. This is the CRM layer.
JobNimbus and AccuLynx are the roofing-specific options, built around the roofing sales-to-install pipeline, typically billed per user from around 30 euro up to 110 and beyond on full plans. Leap leans into estimating and finance. If you want something simpler and trade-general, Jobber and Tradify handle scheduling, jobs and invoicing well and tend to sit lower on price. Any of them works. The honest answer to "what CRM do roofers use" is: the one your crew will actually keep updated.
The layer the directories forget: call handling
Here is the gap. Every roundup organises the stack around measure, estimate, CRM, schedule. Not one of them treats answering the phone as a category, even though it sits in front of all of it.
It does not matter how sharp your estimating tool is or how tidy your CRM is if the lead never gets in. And roofers miss more calls than almost any trade, because you are physically on a roof, up a ladder, or driving between jobs when the phone rings. That enquiry, the one you already paid to generate, goes to voicemail and then to the next roofer who picks up. We put real numbers on that in our guide to what missed calls cost a roofing business, and the figure is bigger than any software subscription on this page.
This is the category Hey Jodie fills. It is not a CRM or an estimating tool; it is the front door. Jodie answers every call instantly, day or night, holds a real conversation, captures the job details, and texts them to you, for a flat monthly fee with no per-call meter. Then your CRM has something to track and your estimating tool has a job to quote.
What a small Irish roofing firm actually needs
You do not need twenty-five tools. For most independent and small-crew roofers, the working stack is:
- One measurement and estimating tool (Roofr or RoofSnap) so quoting is fast.
- One CRM or job-management app (JobNimbus, AccuLynx, Jobber or Tradify) so nothing slips and invoices go out.
- A reliable way to answer every call, so the leads you are spending money on actually reach that stack.
Buy the tool that fixes your biggest current bottleneck first, add the next when it starts to hurt, and do not let a directory's "top pick" talk you into software you will half-use. For the bigger picture on call handling, see how Hey Jodie works for roofers. The best stack is not the longest one. It is the one where no lead ever hits a dead end before it reaches your software.
Frequently asked questions
- What CRM do roofers use?
- The roofing-specific CRMs most operators land on are JobNimbus, AccuLynx, Leap and Roofr, with general field-service tools like Jobber and Tradify also common among Irish trades. A CRM only earns its keep once the lead actually reaches it, which means the call has to be answered first.
- Is there a free roof estimating app?
- Yes, up to a point. Roofr offers free aerial measurement reports on a limited tier, and most paid tools run a free trial. Free is fine to start, but the measurement, estimating and CRM tiers that scale with your job volume are paid, so treat free as a trial rather than a long-term plan.
- How much does RoofSnap cost?
- RoofSnap is priced per user per month with credit-based measurement reports on top, typically starting around 25 to 45 euro per user a month depending on the plan and how many reports you pull. Check the current vendor pricing before you commit, because report credits are the part that adds up.
- How much do roofers charge per hour?
- Irish roofers typically charge between 30 and 50 euro an hour, or a day rate of roughly 250 to 400 euro depending on the work and the region. That day rate is exactly why a single missed enquiry is expensive, and why call handling belongs in your software stack, not just your estimating tools.
More roofers guides

How to get more roofing leads: an Irish playbook
Where roofing leads actually come from in Ireland, ranked by cost and conversion, plus the decisive last step nobody else covers: capturing the call.

What missed calls cost an Irish roofing business
Roofing leads are not cheap, and you are on a roof when they ring. Here is what each missed call really costs you in Ireland, and how to stop burning the spend.