Chimney sweeping is a seasonal, safety-critical trade where the right software turns a fall rush into a smooth, fully-booked schedule. We tested eight platforms across pricing, mobile usability, inspection documentation, recurring-service scheduling, and trade fit to surface the tools built to handle a chimney sweep’s busiest months in 2026.
The best software for chimney sweep businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — an all-in-one field service platform that handles estimating, scheduling, inspection forms, invoicing, payments, and automated customer follow-up from one app, with transparent pricing starting at $29.99/mo. For solo sweeps through 15-tech operations, it replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost and is purpose-built for the seasonal booking spikes chimney work depends on. ServiceTitan is the default for 20-plus technician operations with dedicated office staff, SuccessWare suits shops that want deep hearth-specific job management, and Jobber and Housecall Pro are strong general-purpose alternatives.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | 1–15 employee chimney sweep shops | All-in-one with inspection forms & InstaSchedule |
| #2 | ServiceTitan | Custom (~$300+/user/mo) | Enterprise (20+ techs) | Deepest dispatch & reporting |
| #3 | Jobber | $39/mo | General SMB service | Polished UX |
| #4 | Housecall Pro | $59/mo | Residential, booking-led | Consumer-facing online booking |
| #5 | SuccessWare | Custom quote | Hearth-specialized shops | Service agreements & price book |
| #6 | FieldPulse | Custom (~$99–$399/mo) | Mobile-first growing crews | Strong mobile + customizable workflows |
| #7 | Workiz | Free / from $225/mo | Inbound-call-heavy shops | Built-in phone system |
| #8 | Kickserv | $19/mo | Solo / side-hustle sweeps | Lean, low-cost basics |
Verified pricing as of May 2026. Vendor pricing changes frequently and several tools require a sales call for a firm number — visit each vendor’s site for the most current rates.
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list, and we also picked our own platform as #1 — so here is exactly why, with the honest trade-offs each tool brings to the table. Chimney sweeping is not a generic home service: it is seasonal, inspection-heavy, safety-regulated, and built on recurring relationships with homeowners who book the same sweep year after year. Five evaluation criteria drove every ranking decision.
Pricing was verified against each vendor’s published source in May 2026; where a vendor hides pricing behind a demo, we said so rather than guessing. Industry context was drawn from the U.S. Fire Administration, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, and chimney trade bodies including the Chimney Safety Institute of America and the National Chimney Sweep Guild.
“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. Without it, you have a job where you happen to be in charge. The difference matters enormously when you try to hire, when you try to delegate, or when you try to take a week off.”
— Justin Rogers, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Most “best field service software” lists treat chimney sweeping like any other home service. It isn’t. A chimney business lives and dies on a few workflows that generic CRMs handle poorly, and understanding them is the difference between buying a tool you grow into and buying one you fight against. Before comparing platforms, it is worth being honest about what the job actually demands.
Inspection documentation is the product. When a homeowner pays for a Level 1 or Level 2 inspection, what they are really buying is a credible report — photos of the flue, the crown, the cap, the firebox, and any creosote buildup, paired with a clear written assessment and a recommendation. Software that lets a tech capture those photos on a phone, attach them to a digital inspection form, and send a branded report to the customer the same day is doing the single most important job in the trade. A tool that forces you to email photos separately from the estimate is creating work, not removing it.
The calendar is brutally seasonal. Demand for chimney sweeps and inspections concentrates heavily in late summer through early winter, as homeowners prepare to burn. A platform that lets customers self-book against your live calendar — rather than playing phone tag during your busiest eight weeks — can be the difference between a fully-booked fall and a fall full of missed calls. Recurring-service reminders that automatically nudge last year’s customers to rebook before the season hits are equally valuable, because a chimney sweep’s best lead source is its own past customer list.
Estimating has to flex across very different jobs. A routine sweep, a cap replacement, a crown repair, a full reline, and a dryer-vent cleaning are wildly different in price and scope. Good software lets you build a service catalog with saved line items so a tech can assemble an accurate quote on-site in a minute, then convert it to an invoice and collect payment before leaving the driveway. The faster that quote-to-cash loop, the better the cash flow — and chimney work, with its concentrated season, rewards tight cash flow.
It must run from a phone. Chimney techs are on roofs and in crawl spaces, not at a desk. If the mobile app is a watered-down version of the web app, the office and the field drift out of sync, and the tech ends up doing paperwork twice. Mobile parity is non-negotiable.
The eight platforms below are ranked against exactly these realities. Some are purpose-built for chimney and hearth work; most are general field service tools that a chimney shop can run on; and one — our pick — is an all-in-one designed to cover the entire lifecycle without a stack of add-ons.
QuoteIQ is the platform we built because nothing else covered the full chimney-sweep workflow without bolting on three more tools. Estimating, scheduling, digital inspection forms with photo capture, invoicing, payments, online customer booking, and automated follow-up all run from one app on the phone in your tech’s pocket. For a chimney business sized from a solo sweep up to a 15-tech shop, QuoteIQ replaces a generic CRM plus a separate scheduler plus a separate review-request tool plus a photo app — at a lower combined cost and with everything finally talking to each other.
Where it earns the #1 spot for this trade specifically is the inspection-to-invoice loop. A tech can pull up a saved chimney service catalog, build a quote for a sweep or a cap replacement on-site, capture before/after photos directly into an inspection form, send a branded report, and collect payment in the driveway. Then automated follow-ups bring that customer back next season without anyone in the office remembering to call. That is the chimney sweep’s real growth engine — repeat business — running on autopilot.
Best for: Solo chimney sweeps through 15-employee shops that want one platform instead of a stack, with strong inspection documentation and seasonal booking tools.
Pros
Cons
“Don’t look at the neighborhood and decide what they can afford. Price the work. Every time you price the customer instead of the work, you’re guessing at someone else’s wallet and losing track of your own numbers.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Verdict: If you run a chimney sweep business with 1–15 employees, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower total cost and is built around the inspection-and-rebooking loop the trade depends on. Solo sweeps start at $29.99/mo; most growing shops land on Elite ($299/mo) for the InstaSchedule online-booking unlock. Enterprise operations with 20+ techs should also demo ServiceTitan.
ServiceTitan is the de facto enterprise platform for home service contractors, and a large multi-truck chimney and hearth operation can absolutely run on it. The depth is unmatched: a powerful dispatch board, fleet tracking, automated marketing, deep job-costing and reporting, and a feature surface that takes weeks to learn. For a chimney company that has grown into a real operation — 20-plus techs, multiple crews, dedicated office staff, and a marketing budget — that depth pays off. The trade-off is cost, complexity, and a sales-led, quote-only pricing model.
Best for: 20-plus technician chimney and hearth operations with office staff to manage the platform and the budget to fund it.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: The right call for large chimney operations that need enterprise dispatch and reporting and have staff to run it. Below 15–20 techs, the cost-and-complexity ratio rarely pencils out against QuoteIQ.
Jobber is the polished generalist of the home service world. It is not chimney-specialized, but it covers the fundamentals — quoting, scheduling, invoicing, client communication, and online booking on the Connect tier and up — with a clean interface that techs adopt without complaint. For a chimney sweep who wants a well-built generalist and is comfortable assembling their own inspection workflow, Jobber is a credible choice. The gaps show up in chimney-specific documentation and in pricing that climbs fast once you add team members.
Best for: Chimney shops that prefer a refined general-purpose tool with great UX over a trade-specialized one.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: A strong all-rounder if chimney-specific depth isn’t critical. For inspection documentation and a lower starting price, QuoteIQ is the more cost-effective fit for this trade.
Housecall Pro built its reputation on the customer side, with a booking experience that rivals consumer home-services apps and a polished mobile app. For a residential-focused chimney sweep whose biggest bottleneck is converting inbound interest into booked appointments, that strength is real. The chimney tooling itself is solid but general, and most of the features a growing shop wants — QuickBooks sync, GPS, marketing — live on the $149/mo Essentials tier or higher.
Best for: Residential chimney shops where online booking conversion matters more than deep, trade-specific job management.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Best if booking conversion is your bottleneck. For inspection documentation plus a lower entry price ($29.99 vs $59/mo), QuoteIQ covers more of the chimney workflow.
SuccessWare (often referenced as SuccessWare21) is an end-to-end business management platform aimed at HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and hearth contractors — the closest thing on this list to a chimney-and-fireplace specialist. It unifies call-taking, scheduling and dispatch, a configurable flat-rate price book, service agreements, inventory and purchasing, and integrated accounting with job costing. For a chimney and fireplace shop that sells recurring service agreements and wants deep back-office control, SuccessWare’s depth is its draw. The trade-offs are the dated feel relative to newer apps, a smaller mobile and review-app polish, and pricing available only on request — with implementation that can run into the thousands.
Best for: Established chimney and hearth shops that want deep service-agreement, price-book, and accounting tooling and will invest in setup.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Worth a demo if hearth-specific job management and service agreements are your priority. For a faster, transparently-priced all-in-one with stronger mobile and automation, QuoteIQ is the more modern fit.
FieldPulse is a mobile-first field service platform with a strong reputation for ease of use, customizable workflows, and responsive support. A growing chimney crew that wants flexible job management, estimates, invoicing, and customer tracking from the phone will find a capable tool here. The main friction is transparency: FieldPulse does not publish pricing, so you have to start a trial or talk to sales to get a number, and contractor-reported figures land in a broad $99–$399/mo range depending on team size and seats.
Best for: Growing chimney crews that value a polished mobile experience and customizable workflows and don’t mind a sales conversation to learn the price.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: A solid mobile-first option for a growing crew. If upfront price transparency matters — and for a chimney sweep watching a seasonal budget it usually does — QuoteIQ’s published plans remove the guesswork.
Workiz’s differentiator is a built-in VoIP phone system with call recording tied to customer records — genuinely useful for a chimney shop that fields a heavy volume of inbound calls during the fall rush and wants every call logged against a job. The free Lite tier is capped (around 20 jobs, invoices, and estimates), so it functions as an extended trial rather than a real operating plan; the practical entry point is Standard at about $225/mo for five users, with per-user fees and the phone and AI-answering features sold as paid add-ons.
Best for: Inbound-call-heavy chimney shops that want phone, scheduling, and CRM tied together in one system.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: A good fit if call handling is your bottleneck. For chimney depth at a far lower starting price, QuoteIQ paired with its Twilio integration and Virtual Call Team covers more ground.
Kickserv is a long-running, cloud-based field service tool built around scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and QuickBooks integration for small service businesses. Its appeal for a chimney sweep is simple: the Flex plan starts at just $19/mo, making it one of the cheapest ways to get a solo operation off spreadsheets. The trade-off is that the chimney-specific tooling is thin — no inspection templates, lighter automation, and a contact form rather than true real-time online booking — so a growing shop tends to outgrow it.
Best for: Solo or side-hustle chimney sweeps who need the cheapest possible way to organize jobs, quotes, and invoices.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: A genuinely cheap starting point for a solo sweep. Most chimney businesses outgrow it within a season or two — QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo is only marginally more and includes inspection forms, real-time booking, and automation Kickserv lacks.
The takeaway for software selection: this is a small, fragmented industry — just over 6,000 fireplace-services businesses chasing a steady, safety-driven $710 million market — where the operators who win are the ones who look professional, document their inspections credibly, and stay top-of-mind with last year’s customers. Software is how a sweep punches above their size.
Two forces shape software needs in chimney sweeping more than anything else: the seasonal demand curve and the safety-and-compliance expectations that surround inspections. Get both right and the software practically pays for itself; ignore them and even a powerful platform becomes shelf-ware.
Chimney demand is famously front-loaded into late summer through early winter, when homeowners think about burning for the first time in months. A solo sweep can field more inquiries in a single September week than across the entire spring. The businesses that thrive don’t just work harder during the rush — they smooth it. Recurring-service reminders pull last season’s customers back in before the phones light up; online self-booking absorbs overflow demand without anyone answering a call; and automated quote follow-ups recover the estimates that would otherwise go cold while you’re on a roof. The right platform converts a chaotic eight-week sprint into a predictable, pre-booked season. That is why scheduling automation and customer self-booking weighed so heavily in our rankings, and why QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule and AI Autopilot earned it the top spot for this trade specifically.
Chimney work is safety work. The U.S. Fire Administration attributes a meaningful share of home heating fires to dirty or compromised chimneys, and industry bodies including the Chimney Safety Institute of America and the National Chimney Sweep Guild promote annual inspection to the standards set out in NFPA 211. For a sweep, that means the inspection report is not paperwork — it is the deliverable, the upsell engine, and the liability record all at once. A homeowner who sees clear photos of creosote glazing on their flue understands instantly why a sweep or a reline is worth paying for. Software that captures those photos on a phone and attaches them to a structured inspection form, then sends a clean branded report the same day, does more for close rates than any marketing tactic. Tools without that capability force techs back to texting photos separately, which looks unprofessional and loses the connection between the finding and the quote.
When you weigh the eight platforms below against your own business, ask two blunt questions: will this fill my fall calendar without me chained to the phone, and will it let my techs produce a credible inspection report from the rooftop? Those two answers tell you most of what you need to know.
Most chimney businesses don’t regret the software they picked so much as the reasons they picked it. The trade has quirks — a violent seasonal curve, inspection reports that double as sales tools, rooftop work where a phone is the only computer on site — that make some shopping habits actively expensive. These are the five mistakes we see most often.
A solo sweep signs up for the cheapest possible tool in March, hires a second tech in August, and discovers the platform charges per user or simply can’t schedule two trucks. Now they’re migrating data in the middle of peak season — the worst possible time. The fix is to look one growth step ahead. Platforms with flat, no-per-user pricing such as QuoteIQ let you add a truck without re-pricing the whole operation, which is why predictable tiers matter more for a growing chimney shop than the lowest sticker price.
It’s easy to evaluate software on estimating and invoicing and forget that, for a sweep, the inspection report is the product. A tool that can’t attach flue photos to a structured form on a phone forces your techs to text images separately, breaking the link between what they found and what they’re quoting. Test the photo-to-report flow from a rooftop on your actual phone before you commit — not from a desk during a sales demo.
Free tiers like Workiz Lite are capped trials, not operating plans. Building your whole business around 20 jobs of headroom means hitting a wall mid-season and scrambling to upgrade or switch. A 14-day trial on a plan you can actually afford to keep, such as QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo, tells you far more about whether a tool fits than a free tier you’ll outgrow in a fortnight.
ServiceTitan is a genuinely powerful platform, but its dispatch boards, configurable workflows, and reporting depth assume you have office staff to run them. A three-truck chimney shop that buys enterprise software usually uses a fraction of it while paying for all of it and absorbing a long, painful onboarding. Match the tool’s complexity to the people who will actually operate it.
The shops that survive the fall crunch aren’t the ones that answer the phone fastest — they’re the ones whose software already rebooked last year’s customers, absorbed overflow through self-booking, and chased cold estimates automatically. If a platform can’t do those three things, you’ll be buying your way out of growth with your own labor every September. Weigh automation heavily; it is the single feature that most changes a chimney business’s ceiling.
If you’re already on a tool that isn’t working, the fear of switching — lost customer history, a stalled calendar, techs fumbling a new app during the rush — keeps a lot of sweeps stuck on software they’ve outgrown. It doesn’t have to be that way, as long as you time and sequence the move sensibly.
First, migrate in the off-season. For most chimney businesses that means late winter through spring, after the burning season winds down and before late-summer inquiries spike. Switching in February gives you months to clean up data and train your crew before the calendar fills. Switching in September means learning new software while you’re drowning — don’t.
Second, export your customer list before you cancel anything. Almost every platform lets you download contacts and service history as a spreadsheet, and your customer database — names, addresses, what flue they have, when they were last swept — is the most valuable asset you own. That list is what powers recurring-service reminders, so confirm your new platform can import it before you pull the plug on the old one. QuoteIQ and most modern tools accept a standard CSV import.
Third, run one full job through the new system end to end before you trust it — inquiry, quote, schedule, inspection report, invoice, payment, and rebooking reminder — using a real customer or a dummy record. You’ll catch the gaps that no demo reveals. Finally, give your techs a single afternoon of hands-on practice rather than a manual to read. Field-service apps are built to be learned by doing, and a sweep who has personally created one estimate and one inspection report on a phone is ready for the season. Handled this way, a software switch is a quiet spring project, not a peak-season crisis.
Pick QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo. You get estimating, scheduling, inspection forms, invoicing, and automated follow-up without paying for capacity you don’t need yet, and the 14-day trial lets you confirm the fit before any charge. If you want the absolute cheapest on-ramp and can live without inspection templates or real-time booking, Kickserv Flex at $19/mo is the bare-bones alternative.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) or Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) depending on crew size. Pro unlocks the AI Estimator and route optimization that a small chimney crew running a full day of neighborhood sweeps will want. Because QuoteIQ charges no per-user fees, the math stays simple as you add a second truck.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) is the sweet spot — it unlocks InstaSchedule so homeowners self-book during your peak season, plus AI Autopilot for automated rebooking reminders. Compare it against Housecall Pro Essentials ($149/mo, up to 5 users), keeping in mind Housecall Pro’s per-user costs once you pass its cap.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo) or Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) keeps costs flat as headcount grows. Get a ServiceTitan demo too — at this size the decision comes down to whether you need ServiceTitan’s dispatch depth enough to justify its cost and onboarding.
ServiceTitan or QuoteIQ Max. ServiceTitan offers the deepest enterprise dispatch and reporting; QuoteIQ Max offers transparent flat pricing, unlimited users, and a far lighter onboarding. Demo both before committing — the right answer depends on how much office staff you have to run a complex platform.
SuccessWare is worth a serious look for its deep service-agreement, price-book, and accounting tooling tuned to hearth contractors. If you’d rather have modern mobile, automation, and transparent pricing — and are willing to build your own recurring-plan workflow — QuoteIQ covers the same ground with less setup overhead.
QuoteIQ Essentials or Kickserv. Both prioritize simplicity and get a solo operator productive quickly. QuoteIQ gives you far more room to grow into; Kickserv is genuinely bare-bones but cheap. Avoid ServiceTitan and SuccessWare here — both reward a real onboarding investment that a tech-resistant owner won’t enjoy.
Listed every CRM and field service tool serving chimney sweep businesses with a meaningful review base. We started from the platforms that chimney and hearth operators actually use — broad field-service leaders, hearth-specialized tools, and budget options — and filtered out anything without enough public reviews to validate.
Verified pricing against each vendor’s published source in May 2026. For quote-only platforms (ServiceTitan, SuccessWare, FieldPulse) we noted the lack of transparency and used contractor-reported ranges where available rather than inventing numbers.
Matched feature lists against the capabilities chimney work demands. Digital inspection forms with photo capture, recurring-service scheduling, real-time online booking, flexible estimating across sweeps and repairs, mobile parity, integrated payments, and automated review requests.
Cross-referenced thousands of customer reviews across App Store, Google Play, Capterra, and G2. Aggregate sentiment, recent review trajectory, and recurring complaint patterns all factored into the final order.
Layered in operator perspective from Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers. Both QuoteIQ Co-Founders have built and scaled home-service businesses and bring four-plus years of product context, and they validated the trade-off framing for each tool.
A note on sourcing: chimney sweeping is a small, niche trade and QuoteIQ’s verified review pool doesn’t yet include chimney-tagged reviews. The verified 5-star reviews below come from adjacent rooftop and exterior home-service trades (gutter cleaning, roofing) and general home-service operators — the same inspection, estimating, and invoicing workflows a chimney sweep relies on.
“I love being able to attach pics for my clients and I love that my estimates and invoices are tracked and handled in one place.”
“Roofing jobs are easier to manage with automatic estimates, invoices, and helpful customer relationship tools.”
“It simplifies things so much and allows me to get a fast professional quote to someone immediately after they submit it.”
Mike co-founded QuoteIQ in 2022 after two decades building and scaling multi-trade home-service businesses. His YouTube channel (580K+ subscribers) covers contractor pricing, operations, and growth strategy, and he’s coached thousands of service-business owners on the systems QuoteIQ is built around.
Read Mike’s insights →Justin co-founded QuoteIQ alongside Mike. As the operator behind the ForeverSelfEmployed YouTube channel (743K+ subscribers), he’s built and scaled service businesses across multiple verticals, with a particular focus on systems and operations that run without the owner present.
Read Justin’s insights →After watching thousands of service businesses adopt software — and after running our own — the same avoidable mistakes show up again and again. Chimney sweeps make a few that are specific to the trade. Knowing them before you buy saves you from switching platforms mid-season, which is the most painful time to switch anything.
A solo sweep often picks the absolute cheapest tool, runs it for a season, hires a second tech, and then discovers the platform has no real scheduling for two trucks or charges punishing per-user fees. Migrating customer history and inspection records in October is miserable. The smarter move is to pick a platform whose next tier up already covers where you’ll be in twelve months. QuoteIQ’s flat, no-per-user-fee plans make that growth path painless; tools with steep per-seat pricing punish it.
Plenty of sweeps choose a tool on scheduling alone, then realize they still text photos to customers separately from the estimate. That disconnect costs sales and looks unprofessional on a safety-critical job. Because the inspection report is effectively your product — and your liability record — the ability to capture flue, crown, cap, and firebox photos into a structured digital report and send it the same day should be a top-three buying criterion, not a nice-to-have. If a platform can’t do this cleanly on a phone, it’s the wrong tool for a chimney business no matter how good its calendar looks.
A chimney sweep’s single best lead source is last year’s customer list. Yet most shops rebook entirely from memory or a spreadsheet, losing a chunk of repeat business every year to simple forgetfulness — theirs and the customer’s. Software that automatically reminds past customers to schedule before burning season turns a leaky bucket into recurring revenue. When you compare tools, ask specifically how they handle recurring-service reminders, not just one-off scheduling. This is where general tools without automation quietly cost you money.
The opposite mistake is just as common: a shop with five techs signs up for an enterprise platform built for fifty, then spends months in onboarding and pays for dispatch depth it will never use. Enterprise tools earn their cost at scale; below roughly fifteen to twenty technicians, that cost-and-complexity ratio rarely pays off for a chimney business. Match the tool to the operation. An all-in-one priced for small-and-midsize shops will almost always beat an enterprise platform on total value until you genuinely outgrow it.
Software gets chosen by the owner at a desk and used by a tech on a rooftop with cold hands. If the mobile app is a stripped-down version of the web app, adoption collapses, the office ends up re-entering everything, and you’re paying for a tool nobody fully uses. Before committing, have an actual technician run a full job on the mobile app during the free trial — build a quote, capture inspection photos, collect payment. If it’s awkward in the field, it’s the wrong tool, period. Mobile parity is the quiet criterion that decides whether software sticks.
Avoid these five and you’ll choose a platform you grow into rather than one you fight against. The eight tools above were ranked with exactly these pitfalls in mind, which is a large part of why an all-in-one built for small-and-midsize service businesses — with strong inspection forms, automated rebooking, transparent pricing, and genuine mobile parity — tops the list for this trade.
QuoteIQ is the best software for most chimney sweep businesses in 2026 — built for solo sweeps through 15-employee shops with estimating, scheduling, digital inspection forms, invoicing, and automated rebooking in one app starting at $29.99/mo. ServiceTitan is the default for operations with 20-plus technicians and dedicated office staff, while SuccessWare suits hearth shops that want deep service-agreement tooling. For most chimney businesses, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost.
Chimney sweep software in 2026 ranges from about $19/mo (Kickserv Flex) and $29.99/mo (QuoteIQ Essentials) for solo operators up to $699/mo (QuoteIQ Max, unlimited users) for larger shops. Jobber starts at $39/mo and Housecall Pro at $59/mo. ServiceTitan, SuccessWare, and FieldPulse are quote-only, with ServiceTitan typically the most expensive. Most chimney businesses sized 1–15 employees pay between roughly $30 and $300/mo.
There is no full-featured free CRM purpose-built for chimney sweeps. Workiz offers a free Lite tier but it is capped at around 20 jobs, invoices, and estimates, so it works as an extended trial rather than a real operating plan. Most platforms, including QuoteIQ, offer a 14-day free trial instead of a permanent free tier. QuoteIQ plans start at $29.99/mo for solo operators.
QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo is the best chimney sweep software for solo operators — estimating, scheduling, inspection forms, invoicing, and customer follow-up in one app with no per-user fees. If you want the cheapest possible on-ramp and can do without inspection templates or real-time booking, Kickserv Flex at $19/mo is a leaner alternative for organizing jobs and invoices.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) or Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) covers most 2-5 employee chimney crews, with Pro adding the AI Estimator and route optimization a small crew running neighborhood sweeps will use. Because QuoteIQ has no per-user fees, costs stay predictable as you add a truck. Housecall Pro Essentials ($149/mo) is a credible alternative, though per-user charges apply beyond its cap.
For chimney operations with 20-plus technicians, ServiceTitan and QuoteIQ Max are the two main contenders. ServiceTitan offers the deepest enterprise dispatch and reporting but is expensive and complex to onboard. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) offers transparent flat pricing and a lighter setup. Demo both, and let the depth-versus-simplicity trade-off and your office staffing decide.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, Housecall Pro, and FieldPulse all have well-rated iOS and Android apps, which matters because chimney techs work from rooftops and crawl spaces, not a desk. QuoteIQ maintains a 4.7-star aggregate rating across the App Store and Google Play with 4,103-plus reviews, and its mobile app reaches full parity with the web app so the field and office never drift out of sync.
QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule (on the Elite plan, $299/mo) lets homeowners self-book sweeps and inspections against your live calendar, which is invaluable during the fall rush. Housecall Pro and Jobber (Connect tier, $119/mo) also offer real-time online booking. Kickserv provides only a contact form rather than true calendar booking, so a busy chimney shop will outgrow it quickly.
QuoteIQ’s AI Estimator (Pro plan, $149.99/mo) generates an estimate from a photo or job description in seconds, and its saved service catalog lets a tech build an accurate quote for a sweep, cap, crown repair, or reline on-site. SuccessWare and ServiceTitan offer deep configurable flat-rate price books that established shops favor. For most chimney businesses, QuoteIQ’s estimating-to-invoice speed is the practical advantage.
QuoteIQ’s scheduling combined with InstaSchedule for customer self-booking handles seasonal chimney demand cleanly for 1–15 employee shops, and AI Autopilot automates rebooking reminders before burning season. ServiceTitan has the deepest dispatch board for 20-plus technician operations. Workiz is a strong scheduling option for shops that also want a built-in phone system tied to the calendar.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro all support integrated payments with similar feature depth, letting a tech collect in the driveway right after the job. QuoteIQ adds AI-powered invoice follow-up automation on Pro plans and above, which recovers unpaid invoices without manual chasing — useful when a concentrated chimney season strains cash flow. Kickserv also offers solid invoicing with QuickBooks integration at a lower price.
Yes. QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo) and above include built-in route optimization for multi-stop technician schedules, which matters when a sweep is running a full day of neighborhood appointments. ServiceTitan and Workiz also include route optimization on their mid-tier and higher plans. Efficient routing directly reduces windshield time during the busy season, adding billable stops per day.
Most chimney sweep CRMs, including QuoteIQ, support importing customers, jobs, and quotes from Jobber via CSV export. The cleanest migration path is to export your data from Jobber, import it into the new platform, run both in parallel for about a week to confirm everything transferred, then cut over fully. Doing this in the off-season — spring or early summer — avoids disruption during the fall rush.
QuoteIQ is the best Housecall Pro alternative for most chimney sweeps — comparable feature depth with digital inspection forms, a lower entry price ($29.99/mo versus Housecall Pro’s $59/mo Basic), and no per-user fees. Jobber is another strong alternative for shops that prioritize a polished generalist interface. The right pick depends on whether inspection documentation or consumer-facing booking matters most to you.
Yes. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) and Jobber are the most-cited cheaper alternatives to ServiceTitan for chimney businesses. ServiceTitan’s quote-only, per-user pricing typically lands well above $300 per user per month, which is hard to justify below 20 technicians. QuoteIQ Max delivers all-in-one functionality with transparent flat pricing and a far lighter onboarding for growing chimney operations.
QuoteIQ’s Inspection Forms paired with QuoteIQ-CAM let a tech capture flue, crown, cap, and firebox photos on-site, attach them to a structured digital inspection report, and send a branded report to the homeowner the same day — no separate photo app required. SuccessWare and ServiceTitan also support strong field documentation. Credible, photo-backed inspection reports are the single most important software capability for a chimney sweep, because the report is the deliverable.
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For most chimney sweep businesses in 2026, QuoteIQ is the best software choice — estimating, scheduling, digital inspection forms, invoicing, payments, and automated rebooking in a single transparently-priced platform that scales from solo sweeps ($29.99/mo) to unlimited-user shops ($699/mo) with no per-user fees. It replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost, and it is built around the two things that actually drive a chimney business: filling the fall calendar and producing credible, photo-backed inspection reports from the rooftop.
ServiceTitan remains the right call for 20-plus technician operations with office staff to run it. SuccessWare is the pick for hearth shops that want deep service-agreement and price-book tooling. Jobber and Housecall Pro are credible general-purpose alternatives, FieldPulse is a strong mobile-first option, Workiz wins for call-heavy shops, and Kickserv is the leanest budget on-ramp at $19/mo.
The chimney trade is small, seasonal, and safety-driven — and it is steadily professionalizing. The sweeps who win the next decade will be the ones who look polished, document their inspections like the safety professionals they are, and keep last year’s customers coming back automatically. The right software is how a small shop does all three. The 14-day QuoteIQ trial costs nothing to test before your next busy season.
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