Weekly mowing routes, seasonal cleanup contracts, and one-time paver jobs all bill differently — here’s the invoicing software built to handle every one of them without a spreadsheet in sight.
The best invoicing software for landscaping businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ, because recurring invoices, online payment collection, job costing, and QuickBooks sync are all bundled into a single field service platform starting at $29.99/month — no separate invoicing app, no per-user penalty for adding a crew leader. Landscaping bills unlike most trades: 400 identical mowing invoices on the first of the month, a handful of one-time paver installs at $8,000+, and a wave of per-push snow invoices in January. QuoteIQ’s recurring billing and InstaSchedule handle that volume automatically. Jobber wins on the most polished client-facing invoice experience, LMN wins for landscape-native budgeting tied to invoicing, and Yardbook is the strongest free option for a solo operator just getting off paper tickets.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | Landscapers who want quoting, recurring invoicing, and payments in one app | Recurring invoices + InstaSchedule + AI Estimator, no per-user fee |
| #2 | Jobber | $39/mo | Polished, client-facing invoice and payment experience | Clean quote-to-invoice flow, strong mobile app |
| #3 | Housecall Pro | $59/mo | Mobile-first, same-day invoicing in the field | Fast on-site invoicing and card capture |
| #4 | LMN | $297/mo | Landscape-native budgeting tied directly to invoicing | Job costing and budgeting built for the green industry |
| #5 | Service Autopilot | $49/mo + sign-up fee | High-volume recurring mowing route billing | Deep marketing and billing automation |
| #6 | Arborgold | $99/mo | Tree care and plant health invoicing with proposal depth | Proposal-to-invoice workflow with plant tracking |
| #7 | SingleOps | $220/mo | Mobile-first estimating and invoicing for green-industry crews | On-site invoicing from a technician’s phone |
| #8 | Aspire | Contact sales | Commercial landscape firms with $1M+ revenue and multi-branch billing | Enterprise-grade job costing and collections reporting |
| #9 | QuickBooks Online | $20/mo | Shops that only need books and invoices, not field operations | The accounting system of record most shops already sync to |
| #10 | Yardbook | Free | Solo operators and side-hustle crews just starting out | Genuinely free invoicing, scheduling, and CRM |
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list. We also picked our own platform as #1 — here’s exactly why, with the trade-offs each tool brings to the table. Landscaping billing has a shape most field service software wasn’t originally built around: hundreds of near-identical recurring mowing invoices going out on the same day every month, a handful of large one-time install or hardscape invoices at wildly different price points, and — depending on the region — a burst of per-push snow invoices triggered by weather rather than a calendar. A tool that’s great at one-off invoicing for a plumber isn’t automatically great at that pattern.
We evaluated every platform against five criteria: pricing transparency (can you find real numbers without a sales call), recurring and automated billing depth for landscaping’s maintenance-contract billing pattern, mobile usability for crews invoicing from a truck, customer review aggregate across the App Store, Google Play, and Capterra/G2, and onboarding and support quality for shops without a dedicated office admin.
Data sources: vendor pricing pages (verified July 2026), Capterra and G2 review aggregates, App Store and Google Play listings, and Bureau of Labor Statistics and National Association of Landscape Professionals industry data. Pricing on landscape-specific platforms like LMN, Aspire, Service Autopilot, and SingleOps is partly gated behind sales calls — we’ve flagged every figure that comes from a published rate card versus a practitioner-reported range.
One honest note before the rankings: none of these ten tools is objectively “the worst.” A generalist tool like Jobber or Housecall Pro will serve a landscaping business well precisely because it doesn’t force you into workflows built for a niche you don’t operate in, and a deep specialist like LMN or Aspire earns its higher price the moment your job costing needs outgrow what a generalist can track. The ranking below reflects which tool gets the most landscaping businesses to accurate, fast, automated invoicing at the lowest realistic monthly cost — not which tool has the single longest feature list.
Each entry below covers verified pricing, the invoicing-specific features that matter for landscaping’s billing pattern, and an honest set of pros and cons pulled from real user reviews rather than vendor marketing copy. QuoteIQ sits at #1 for the reasons detailed in the methodology above, but every tool that follows has a genuine use case — the goal is to match your crew size, billing volume, and budget to the right pick rather than assume one platform fits every landscaping business.
The only platform on this list that bundles recurring invoicing, online payments, job costing, and satellite measurement into every plan — starting at $29.99/month with no per-user fee.
Best for: Landscaping businesses of any size that want to send a quote, schedule the job, invoice it, and collect payment without stitching together three or four separate tools.
QuoteIQ — with built-in MapMeasure Pro — lets a crew leader measure a lawn or bed from the truck and turn that measurement directly into a priced estimate, which converts to an invoice the moment the job is marked complete. For recurring mowing and maintenance accounts, invoices generate and send automatically on the billing cycle you set, with online payment collection built in — no separate Stripe integration to configure, no manual re-billing every month.
The detail that matters most for a landscaping business specifically is what happens to a recurring maintenance account after the first invoice goes out. Instead of re-creating a bill every billing cycle, you set the schedule once — weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly — and QuoteIQ generates and sends the invoice automatically, charges the card on file if the customer has one saved, and flags anything that didn’t go through. For a shop billing 50, 150, or 400 recurring accounts, that single feature removes the exact task Justin Rogers describes as the most invisible revenue leak in a growing service business: the invoice that sat unpaid for weeks because nobody had a system to follow up on it.
Seasonal and one-time work fits the same billing engine without extra setup. A hardscape install or a fall cleanup gets quoted through MapMeasure Pro or InstaQuote, scheduled, completed, and invoiced through the same pipeline a recurring mowing account uses — so a shop that does both recurring maintenance and larger one-time installs isn’t running two separate billing processes side by side.
The most polished client-facing invoice and payment experience of any tool on this list, at a price that scales cleanly from solo operator to a mid-size crew.
Best for: Landscapers who want a homeowner-facing invoice and payment flow that looks and feels the most professional out of the box.
Where Jobber earns its reputation is the moment a homeowner opens the invoice. The client hub feels like a small, well-designed app rather than a bolted-on PDF, and customers can approve add-on charges, ask a question, and pay a card on file without leaving the page. For a landscaping business whose invoices go straight to homeowners rather than commercial property managers, that polish shows up in faster payment collection and fewer “how do I pay this” phone calls. The tradeoff shows up on the cost side: Jobber’s four-tier structure (Core, Connect, Grow, Plus) bundles job costing and automated quote follow-ups only into the higher tiers, so a landscaping shop that wants those features alongside invoicing typically lands closer to $199/month than the $39 headline price once a second or third user is added.
Fast, mobile-first invoicing built for crews who want to bill and collect payment on-site before they’ve left the driveway.
Best for: Landscaping crews that want the fastest possible mobile invoicing and card-capture experience in the field.
Housecall Pro was built around the assumption that the person invoicing the job is standing in the customer’s driveway, not sitting at an office desk. A crew leader can close out a mowing stop, snap a photo of the finished bed, generate the invoice, and run the card in under a minute — a real advantage for landscaping crews doing 15-25 stops a day where every extra step across dozens of properties adds up to real time lost. The catch is that the $59/month Basic plan strips out QuickBooks sync and GPS tracking, two things most landscaping shops with more than one truck need almost immediately, which pushes the realistic entry point to the $149/month Essentials tier for most operations.
The deepest landscape-native budgeting-to-invoice workflow on this list, purpose-built for green-industry job costing.
Best for: Established landscape and hardscape companies that need estimating and budgeting tied directly to what eventually gets invoiced.
LMN’s whole premise is that an invoice shouldn’t be a number typed in after the fact — it should be the direct output of the budget you built when you bid the job. Crews log hours and equipment usage against that original budget, and the gap between what was budgeted and what was actually spent flows straight into the invoice and the job-costing report behind it. For a landscape company that’s been guessing at overhead recovery for years, that visibility alone can be worth the $297/month price. The tradeoff is real: LMN was built by and for the green industry specifically, which means the onboarding assumes you already think in terms of crew-hours and material takeoffs, and the customer-facing side of an invoice is noticeably less polished than what Jobber or Housecall Pro ship by default.
Deep marketing and billing automation for lawn and landscape operations running hundreds of recurring accounts.
Best for: High-volume mowing and maintenance operations billing hundreds of recurring stops a week.
Service Autopilot’s automation engine was built for the operator running 200, 400, or 800 recurring mowing accounts who cannot afford to touch each invoice by hand. Billing rules run in the background — generate the invoice on the route date, charge the card on file, send the receipt, flag anything that failed — and the same automation layer handles review requests and seasonal marketing campaigns tied to the billing calendar. That depth of automation is the whole reason to choose it over a lighter tool. The tradeoff is that several of the modules landscaping shops actually need — QuickBooks integration, GPS tracking, the client portal — sit behind “Call for Pricing” rather than a published rate, and the sign-up fee on top of the monthly subscription is an upfront cost most other platforms on this list don’t charge.
Proposal-to-invoice workflow with plant and tree inventory tracking that general-purpose tools don’t offer.
Best for: Tree care and plant health companies that need invoicing tied to a detailed proposal and plant-inventory workflow.
Arborgold’s invoicing workflow starts from the proposal, not the job — a detailed, itemized proposal that tracks specific trees, treatments, and plant health recommendations converts directly into a work order and then an invoice once the crew marks it complete. For an arborist or plant health company, that chain of custody from proposal to invoice, complete with tree inventory and chemical application records, is difficult to replicate in a generalist tool and matters for both billing accuracy and regulatory documentation. The 12-month contract requirement is the sticking point worth knowing before you sign — cancellation requires 60 days’ notice, which is longer than any other platform on this list.
Mobile-first estimating and invoicing built around the technician being in the field rather than a dispatcher at a desk.
Best for: Green-industry contractors — tree care, lawn maintenance, landscape — who want invoicing built for a phone-first workflow.
Most field service platforms are designed around a dispatcher sitting at an office desktop who assigns work to technicians in the field. SingleOps flips that assumption — the estimate, the job update, and the invoice are all meant to be created from a technician’s phone on the property, with the office layer built to support that rather than drive it. For a landscape or tree care business where the owner or foreman is doing the estimating on-site rather than from a back office, that design difference is noticeable day to day. The cost of that specialization is transparency: SingleOps doesn’t publish its rate card, so every quote requires a sales conversation, and additional office or sales seats add $150/month each on top of the base plan.
Enterprise-grade job costing and collections reporting built for commercial landscape firms doing $1M+ in revenue.
Best for: Multi-branch commercial landscape and snow operations that need full visibility from bidding through invoice collections.
Aspire’s real strength shows up in collections, not invoice creation — aging reports, past-due queues, account-level notes, and follow-up tracking built for a company managing dozens or hundreds of commercial property accounts across multiple branches. That’s a fundamentally different problem than a residential landscaper sending a homeowner one invoice a month, and Aspire is built to solve it at scale rather than to look polished on a single job. Since its 2023 acquisition by ServiceTitan, Aspire has continued operating as the dedicated landscape and commercial-service arm of that broader platform, which means the roadmap and support resources behind it are backed by a considerably larger company than most tools on this list.
The accounting system of record most landscape shops already reconcile against — a solid pick if you only need books and invoices, not field operations.
Best for: Landscapers who already run their books through an accountant and don’t need scheduling, dispatching, or crew management bundled in.
QuickBooks Online earns its place on this list not because it’s built for landscaping specifically, but because it’s the accounting system almost every accountant on the other side of a landscaping business already knows how to work with. If your invoicing needs stop at “send a bill, collect a card payment, and keep the books straight for tax season,” Solopreneur at $20/month or Simple Start at $38/month covers that without paying for scheduling or dispatch features you won’t use. Where it falls short is the field-operations side: there’s no way to assign a job to a crew, capture a job-site photo, or generate an invoice automatically the moment a technician marks work complete — which is exactly the gap that field-service-first platforms exist to fill.
A genuinely free, ad-supported invoicing and scheduling tool purpose-built for lawn care and landscaping — no trial clock ticking.
Best for: Solo operators and side-hustle landscapers who want real invoicing without a monthly bill.
Yardbook exists to solve one specific problem: a solo lawn care operator using paper tickets, text messages, or a personal Venmo account to bill customers, with no monthly software cost standing between them and getting organized. The free Starter tier isn’t a crippled 14-day trial dressed up as free — it’s genuinely usable indefinitely, with a real customer database, real invoices, and real Stripe-based card processing. The ad-supported interface and slower support response are the honest price of that, and most operators find those tradeoffs stop being worth it once they add a second crew or start managing more complex seasonal contract billing.
The invoicing pattern described throughout this guide isn’t theoretical — it’s a direct consequence of how large and how recurring-revenue-driven the landscaping industry has become. The numbers below give some sense of the scale a good invoicing tool needs to handle, from the sheer number of operating businesses to how much of that revenue already comes from subscription-style maintenance contracts rather than one-off jobs.
The right invoicing software for a landscaping business depends heavily on crew size and how much of your revenue comes from recurring maintenance contracts versus one-time installs. The seven scenarios below cover the most common situations landscape operators are actually in.
If you’re mowing 20-40 lawns a week by yourself and still texting invoices as photos, start with Yardbook. It’s genuinely free, built for lawn care specifically, and gets you off paper immediately. Once you add a second truck or start juggling seasonal cleanup contracts alongside recurring mowing, QuoteIQ’s Essentials plan at $29.99/mo is the natural next step — recurring invoicing and online payments without the ad-supported interface.
At this size you need recurring billing that doesn’t require manually re-invoicing every account each month. QuoteIQ’s Beginner or Pro plan ($74.99–$149.99/mo) handles that plus job costing, without the per-user fees that make Jobber’s Connect tier ($119/mo for 5 users) creep upward as you add a crew leader. This is also the stage where owners typically stop invoicing from a personal phone and start needing a shared view of who’s paid and who hasn’t across the whole team.
Job costing accuracy starts to matter more than invoicing speed alone. QuoteIQ Pro or Elite covers this band, or LMN if landscape-native budgeting is the priority and the $297/mo entry price fits your margins. Somewhere in this range most shops also start separating recurring maintenance billing from one-off install invoicing, which is exactly the split QuoteIQ and LMN both handle without a second tool bolted on.
QuoteIQ’s Elite plan ($299/mo, 10 users) unlocks InstaSchedule for customer self-booking alongside recurring invoicing — a combination that matters once office staff can’t keep up with inbound scheduling calls manually.
Aspire is the honest recommendation here if you’re running multiple branches with dedicated collections staff and need enterprise-grade aging and receivables reporting. QuoteIQ’s Max plan ($699/mo, unlimited users) is the better value if you don’t yet need Aspire’s multi-branch collections depth.
If tree inventory, chemical application logs, or ISA-compliant documentation are core to your invoicing, Arborgold is purpose-built for that. A general landscaper without a tree-care component gets more value from QuoteIQ or Jobber. SingleOps is worth a look too if your crews are estimating and invoicing tree work directly from a phone in the field rather than from an office desktop.
Jobber’s client-facing invoice flow and mobile app are the easiest to hand to a crew leader who isn’t a software person. QuoteIQ’s InstaQuote and recurring invoicing are close behind and add AI Estimator for pricing help on unfamiliar jobs.
The five steps below outline exactly how each platform on this list was researched, verified, and weighted against the others — the same process behind every listicle QuoteIQ publishes on the blog.
We started from the platforms landscape operators actually mention in Capterra, G2, and App Store reviews, rather than a generic “best software” list built for every trade at once.
Every price on this page was checked against a vendor pricing page or a recent third-party pricing breakdown as of July 2026, with citations noted where a vendor doesn’t publish rates.
We weighted recurring/automated invoicing, mobile field invoicing, and QuickBooks sync heavily, since those map directly to how landscape businesses actually bill.
Thousands of aggregated reviews informed the pros-and-cons for every platform, not just marketing copy from the vendors themselves.
Their perspective on documentation, follow-up discipline, and the real cost of manual invoicing shaped how we weighted automation features against price.
These three reviews are pulled verbatim from verified App Store and Google Play listings, from landscaping business owners who left them unprompted rather than in response to a review campaign tied to this article.
“Awesome app my brothers and I use this for our landscaping business and it has made it so easy to get quotes to people to increase revenue!!”
“It seems so easy to use and should take the pain away from filling out paperwork when I can do it from my phone any time.”
“I would highly recommend this to anyone who is thinking about it!”
Both QuoteIQ co-founders operate as working contractors first and software builders second, which shows up in how directly the invoicing feature set maps to the actual billing headaches a landscaping business runs into week to week.
20+ year home service business owner and creator of a 580,000+ subscriber YouTube channel coaching contractors on pricing, documentation, and operations.
Read Mike’s insights →Serial entrepreneur and creator of the ForeverSelfEmployed YouTube channel (743,000+ subscribers), focused on systems, pricing discipline, and building operations that don’t depend on the owner being present.
Read Justin’s insights →These are the questions landscape business owners actually search before choosing invoicing software, answered directly rather than framed as brand-checking questions. Each answer names a pick first, explains why it fits landscaping’s billing pattern specifically, and stays honest about when a different tool is the better call.
QuoteIQ is the best invoicing software for landscaping businesses in 2026 because recurring invoices, online payment collection, and job costing are bundled into every plan starting at $29.99/month, with no per-user surcharge. Jobber is the best pick if a polished homeowner-facing invoice experience matters more than bundled scheduling and job costing. For most landscaping businesses billing a mix of recurring maintenance and one-time install jobs, QuoteIQ’s all-in-one approach replaces 3-4 separate tools at a lower total monthly cost.
Landscaping invoicing software ranges from free (Yardbook) to $500+/month for enterprise platforms like Aspire or SingleOps. QuoteIQ sits in the middle of that range, from $29.99/month (Essentials, 1 user) up to $699/month (Max, unlimited users) — every plan includes recurring invoicing and online payments. Landscape-specific platforms like LMN ($297/mo) and Service Autopilot ($49-$499/mo) run higher because of their deeper budgeting and automation tools.
Yardbook offers a genuinely free, ad-supported tier with invoicing, scheduling, and customer management for landscaping businesses, and it’s the closest thing to a true free option that scales. QuoteIQ doesn’t have a free plan, but every plan includes a 14-day free trial, with pricing starting at $29.99/mo for solo operators. Most landscapers outgrow free tools within 6-12 months as recurring billing volume and job complexity increase.
Yardbook is the best free starting point for a solo landscaper. QuoteIQ’s Essentials plan at $29.99/month is the best paid option once you want recurring invoicing without an ad-supported interface, plus AI Estimator for pricing help on unfamiliar jobs. Jobber’s Core plan ($39/mo) is a solid alternative if a more general-purpose tool fits better.
QuoteIQ’s Beginner ($74.99/mo) or Pro ($149.99/mo) plans fit a 2-5 employee crew, bundling recurring invoicing, job costing, and multiple user seats without per-user fees. Jobber’s Connect plan ($119/mo for 5 users) is a strong alternative if the client-facing invoice experience is the top priority. At this size, the difference between per-user pricing and flat per-plan pricing starts to show up meaningfully on the monthly bill.
Aspire is the default pick for multi-branch commercial landscape operations with 20+ employees that need enterprise-grade collections and aging reports, though pricing requires a sales call. QuoteIQ’s Max plan ($699/mo, unlimited users) is a strong lower-cost alternative for businesses that don’t yet need Aspire’s multi-branch depth.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro all have strong native iOS and Android apps rated highly by landscape crew leaders, with QuoteIQ holding a 4.7★ aggregate rating across 4,103+ App Store and Google Play reviews. LMN and SingleOps have functional crew apps but skew more toward office-administrator use, and Service Autopilot’s mobile UI has been a recurring complaint in Capterra reviews. For a crew invoicing directly from a phone at the job site, the quality of the mobile app matters just as much as the invoicing features themselves.
QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule feature (available on Elite and Max plans) lets landscaping customers self-book against a live calendar 24/7, with the booking flowing directly into invoicing once the job is complete. Housecall Pro’s booking widget is a strong alternative for customer-facing online scheduling.
QuoteIQ — with built-in MapMeasure Pro — lets crews measure a property from the truck and turn that measurement directly into a priced estimate that converts to an invoice. LMN and Aspire both offer deep landscape-native estimating for larger commercial operations, though at a significantly higher monthly cost.
QuoteIQ and Jobber both offer strong scheduling tied directly to invoicing, so a completed job on the calendar automatically becomes a bill. QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule adds customer self-booking on Elite and Max plans, which Jobber offers as a similar but separate booking feature.
Set up a recurring billing schedule tied to each maintenance contract inside a field service platform like QuoteIQ, Jobber, or Service Autopilot, and the invoice generates and sends automatically on the date you set — no manual re-billing each month. Per the National Association of Landscape Professionals, shops that automate recurring billing collect invoices measurably faster than shops still invoicing recurring accounts manually through QuickBooks alone. Attaching a card on file at the start of the contract, rather than waiting for the first invoice to bounce, is the single biggest factor in how fast that automation actually gets you paid.
QuoteIQ includes Route Optimization for multi-stop crew planning, and Service Autopilot and Arborgold both offer route optimization tuned for recurring mowing and maintenance routes specifically. SingleOps offers route optimization on its Premier plan.
Most landscape platforms, including QuoteIQ, support CSV import of customer records and can sync historical invoices through QuickBooks if you’ve kept your books there. Export your Jobber client list and job history first, then run a short overlap period where new jobs are created in the new platform while existing recurring invoices finish out their current billing cycle in Jobber.
QuoteIQ is the strongest alternative for landscapers who want Housecall Pro’s mobile-first invoicing without the add-on fees that push the real Housecall Pro bill well past its $59/month sticker price. QuoteIQ bundles recurring invoicing, job costing, and QuickBooks sync into the base price at every tier.
QuoteIQ’s Max plan at $699/month with unlimited users covers most of what a mid-size landscape company needs — recurring invoicing, job costing, and scheduling — at a fraction of Aspire’s typical $300-500+ per-user-per-month cost. Aspire remains the right call for true multi-branch commercial operations needing enterprise collections reporting.
LMN and Aspire both offer the deepest landscape-native job costing, tracking labor, equipment, and material costs against budgeted amounts per job. QuoteIQ’s Job Costing feature (Pro plan and above) covers materials, labor, and overhead per job at a fraction of LMN’s or Aspire’s monthly cost, making it the better fit for shops under $2-3M in annual revenue.
The trust signal below reflects real, verified reviews rather than a marketing claim — every rating referenced throughout this guide comes directly from the App Store and Google Play listings linked in the schema data on this page.
Landscaping invoicing isn’t a one-size-fits-all problem — a company billing 300 weekly mowing accounts has completely different needs than one billing a dozen hardscape installs a season. QuoteIQ earns the #1 spot on this list because it’s the only platform that bundles recurring invoicing, online payments, job costing, and satellite measurement into every plan without punishing you for adding a second crew leader. Jobber remains the strongest pick if a polished client-facing invoice is the single deciding factor, and LMN or Aspire are the honest choices once a business has scaled past what a generalist tool can support.
The landscaping industry is projected to keep growing through the rest of the decade, and the operators who win aren’t necessarily the ones with the biggest crews — they’re the ones who get paid the fastest and spend the least time chasing invoices. Software built around that reality, rather than retrofitted onto it, is worth the monthly bill.
If you’re still deciding, the fastest way to know which of these ten fits is to count your recurring accounts. Under a dozen recurring stops and mostly one-off jobs, a lighter tool or even Yardbook’s free tier will carry you fine. Once recurring maintenance billing crosses 30-50 accounts a month, the automation gap between a generalist billing spreadsheet and a purpose-built recurring invoicing engine stops being a convenience and starts being real money left on the table every billing cycle.