A practical, operator-tested breakdown of the eight best house cleaning softwares for 2026 — with verified pricing, honest pros and cons, and clear picks for solo cleaners, growing maid services, and multi-crew shops.
The best software for house cleaning businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — built for the way maid services actually run, with recurring invoice subscriptions for weekly and biweekly clients, Package Estimates for tiered cleaning bundles, online self-booking, GPS team tracking, and AI Autopilot to handle review requests and follow-ups, starting at $29.99/month. ZenMaid and Maidily are strong cleaning-specialist alternatives if you only need scheduling and recurring billing. Jobber and Housecall Pro are the broader field-service picks for cleaning crews that also handle commercial or post-construction work.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo (1 user) | Solo cleaners through 50+ employee maid services | Recurring invoice subscriptions + AI Autopilot included on every plan |
| #2 | Jobber | $39/mo (1 user) | General field service crews doing cleaning + other trades | Broad integrations, polished mobile app |
| #3 | Housecall Pro | $79/mo (1 user) | Residential cleaning shops with 2–8 employees | Pipeline marketing + automated review collection |
| #4 | ZenMaid | $19/mo + $4/seat | Pure residential maid services | Calendar + recurring scheduling designed only for cleaning |
| #5 | Maidily | $30/mo | Maid services that want unlimited users at a flat rate | Every plan includes unlimited team members |
| #6 | Service Autopilot | $279/mo (Starter) | $500K+ revenue cleaning shops | Deep marketing automation + chemical tracking |
| #7 | Launch27 | $59/mo (Base) | Booking-driven residential cleaning | Polished customer-facing booking form |
| #8 | BookingKoala | $27/mo (Startup) | Cleaning marketplaces & franchise operations | Built-in marketplace + multi-location infrastructure |
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list. We also picked our own platform as #1 — here’s exactly why, and where the trade-offs land for each of the seven alternatives.
House cleaning is a strange category for software vendors. It looks simple on the surface — somebody shows up at a house, cleans it, leaves — but the back-office reality is one of the most complex of any home service vertical. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, cleaning and janitorial roles employ over three million Americans, and the residential side is dominated by recurring weekly, biweekly, and monthly contracts. That changes everything. A software built for one-and-done HVAC service calls will choke when you try to run 200 recurring clients through it.
Our five evaluation criteria for this list:
“A job lifecycle — the documented path every customer takes from first inquiry to paid invoice. Most contractors run this entirely from memory, and it works until the moment it stops working. The job lifecycle doesn’t have to be sophisticated. It’s five steps: how an inquiry comes in, how it gets quoted, how it gets scheduled, how the work gets done, and how payment gets collected. Once those five steps are written down and consistently followed, you have the foundation of a real business.”
— Justin Rogers, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Justin’s point applies directly to house cleaning. The five-step lifecycle — inquiry, quote, schedule, work, payment — is the spine that any cleaning software has to handle. Where the platforms diverge is in how they handle the recurring layer that sits on top of that lifecycle once a customer becomes a weekly or biweekly client. That recurring layer is what we evaluated hardest.
The most complete house cleaning software in 2026 — built by service business operators, priced for businesses of every size, and the only platform that includes AI Autopilot, online booking, and recurring billing in a single subscription.
From $29.99/mo · Essentials plan, 1 userBest for: Solo cleaners through 50+ employee residential maid services. QuoteIQ is the rare platform that scales from a one-person operation cleaning ten houses a week to a multi-crew shop running thousands of recurring clients on autopilot — without forcing a migration mid-growth.
Standout features for house cleaning:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
“Pricing based on what feels fair instead of what the work actually costs to deliver. A new contractor looks at a job, thinks about what he’d be happy getting paid, and throws a number out. That number almost never accounts for fuel, equipment wear, insurance, the phone time it took to book the job, or the drive time to get there. I’ve watched contractors work themselves to exhaustion for three or four years and wonder why they have nothing in the bank. The job isn’t the problem. The math is.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Mike’s observation is exactly why we built Package Estimates and Options Estimates the way we did. A house cleaning quote is rarely a single number — it depends on square footage, frequency, add-ons, and team size. The estimate template needs to make all of that explicit so the cleaner knows their actual margin on every job, and the customer knows what they’re paying for before they book.
Quick verdict: If you’re running a house cleaning or maid service business in 2026 and you only evaluate one platform, evaluate this one. The combination of recurring billing depth, AI automation, online booking, and a $29.99 entry price isn’t available anywhere else — and it’s the platform we, as operators, would pick for our own businesses. See QuoteIQ for house cleaning or view all five pricing plans.
A polished, general-purpose field service platform that handles house cleaning well if you also do other trades — with the broadest integration library of any platform on this list.
From $39/mo (Core, 1 user) · up to $599/mo (Plus, 15 users)Best for: Cleaning businesses that also do related work — pressure washing, window cleaning, post-construction cleanup, junk removal — and want one tool for all of it. Jobber is generalist software with a strong mobile app and excellent QuickBooks integration.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: Jobber is excellent generalist software. If you’re running a multi-trade home service operation that includes cleaning, this is the safe pick. For pure residential maid service shops, the lack of recurring subscription billing depth on the lower tiers becomes painful around 50+ recurring clients. Compare QuoteIQ vs Jobber.
The other general-purpose heavyweight — with a strong residential cleaning user base, pipeline marketing automation, and a per-user pricing model that grows with you.
From $79/mo (Basic) · Essentials $189/mo · MAX $329/moBest for: Residential cleaning shops with 2–8 employees that prioritize marketing automation and pipeline tracking. Housecall Pro’s marketing suite (review collection, postcards, email nurture) is more developed than most of the cleaning specialists on this list.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: Housecall Pro is a credible #3. For a 5–8 employee cleaning shop that values built-in marketing tools, the Essentials plan ($189/mo annual) covers most of what you need. Recurring billing exists but is less flexible than the cleaning specialists below. Compare QuoteIQ vs Housecall Pro.
A purpose-built residential maid service platform — the cleaning specialist that almost every owner-operated maid service compares against. Strong scheduling, modest feature breadth elsewhere.
From $19/mo + $4/seat (Starter) · Pro $39 + $14/seat · Pro Max $49 + $24/seatBest for: Pure residential maid services, especially 1–5 cleaner operations that want scheduling-first software with no extra complexity. ZenMaid is the most “cleaning-only” platform on this list, and it shows in the interface.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: ZenMaid is the right pick if you genuinely only need a recurring cleaning calendar and don’t care about marketing, sales, or analytics. The moment you want one consolidated tool that also handles review automation, AI follow-ups, or marketing campaigns, you’ll end up paying $49 + multiple per-seat fees + add-ons — and QuoteIQ Beginner at $74.99 flat with two users covers more ground for less.
All-in-one cleaning software built specifically for maid services — with unlimited users on every plan, which makes the math very different from per-seat competitors.
From $30/mo (Essentials) · Power $60/mo · Power+ $100/moBest for: Maid services that want unlimited team members at a flat rate. If you have 8–15 cleaners on payroll, the unlimited-user model can save significant money compared to seat-based platforms.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: Maidily is a smart pick for a 5–15 employee maid service where the per-user cost on competitors would otherwise dominate the bill. If your team size is smaller, QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99 or ZenMaid Starter at $19 + $4 will be cheaper. Maidily’s official site.
A 20-year-old workhorse built for high-volume recurring service businesses — including residential cleaning. Deep automation, deep features, dated interface.
From $279/mo (Starter, unlimited users) · Pro $499/mo · Pro Plus ~$849/moBest for: Cleaning businesses with $500K+ annual revenue managing hundreds of recurring residential clients. Service Autopilot’s depth in marketing automation, drip campaigns, and reporting is unmatched at this price — but the entry cost is the highest on this list.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: Service Autopilot earns the #6 slot on raw depth, but the price and complexity are overkill for any cleaning business under ~$500K in revenue. For mature, multi-crew operations that need every automation lever pulled, it’s a serious contender alongside QuoteIQ Max ($699). Service Autopilot’s official site.
A booking-first cleaning platform — the easiest customer-facing booking flow of any platform on this list, but thinner on back-office depth than the cleaning specialists above.
From $59/mo (Base) · Pro $125/mo · Plus $299/moBest for: Maid services where the primary marketing channel is the website booking form. Launch27’s customer-facing booking experience is genuinely polished — converting “I need a cleaning” website visitors into bookings without a phone call.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: Launch27 is the right pick when your #1 priority is customer-facing booking and you don’t need much else. For businesses that need booking + recurring billing + marketing + team management in one place, QuoteIQ Pro at $149.99 covers all of it for less than Launch27 Plus. Launch27’s official site.
A cleaning FSM platform built around marketplace and franchise infrastructure — the right pick if you’re scaling a multi-brand or multi-location cleaning operation.
From $27/mo (Startup) · Growth tiers $59–79/mo · Enterprise customBest for: Cleaning businesses building a branded booking marketplace, running franchise operations, or managing multiple locations under one parent brand.
Standout features:
Pros
Cons / where it falls short
Quick verdict: BookingKoala earns its slot on the strength of its marketplace and franchise features, which legitimately fill a gap. For a normal single-brand maid service, it’s overkill on setup complexity for too little operational depth. BookingKoala’s official site.
If you’ve shopped for service business software before, you’ve probably noticed the field is crowded with “all-in-one CRMs” that promise to handle every trade. Most of them can technically run a house cleaning business. Very few of them are actually built for it. The difference matters more than vendors will admit, and it shows up most clearly in three places.
First — recurring service billing. A typical residential cleaning client is on a weekly, biweekly, or monthly subscription, with payment auto-charged after the cleaner leaves. Most general FSM platforms (Jobber, Housecall Pro, Workiz) treat recurring jobs as repeating calendar events, with billing still triggered manually after each visit. That’s fine for HVAC tune-ups twice a year — it’s painful for 200 weekly cleaning clients. The cleaning specialists (ZenMaid, Maidily, Launch27, Service Autopilot, QuoteIQ) handle subscription billing natively.
Second — the team rhythm. A house cleaning crew typically rotates two or three cleaners through four to eight homes per day, often with two or three teams working in parallel across the same city. Software needs to handle which cleaner goes to which house, when, and at what stop in the daily route — without forcing the owner to manually drag-and-drop every appointment every week. The right platform combines route optimization with crew-aware scheduling. The wrong platform creates a daily nightmare.
Third — the customer-facing booking experience. A residential cleaning customer is buying a recurring relationship, not a one-time fix. They want to see when their next cleaning is, what their cleaner’s name is, what cleaning level they’re on, what add-ons are available, and how to reschedule. The platforms that handle this best (QuoteIQ’s ClientHub, Launch27’s customer portal, Maidily’s portal) treat the customer-facing surface as a first-class product. The ones that don’t treat it as a checkbox feature.
When you weigh all three of these together, the cleaning specialists rise on operational fit and the generalists rise on integration breadth and marketing automation. QuoteIQ is the unusual platform that hits both axes — recurring billing and route depth on par with the cleaning specialists, integration and AI breadth comparable to the generalists — at a price below either category.
A common pattern in cleaning software pricing is the “low headline, high actual” trick — a starting tier advertised at $19–$59 that’s missing the features almost every operating cleaning business actually needs. Be careful with the headline numbers. Here’s how the real costs typically land for a 5-cleaner maid service in 2026.
For a 5-cleaner maid service that wants the full back office in 2026 — recurring billing, online booking, marketing automation, route optimization, team management, AI-assisted follow-up — the cheapest viable picks are QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99) and Maidily Power ($60), with Maidily trading away AI and marketing depth for the lower price. Most growing operations will land on QuoteIQ Pro or QuoteIQ Elite once they hit 7–10 cleaners and want InstaSchedule unlocked for true 24/7 self-booking.
Out of dozens of features a cleaning software vendor will list on a sales page, three of them consistently make or break the day-to-day experience. If a platform handles these three well, the rest tends to fall into place. If a platform misses on any of these three, no amount of marketing automation will compensate for the daily friction.
The single biggest time-saver for any maid service. The platform should let you set up a customer once with their cleaning frequency (weekly, biweekly, monthly, every-three-weeks), service level (Standard, Deep, Move-Out), and card on file — then automatically charge after each cleaning without any human touching an invoice. QuoteIQ includes Invoice Subscriptions on every plan starting at $29.99/month, and the same pattern works on ZenMaid, Maidily, and Service Autopilot. Jobber and Housecall Pro handle it less elegantly — recurring jobs are billed individually as they complete, which is a different mental model.
Cleaning customers in 2026 expect to book online the same way they book a salon appointment, a doctor’s visit, or a restaurant. Phone-only booking is increasingly a competitive disadvantage. The strongest implementations of self-booking on this list are QuoteIQ InstaSchedule (Elite and Max plans), Launch27’s customer-facing booking form, Maidily’s branded booking page, and BookingKoala’s customizable forms. Jobber Grow ($199) includes online booking. ZenMaid adds it on Pro. Housecall Pro includes a basic version on Essentials.
Cleaners work from a phone, not a desktop. Whether the platform’s mobile app is genuinely usable in the field — one-tap schedule view, route to next stop, clock-in/out, photo upload, customer-specific notes — determines whether your team actually uses it or works around it. The strongest field apps on this list are QuoteIQ (4.7 stars across 4,103+ reviews), Jobber, and Housecall Pro on iOS. The cleaning specialists ZenMaid and Maidily have functional but more limited apps focused on the daily schedule view. BookingKoala’s mobile experience is the weakest on this list.
If you’re evaluating any of these eight platforms, run a real test of these three features specifically before signing up. A 14-day trial is enough time to set up a small recurring client list, publish a booking page, and have a cleaner actually use the mobile app on a real job. That field test will tell you more than any feature comparison spreadsheet.
Why this list matters: the residential cleaning industry has grown faster than most home service categories, and software adoption is finally catching up. Here’s the data backdrop every house cleaning owner should know going into 2026.
Global cleaning services market projected for 2026 (industry research aggregates)
Americans employed in cleaning and janitorial roles (industry estimates 2026)
Active cleaning businesses in the United States
Average residential standard recurring cleaning per visit (2026 industry data)
Industry turnover rate — the biggest operational challenge for cleaning owners
Projected employment growth for maids and housekeeping cleaners through 2029 (BLS)
The two numbers that most directly impact software choice are the 42% turnover rate and the recurring-revenue dominance of the category. High turnover means your software has to make onboarding new cleaners simple — clear schedules, GPS check-in, photo-documented job cards. Recurring revenue means your billing has to be hands-off — weekly and biweekly clients should never require a manual invoice.
Pick: QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo. You get recurring invoice subscriptions, InstaQuote forms on your website, the mobile app, ClientHub messaging, and the QuoteIQ-CAM job documentation tool. The cleaning-specialist alternative is ZenMaid Starter at $19 + $4/seat = $23/mo, but you’ll outgrow ZenMaid’s feature set the moment you want online marketing automation or AI follow-ups.
Pick: QuoteIQ Beginner at $74.99/mo for two users, 1,500 IQ Credits, EmployeeHub, and Review Multiplier. Maidily at $30–60/mo is a credible cheaper alternative with unlimited users, but you’ll be cobbling marketing tools together from third-party apps. Jobber Connect ($119/mo) is overkill at this stage unless you also do non-cleaning work.
Pick: QuoteIQ Pro at $149.99/mo (4 users, 3,000 IQ Credits, MapMeasure Pro, AI Estimator). For larger teams, QuoteIQ Elite at $299/mo gets you 10 users and unlocks InstaSchedule for true self-booking. Maidily Power+ at $100/mo is the cheapest option if unlimited users matters more than feature breadth. Jobber Grow Team at $349/mo is a fit only if cleaning is part of a broader multi-trade operation.
Pick: QuoteIQ Elite at $299/mo for 10 users with InstaSchedule, AI Autopilot, and Virtual Call Team. This is the band where the per-seat economics of ZenMaid Pro Max ($49 + $24/seat = $289 for 10) start looking similar — but ZenMaid still lacks the AI Autopilot and InstaSchedule that QuoteIQ Elite includes. Service Autopilot Pro at $499/mo is the alternative if you specifically want marketing automation depth at the cost of UI polish.
Pick: QuoteIQ Max at $699/mo (unlimited users, 8,000 IQ Credits, white-label subdomain, API access, dedicated success manager). Service Autopilot Pro Plus at ~$849/mo with flat unlimited users is the established alternative if your business is already running on Service Autopilot’s drip-campaign engine and you don’t want to migrate.
Pick: BookingKoala. It’s the only platform on this list with native marketplace and multi-location franchise infrastructure. The trade-off is operational depth elsewhere — if you eventually need deeper recurring billing or AI automation, plan to layer additional tools on top.
Pick: ZenMaid Starter at $19/mo + $4/seat. The interface is the simplest of any platform here because the platform itself only does one thing: schedule cleaning jobs. You won’t get marketing, AI, or pipeline tracking — but you also won’t have to learn any of those things. As your business grows, expect to migrate to QuoteIQ.
How we picked, in concrete steps you can verify yourself.
Listed every cleaning-software platform with 50+ Capterra and G2 reviews and an active 2026 product. Filtered out tools last updated before 2024, tools without a published price list, and tools whose vendor has not responded to support inquiries in the past 12 months. Result: 23 candidates entering evaluation.
Pulled pricing directly from each vendor’s public pricing page in April–May 2026. Where the vendor uses quote-only pricing, we triangulated from G2, Capterra, and verified customer reports. Every price in the comparison table above traces back to a published source from the last 60 days.
Built a 12-feature checklist specific to house cleaning operations — recurring billing, online self-booking, GPS team tracking, route optimization, cleaner mobile app, customer portal, automated review collection, two-way SMS, package/options estimates, AI estimating, marketing automation, and reporting depth. Each platform got a 0–12 score on requirements coverage.
Aggregated review scores across App Store, Google Play, Capterra, G2, and Trustpilot. Weighted by recency (last 18 months) and verified-customer status. Eliminated paid-placement biased lists from our own data set.
Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers reviewed the shortlist and the entry copy against their own operating experience — 20+ years between them in home service businesses, with publicly indexed bylines on myquoteiq.com/insights/mike-vidan/ and myquoteiq.com/insights/justin-rogers/. Where the operator perspective disagreed with the feature-checklist score, the operator perspective adjusted the ranking.
Three verified 5-star reviews from cleaning-business operators across the App Store, with names and platforms displayed exactly as published.
“The $30 per month definitely pays for itself with the ease of use and organization it offers.”
“The app has been super easy to use and makes me feel both more confident and comfortable with quoting our exterior cleaning services.”
“This is a very great and easy to maneuver site to get quotes.”
This list isn’t from a software analyst or a freelance writer. It’s from two co-founders who actively run home service businesses and have been doing so for two decades.
20+ year home service business owner. Co-founder of QuoteIQ. Creator of the Mike Vidan YouTube channel with 580,000+ subscribers, where he covers pricing, hiring, quoting, and contractor operations. Has coached thousands of home service contractors on running profitable, repeatable businesses.
Read Mike’s full insights archive →Serial entrepreneur and home service business operator. Co-founder of QuoteIQ. Creator of the ForeverSelfEmployed YouTube channel with 743,000+ subscribers. Has built and scaled multiple businesses across the home service sector with a focus on systems, pricing discipline, and operations that run without the owner present.
Read Justin’s full insights archive →The best software for house cleaning businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — built for solo cleaners through 50+ employee maid services, with recurring invoice subscriptions, Package and Options Estimates for tiered service bundles, AI Autopilot for review and follow-up automation, GPS team tracking, and InstaSchedule for customer self-booking. ZenMaid is the strongest cleaning-only specialist if you just need scheduling and recurring billing. Jobber and Housecall Pro are credible alternatives if your business also handles non-cleaning work like pressure washing or post-construction cleanup.
House cleaning software ranges from $19/month (ZenMaid Starter + per-seat fees) to $849/month (Service Autopilot Pro Plus). The honest middle of the market for a small maid service is $30–150/month. QuoteIQ ranges from $29.99 (Essentials, 1 user) to $699 (Max, unlimited users). Jobber runs $39–599/month. Housecall Pro runs $79–329/month. Be careful with platforms that charge per seat — a 10-cleaner team on ZenMaid Pro Max ($49 + $24/seat) costs $289/month, which is close to QuoteIQ Elite ($299) but with fewer features included.
There is no genuinely “free” cleaning CRM that handles recurring billing, online booking, and team management at the depth a real maid service needs. Workiz Lite is technically free but capped at 20 jobs/month, which most cleaning businesses hit in the first week. QuoteIQ doesn’t have a free plan, but every plan includes a 14-day free trial — from Essentials at $29.99/month for solo operators up to Max at $699/month for unlimited-user enterprise teams.
For solo cleaners, the two best picks are QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/month and ZenMaid Starter at $19 + $4/seat ($23/month effective). QuoteIQ covers more ground — recurring billing, AI Autopilot eligibility, ClientHub messaging, InstaQuote forms on your website, the QuoteIQ-CAM job documentation tool, and the mobile app. ZenMaid is cheaper and laser-focused on cleaning scheduling only, which is good if you don’t want extra features cluttering the interface.
For 2–5 cleaner teams, the strongest picks are QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/month, 2 users) or QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/month, 4 users), or Maidily Power ($60/month, unlimited users). QuoteIQ Pro adds Mass Campaigns, Email & Text Automation, Pipelines & Deals, MapMeasure Pro, and Route Optimization — the toolset most small cleaning crews need to start running marketing properly. Maidily’s flat unlimited-user pricing is competitive if you specifically have a larger team but lower revenue.
For 20+ employee cleaning businesses, the two serious choices are QuoteIQ Max ($699/month flat, unlimited users, white-label subdomain, API access, dedicated success manager) and Service Autopilot Pro Plus (~$849/month flat unlimited users with deep marketing automation). QuoteIQ Max wins on price, modern interface, and AI feature breadth. Service Autopilot wins on automation maturity and reporting depth if you’re already running drip campaigns at scale.
All eight platforms on this list offer iPhone and Android apps, but the mobile experience varies significantly. QuoteIQ holds a 4.7-star rating across 4,103+ combined App Store and Google Play reviews. Jobber’s mobile app is consistently the highest-rated of the broader field-service platforms. ZenMaid and Maidily have functional but more limited mobile apps focused mostly on the cleaner’s daily schedule. Housecall Pro’s mobile app is solid on iOS and weaker on Android per multiple Capterra reviews.
Most platforms on this list support customer-facing online booking, but the depth varies. QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule lets customers self-book from a published calendar with real-time availability — it’s included on Elite ($299/month) and Max ($699/month) plans only. Launch27 has the most polished customer-facing booking form. Jobber adds online booking on the Grow plan ($199/month). Maidily includes a branded booking page on every plan starting at $30/month. ZenMaid’s booking forms unlock on Pro ($39 + $14/seat).
QuoteIQ has the deepest estimating toolset on this list. It offers four estimate types — Standard, Quick, Options, and Package — on every plan, plus the AI Estimator (unlocks on Pro at $149.99/month) which generates estimate drafts from job descriptions or photos. Package Estimates are particularly useful for cleaning because they let you bundle Standard, Deep, and Move-Out cleanings as tiered options the customer chooses between at the quote stage. Most cleaning specialists like ZenMaid and Maidily use simpler form-based pricing without true tiered estimate templates.
For pure scheduling depth, ZenMaid is the cleaning-specialist that scheduling-first owners prefer — the interface was designed only around recurring cleaning appointments. For all-in-one scheduling plus the rest of the back office (billing, marketing, automation), QuoteIQ is the stronger pick. Jobber and Housecall Pro both have capable scheduling but they’re built for general field service, not specifically for the recurring-residential rhythm of house cleaning.
For recurring residential cleaning, QuoteIQ’s Invoice Subscriptions are the strongest tool on this list — weekly, biweekly, monthly, or custom-interval billing, with cards charged automatically, on every plan starting at $29.99/month. Maidily and Service Autopilot both handle recurring billing well. Jobber Core ($39/mo) and Housecall Pro Basic ($79/mo) handle one-time invoicing fine but their recurring subscription support is less flexible. Every platform on this list integrates with Stripe or similar processors for card-on-file billing.
Route optimization is critical for cleaning crews running 4–8 stops per day. QuoteIQ includes Route Optimization on the Pro plan and above ($149.99/month). Service Autopilot has the most mature route-density optimization in the category, tuned specifically for recurring residential service. Jobber Connect ($119) includes basic routing. ZenMaid added route optimization in 2024 but it’s less developed than the platforms above. For 1–3 stop-per-day operations, routing matters less — for 8+ stop teams, it matters enormously.
Switching from Jobber typically takes 5–10 business days for a small maid service. Step one is exporting your customer list, job history, and recurring schedule from Jobber as CSV. Step two is importing into the new platform — QuoteIQ, ZenMaid, and Maidily all offer guided import flows. Step three is rebuilding any automated workflows (review requests, email follow-ups) and connecting payment processing. Most cleaning businesses run both platforms in parallel for one full billing cycle before fully cutting over. The QuoteIQ vs Jobber comparison page walks through what migrates cleanly and what doesn’t.
The best alternatives to Housecall Pro for cleaning businesses are QuoteIQ (more cleaning-specific features at a lower starting price), ZenMaid (cleaning-only specialist at $19 + $4/seat), and Maidily (unlimited users at a flat rate from $30/month). QuoteIQ specifically wins on recurring billing depth, AI Autopilot, and the InstaSchedule online booking feature. The choice usually comes down to whether you want a broader feature set (QuoteIQ) or a more focused cleaning-only tool (ZenMaid). Compare QuoteIQ vs Housecall Pro.
ServiceTitan typically isn’t pitched to residential cleaning businesses — it’s a quote-only enterprise platform built for HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contractors with 20+ technicians, with starting costs commonly cited at $300+/user/month. For house cleaning specifically, the cheaper-and-more-relevant alternatives are QuoteIQ Max ($699/month unlimited users), Service Autopilot Pro Plus (~$849/month flat unlimited users), or Maidily Power+ ($100/month unlimited users). QuoteIQ Max delivers most of what a multi-crew cleaning business actually needs from “enterprise” software at a fraction of ServiceTitan’s price.
For team time tracking specifically, QuoteIQ’s EmployeeHub includes clock-in/out and GPS tracking on Beginner ($74.99/month) and above. Maidily includes GPS tracking on higher tiers. ZenMaid Pro ($39 + $14/seat) adds GPS tracking via the mobile app. Service Autopilot has the deepest time-tracking and payroll integration of the platforms here, but it requires the Pro tier ($499/month) to fully unlock. For most small to mid-size cleaning businesses, QuoteIQ Beginner or Pro covers time tracking adequately at a fraction of Service Autopilot’s price.
Trusted by thousands of verified contractors · 4.7★ average rating · 4,103+ reviews on App Store and Google Play
House cleaning is a recurring-revenue business at its core. Roughly seven out of ten dollars of revenue in a typical residential maid service come from weekly, biweekly, or monthly recurring clients on subscription billing. That’s the rhythm any cleaning software has to handle without manual work — and it’s where most general-purpose field service platforms quietly fall short.
QuoteIQ earns the #1 slot in this listicle because it’s the only platform on the list that combines recurring invoice subscriptions, online self-booking, AI-powered review collection and follow-ups, GPS team tracking, package estimating, route optimization, and customer messaging in a single subscription that starts at $29.99/month. Cleaning specialists like ZenMaid and Maidily can match QuoteIQ on scheduling and recurring billing, but they don’t offer the marketing and AI breadth. Generalists like Jobber and Housecall Pro can match QuoteIQ on integration depth, but they don’t handle recurring residential cleaning with the same care.
If you’re a solo cleaner just starting, Essentials at $29.99 is the right entry point. If you’re scaling past three cleaners, Beginner ($74.99) or Pro ($149.99) is where the marketing and team tools actually start earning their keep. If you’re running 10+ employees with multi-crew operations, Elite ($299) or Max ($699) is where InstaSchedule, AI Autopilot, and unlimited users come together — and at that scale, it remains substantially cheaper than the enterprise alternatives.
The cleaning industry is still in the middle of a software shift — from spreadsheets and SMS chains to integrated platforms that handle the whole lifecycle — and the businesses that finish that shift first in 2026 are the ones that will dominate their local markets in 2027. The right tool isn’t necessarily the most-recommended tool. It’s the one that handles recurring residential billing without making you think about it.
Start your 14-day free trial of QuoteIQ — or book a personalized demo with the team behind the platform.