The best electrician software for running a US electrical business in 2026
There is no single best electrician software. This is an honest, vendor-neutral roundup of the job management tools US electrical contractors actually run, compared on scheduling, invoicing, inspections and free tiers, plus the call-handling layer none of them cover.
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Search "best electrician software" and the whole first page is vendors crowning their own product, a directory or two, and a forum thread of electricians asking which one anyone actually rates. Nobody lays the options side by side. So here is the honest version.
There is no single best electrician software. There is a handful of jobs the software needs to do well, and the right pick depends entirely on which of those is currently costing you time or money. This roundup groups the real tools by what they are good at, compares them in one table, and stays straight about where each one fits.
The best electrician software at a glance
For most US electrical contractors the best tool is a simple all-rounder like Jobber or Housecall Pro for scheduling, estimates and invoicing from the truck. Step up to ServiceTitan if you run multiple crews and need heavy dispatch and reporting, ServiceM8 for slick mobile, and a dedicated accounting tool like QuickBooks alongside whichever you choose.
| Tool | Best for | Scheduling | Invoicing | Inspections / reports | Free option |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jobber | Solo and small teams who want simple | Yes | Yes | Custom forms | Free trial |
| Housecall Pro | US residential service shops | Yes | Yes | Custom forms | Free trial |
| ServiceTitan | Larger commercial and multi-crew | Yes | Yes | Strong | Demo only |
| FieldEdge | Growing service contractors | Yes | Yes | Strong | Demo only |
| ServiceM8 | Slick mobile, on-the-tools use | Yes | Yes | Custom forms | Free tier |
| Service Fusion | Multi-tech field operations | Yes | Yes | Strong | Demo only |
No tool wins outright on purpose. The right one depends on your size, whether you do inspection and report-heavy work, and how much you want to spend. The sections below break it down by the job you are trying to solve.
How to choose electrician software
Forget the brand names for a minute and think in jobs to be done. A working electrical business needs software to handle some or all of:
- Scheduling and dispatch, so you stop double-booking and the calendar is shared.
- Estimates and invoices you can build and send from the truck, before you have left the site.
- Inspection forms, service reports and permit paperwork, generated cleanly to NEC standards.
- Mobile, on-site use, because you are rarely at a desk.
- Integrations with your accounting and payments, so nothing gets keyed in twice.
Almost nobody buys all of that as one product, and you should not try to. Fix the category that is currently costing you money first, then add the rest as you grow.
Best all-round job management tools
This is the core category most people mean by "electrician software": scheduling, job tracking, estimates and invoices in one place. If you want one tool to run the day, start here.
- Jobber is simple and affordable, a strong fit for a one-person shop or a small crew that wants scheduling, estimates and invoices without a steep learning curve. It is the one most often recommended on the forums for value.
- Housecall Pro is built for US residential service businesses, with solid online booking, payments and customer follow-up, so it suits a service-call electrician well.
- ServiceM8 is the polished mobile option, genuinely good on a phone on-site, with a free tier to test it on a few jobs a month before you commit.
- ServiceTitan and FieldEdge are heavier field-service platforms with strong dispatch and reporting. They suit growing teams and commercial work more than a one-truck business.
- Service Fusion is a heavier platform again, aimed at larger contractors with inventory, multiple techs and complex jobs. For a solo electrician it is usually overkill.
Best for scheduling and dispatch
If your main problem is the calendar, who is where, and stopping clashes across two or three trucks, the dispatch-led tools earn their keep. ServiceTitan and FieldEdge lead here, with drag-and-drop dispatch boards, technician tracking and route planning built for teams. ServiceM8 handles scheduling well for smaller setups and pushes jobs straight to the tech's phone.
For a solo electrician, dispatch features are usually more than you need, and the lighter all-rounders cover the calendar fine. The moment you take on a second pair of hands, though, a proper shared schedule stops the double-bookings that cost you jobs.
Best for invoicing and estimating
Most job-management apps above include invoicing and estimating, which is the main reason to consolidate rather than buy a separate invoicing tool. Jobber and Housecall Pro both let you build an estimate on-site and turn it into an invoice in a couple of taps.
What matters for an electrician is speed and clean sales-tax handling: a professional estimate sent while you are still in the customer's hallway wins more work than a tidy one that lands two days later. Templates for your common jobs, a panel swap, a service inspection, a few added outlets, save you retyping the same line items every week.
Inspection and service-report tools
This is where electrical work differs from most trades. You need clean service reports, permit paperwork and inspection forms that hold up to NEC and the local inspector, and ideally generated on-site rather than typed up at the kitchen table at night.
ServiceTitan and FieldEdge have the strongest custom-form and reporting handling, built for shops that issue a lot of paperwork. Most all-rounders let you build custom forms for your standard reports. Plenty of electricians also keep a dedicated forms app alongside a lighter job-management tool, which is a perfectly sensible split if your main tool does not do reports well.
Free and free-tier options
There genuinely are free and free-trial ways to start:
- Jobber and Housecall Pro run free trials so you can test them on live jobs before paying.
- ServiceM8 has a free tier capped at a handful of jobs a month, fine for a one-person shop starting out.
- General tools like a Google Workspace setup or Trello cost nothing and can hold a basic job list, though you will outgrow them fast.
The catch with most "free" plans is a cap on users, jobs or invoices, plus the time you lose to manual workarounds. Free only beats paid until the admin starts eating your evenings, at which point a paid plan that saves you an hour a day pays for itself.
The piece every tool leaves out: answering the phone
Here is the gap every "best electrician software" roundup leaves open. Every tool above manages the jobs you already have on the books. Not one of them catches the call that comes in while you are up a ladder with both hands full and the phone ringing in the truck.
That missed call is the most expensive software gap in the business, because it happens before any of the other tools get to do their job. A booking that never reaches your scheduling app is a job that went to the next electrician on the list. 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 your calls for electricians when you cannot, takes the job details, and texts them to you, so the call actually reaches your job-management tool instead of going to voicemail.
Winning more work in the first place is a separate skill from running it; if that is your bottleneck, see how to get more electrical work. Software runs the jobs. Answering the phone is what makes sure you get them.
For the record, the picks above are grouped by what they are good at rather than ranked, and named because they are the tools US electrical contractors actually run, not because anyone paid to be here. 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 makes sure no job slips through before it ever reaches the calendar.
Frequently asked questions
- Is there free electrician job management software?
- A few. Jobber and Housecall Pro run genuine free trials, ServiceM8 has a free tier capped at a handful of jobs a month, and general tools like Trello or a Google Workspace setup cost nothing. The catch with most "free" plans is a cap on users, jobs or invoices, so they fit a one-person shop testing the water rather than a growing crew.
- What is the best field service software for electrical contractors in the US?
- There is no single best. Pick by the job you most need solved: Jobber or Housecall Pro for a simple all-rounder, ServiceTitan for larger commercial outfits that need dispatch and reporting, ServiceM8 for slick mobile, and a dedicated accounting tool like QuickBooks alongside whichever you choose.
- Does electrician software answer my phone?
- No. Every tool here manages the jobs you already have on the books. None of them picks up the phone when a new call comes in while you are up a ladder. Answering is a separate category that sits in front of the whole stack, and it is the gap most software roundups never mention.
- Can I use accounting software instead of job management software?
- They do different jobs. Accounting software like QuickBooks handles sales tax and your books. Job management software handles scheduling, estimates, inspections and job tracking. Most electrical contractors run both and connect them, so an invoice raised on-site flows through to the accounts without re-keying.
More electricians guides
How to get more electrical work: a practical playbook for electricians
A step-by-step playbook for winning more electrical work in the US: the lead channels that actually pay off, then the conversion half nobody covers - answering every call so the leads you generate turn into booked jobs.
What to charge as a self-employed electrician: US rates and a pricing formula
A pricing model for self-employed electricians: US benchmark hourly and day rates, the overhead and non-billable-time math, and how to set a rate that hits your take-home target.