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The best plumbing invoicing and job-management software for getting paid faster

A vendor-neutral buyer guide to plumbing invoicing and job-management software: what each tool is best for, how the per-seat pricing really works, and the call-handling layer the vendors all skip.

Matt Horner Matt Horner Co-Founder 6 min read
A plumber taking a customer call from the front of their work van

Getting paid faster comes down to one thing: turning a quote into a scheduled job into a paid invoice without retyping the same details three times. That is what plumbing invoicing and job-management software does, and for a small plumbing business the right tool is usually a job-management app such as Jobber, Housecall Pro or ServiceTitan rather than a standalone invoicer. There is no single winner; the right pick depends on your size and the job that hurts most.

This guide compares the real tools on what each is best for, how the per-seat pricing actually works, and the one thing every vendor leaves out: who answers the phone and books the job before it ever reaches the software.

Tool Best for Pricing model Quoting and payments
Housecall Pro Solo and small teams who want simple Per user, per month On-site estimates, invoicing, card-on-file
Jobber Small, growing service teams Per user, per month (tiered) Estimates, invoicing, card and online pay
ServiceTitan Larger shops with dispatch and reporting Quote on request Full estimating, invoicing, financing
Workiz Small field-service teams who want dispatch Per user, per month Estimates, invoicing, payments
FieldEdge Established HVAC and plumbing shops Quote on request Quoting, invoicing, QuickBooks sync

What this software actually does

Strip away the brand names and a job-management tool does a short, specific list of jobs. It holds your schedule so you stop double-booking. It builds an estimate you can send before you have left the customer's driveway. It turns that estimate into a job, then into an invoice, without you keying the same details three times. And it gives the customer a fast way to pay.

The reason to buy one tool rather than five separate apps is that the handoffs between estimate, job and invoice are where time and money leak. A standalone invoicer is fine if invoicing is your only pain. The moment scheduling and chasing payment also hurt, an integrated app earns its keep.

What to look for as a plumber

Before you compare brands, get clear on the buying criteria that matter in the field:

  • Fast on-site estimating. An estimate sent while the customer is still standing in the flooded kitchen wins more work than a tidy one that lands two days later.
  • Scheduling and dispatch. A shared calendar that stops you double-booking, and that a second truck can see.
  • Invoicing and payments. Pay-by-link and card-on-file so the money lands in days, not weeks.
  • Accounting sync. A clean link to QuickBooks or Xero so an invoice raised in the truck flows to the books without re-keying.
  • Mobile and field use. It has to work one-handed on a phone in a crawl space, not just at a desk.

The main tools compared

Here is an honest line on the names you will actually run into, no single winner crowned.

Housecall Pro is polished and approachable, the natural first paid tool for a solo plumber or a small outfit. It does scheduling, estimates and invoices without a steep learning curve. Watch out if you later need deep job costing or heavy reporting; the entry tiers stay deliberately light.

Jobber is a strong all-rounder for small, growing teams, with clean estimating and online payments. It scales well from one truck to a handful without forcing an enterprise migration.

ServiceTitan and FieldEdge are heavier platforms aimed at established plumbing and HVAC shops with dispatch, financing and complex reporting. Powerful, but cost and complexity make them overkill for one or two trucks.

Workiz sits in the middle, leaning on dispatch and call tracking for small field-service teams that have outgrown a spreadsheet but are not ready for a full enterprise platform.

How the pricing works, and what "free" really costs

Almost all of these tools price per user, per month. Entry plans for the small-business apps tend to sit in the mid tens of dollars per user; the bigger field-service platforms quote on request and run well above that. Adding seats and features moves the number, so price the plan you will actually be on in a year, not the headline tier.

The trap is treating a free tier as a permanent answer. A plan that limits you to a handful of invoices a month, or makes you copy job details into your accounts by hand, is borrowing time from your evenings at a poor exchange rate. Free is a fine way to trial the workflow; it is a poor way to run a business that is winning work.

A plumber creating an invoice on a tablet at the kitchen table
The right tool turns an hour of evening paperwork into a few taps before you leave the job.

The category every stack forgets: answering and booking

Every tool above manages jobs you already have. Not one of them catches the call that comes in while you are under a sink with both hands full and the phone ringing in the truck.

That missed call is the most expensive gap in the stack, because it happens before any of this software gets to do its job. There is no invoice to raise if the caller hung up and dialed the next plumber. Answering and booking is its own category, and it sits in front of everything else. This is the one place we will mention our own corner of it: Hey Jodie answers your calls for plumbers when you cannot, takes the job details, and texts them to you, so the lead reaches your job-management app instead of your competitor.

How to choose your stack

Start with the job that hurts most, which for most plumbers is getting paid. Pick the tool that fixes that first, then add the rest as you grow rather than buying everything on day one.

A sensible order: confirm it handles your sales tax setup and the way you invoice, check that it talks to your accounting software so you are not re-keying invoices, and only then weigh the nice-to-haves. If you want the wider view across every software category a plumbing business touches, not just invoicing and job management, see the full plumbing software guide. And if you are setting all this up from scratch, how to start a plumbing business covers the systems to get right from day one. The best stack is the smallest set of tools that fixes what is costing you money and gets out of your way.

Part of our guides for Plumbers See how Hey Jodie helps plumbers answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

What software do plumbers use to invoice?
Most plumbers invoice through a job-management app rather than a standalone invoicing tool. Jobber, Housecall Pro and ServiceTitan all turn a quote into a job into an invoice in one place, usually with a pay-by-link or card-on-file button. Some run a simpler setup, raising invoices straight from QuickBooks or Xero, which works fine until scheduling and chasing payment start eating your evenings.
What is the best job-management software for a small plumbing business?
For a solo or small plumbing business, Housecall Pro and Jobber are usually the easiest start: scheduling, estimating and invoicing without a steep learning curve. Jobber suits a small crew that is growing. ServiceTitan fits larger shops that need deep reporting and dispatch. There is no single best, only the one that matches your size and the job that hurts most.
Is there free plumbing invoicing software?
Yes, basic free invoicing exists, including the free tiers of some accounting tools, but they cap invoices, users or features and leave you doing the scheduling and chasing by hand. Free beats paid only until the manual workarounds start costing you more time than the subscription would. For most working plumbers that point comes quickly.
How much does plumbing software cost?
Most plumbing job-management software is priced per user per month, typically from around twenty-five to sixty-five dollars per user on entry plans, climbing with extra features and seats. Standalone invoicing or accounting tools sit lower. The bigger field-service platforms like ServiceTitan cost more and quote on request. Always check what the free tier really limits before you rely on it.

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