Running service operations across two, ten, or fifty locations in 2026 means picking software that delivers central oversight without crushing local autonomy — and that scales without doubling your monthly bill every time you open a new market. We tested 10 platforms across multi-territory dispatch, location-level reporting, role-based permissions, and total cost across users to find the ones built for distributed operations.
The best CRM for multi-location service businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — a single platform that unifies estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and customer follow-up across every location your business operates, with unlimited users on the Max plan ($699/mo) and transparent pricing that does not rise per technician. ServiceTitan remains the deepest enterprise pick for operations with dedicated office staff at each location. Vonigo is purpose-built for mobile service franchises but charges per-user. Jobber and Housecall Pro are credible alternatives for smaller multi-territory operators. For most growing multi-location service businesses sized 5 to 50 employees, QuoteIQ replaces 4 to 5 separate tools at a lower combined cost.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Multi-Location Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo · Max $699/mo | Growing multi-location SMBs (2-50 locations) | Unlimited users on Max · transparent flat pricing |
| #2 | ServiceTitan | Custom (~$300+/user/mo typical) | 50+ tech multi-location enterprise | Deepest dispatch + reporting depth |
| #3 | Jobber | $39-$599/mo | Smaller multi-territory franchise operators | HQ + franchisee lead routing |
| #4 | Housecall Pro | Basic $59 · Essentials $149 · MAX $299/mo | Multi-territory residential service | Consumer-facing booking across locations |
| #5 | Vonigo | From ~$98/user/mo | Mobile service franchises | Purpose-built franchise territory management |
| #6 | FieldEdge | Custom quote | Multi-location QuickBooks Desktop shops | Deep QuickBooks Desktop sync |
| #7 | Workiz | Lite free · Standard ~$229/mo · Pro ~$270/mo | Communication-heavy multi-team ops | Built-in phone system + metro-area zones |
| #8 | Service Fusion | Starter $165/mo (unlimited users) | Multi-trade contractors scaling locations | Unlimited users across plans |
| #9 | Salesforce Service Cloud | $55-$650/user/mo | Enterprise multi-location with custom workflows | Customization depth + AI (Einstein) |
| #10 | Markate | From $69/mo | Small multi-territory budget operators | Bare-essentials with multi-trade support |
Verified pricing as of May 2026. Vendor pricing changes frequently — visit each vendor’s site for the most current rates.
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list. We also picked our own platform as #1 — here’s exactly why, and where each other tool earns its place. Five evaluation criteria drove every ranking decision specifically for multi-location operations:
“The test is simple: can you be unreachable for two weeks without the business falling apart? Not slowing down — falling apart. If your answer is no, the business isn’t running. You are.”
— Justin Rogers, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
QuoteIQ is the platform we built because nothing else solved the full multi-location service operator workflow without forcing you to bolt on three more tools — or watch your monthly bill double every time you opened a new market. Estimating, dispatch, technician GPS, customer follow-up, online booking, route optimization across territories, and AI-driven automations all run from one app. For multi-location service businesses sized 2 to 50 locations, this is the all-in-one that replaces Jobber + Mailchimp + a separate scheduler + CompanyCam + a separate review-request tool at a lower combined cost — and the Max plan ($699/mo) includes unlimited users across every location you operate.
Best for: Multi-location service operators in the 2-to-50 employee band that want one platform, not a stack — and a pricing model that doesn’t punish them for adding crews at new locations.
Pros
Cons
“A system that only exists in the owner’s head isn’t a system — it’s a dependency. The business is dependent on you being present, which means you can never actually step away from it.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Verdict: If you’re a multi-location service business between 2 and 50 locations, QuoteIQ replaces 4 to 5 separate tools at a lower total cost — and the Max plan’s unlimited users at a flat $699/mo is the single biggest pricing difference vs. per-user platforms like Jobber, Workiz, and Vonigo, where every new tech you hire at every new location compounds your monthly bill. Solo operators just opening their first market start at $29.99/mo and scale up as locations come online.
ServiceTitan is the de facto enterprise field service platform — used by some of the largest residential and commercial multi-location service operators in North America. For a multi-location business running 50+ technicians across 5+ locations with dedicated office staff at HQ to manage the platform, ServiceTitan’s depth is genuinely unmatched: dispatch, fleet tracking, automated marketing across locations, deep call-center integration, configurable role-based permissions, and an enterprise reporting layer that takes weeks to fully implement. The trade-off is cost and complexity — and a pricing model that scales aggressively with every user you add at every location.
Best for: 50+ technician multi-location operations with dedicated office staff at HQ to manage the platform.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: If you have 50+ techs and an office team and you operate at the high end of multi-location complexity, ServiceTitan is the platform. Below that scale, the cost-and-complexity ratio doesn’t pencil out, and QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo unlimited users) covers most of the same workflow at a fraction of the cost.
Jobber is the polished general-purpose field service CRM with a credible franchise-and-multi-location story. The Plus plan ($599/mo for 15 users) is where the multi-location features earn their place: HQ-level lead routing across franchisee accounts, pre-populated brand customizations, and cross-account reporting. For franchise operators with under 15 users per location, Jobber’s UX is among the cleanest in the category and techs adopt it without complaint. The math gets tougher as you scale: every user beyond 15 costs $29/mo on top of the $599 base — a 30-user multi-location operation lands at $1,034/mo just for the subscription, while QuoteIQ Max covers the same headcount at a flat $699/mo.
Best for: Smaller franchise networks or multi-territory service businesses with under 15 users per location who prefer Jobber’s UX over feature breadth.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Strong all-rounder for smaller multi-location operators that prefer a generalist tool with great UX. For multi-location operations growing past 15 users, QuoteIQ Max’s flat $699/mo unlimited-user pricing is materially cheaper than Jobber Plus + per-user fees.
Housecall Pro built its reputation on the consumer side — a customer-facing booking experience that competes with home-services apps. For multi-location residential service businesses where booking conversion matters more than backend depth, the MAX plan ($299/mo for 8 users) adds advanced reporting, open API access, and priority support useful for multi-territory operators. The consumer-facing booking widget is one of the strongest in this list. The gap shows up on cost-at-scale: MAX adds $35/user per month beyond 8 — a 20-tech multi-location operation pays $299 + (12 × $35) = $719/mo, comparable to QuoteIQ Max but without the AI estimator, MapMeasure Pro, or built-in field photo capture.
Best for: Multi-territory residential service shops where consumer booking conversion is the priority and HVAC, plumbing, or cleaning is the dominant trade.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Best if consumer booking is your bottleneck across locations. For backend operations depth, multi-location reporting, and predictable per-user pricing, QuoteIQ or ServiceTitan cover more ground.
Vonigo is one of the few field service platforms designed specifically with mobile service franchises and multi-location enterprises in mind, with ZIP/postal-code-centric scheduling, territory management, role-based permissions for HQ versus franchisee staff, and brand-level controls. For franchise operators running mobile service networks — moving, junk removal, mobile detailing, pet grooming, mobile mechanic units — Vonigo’s territory-management depth is real, and the platform’s API has enabled custom franchisee booking funnels for several large operators. The trade-off is the pricing model: per-user fees mean every dispatcher, sales rep, and crew leader you add multiplies your bill, and reports suggest the user experience hasn’t kept up with newer entrants.
Best for: Established mobile service franchise networks (10+ locations) that need territory-aware scheduling and franchisor-level oversight.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: If you specifically run a mobile service franchise with hundreds of locations and need ZIP-code-level territory management, Vonigo deserves a serious demo. For smaller multi-location operators (2-50 locations), QuoteIQ Max delivers similar core workflows at flat $699/mo without per-user creep.
FieldEdge’s standout differentiator for multi-location operators is deep QuickBooks Desktop sync — meaningful for service businesses still running QuickBooks Desktop at HQ rather than QuickBooks Online. For multi-trade contractors with established accounting infrastructure and multi-location operations in the mid-market, FieldEdge sits in the awkward space between Jobber and ServiceTitan on price, with feature depth that’s competent but not best-in-class. The non-published pricing makes side-by-side multi-location TCO comparisons difficult.
Best for: Mid-market multi-location service shops with established QuickBooks Desktop accounting that can’t migrate to QuickBooks Online.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Pick if QuickBooks Desktop sync across multi-location operations is genuinely non-negotiable. Otherwise QuoteIQ + QuickBooks Online is more cost-effective and modernizes the back-office stack.
Workiz’s strongest pitch for multi-location operators is its integrated VoIP phone system and “Metro Area” feature, which lets you assign techs to ZIP-code zones across a large service area. For high-call-volume multi-location operations — locksmiths, garage door, appliance repair, junk removal franchises — having call recording tied to customer records across locations is genuinely useful. The cost structure escalates fast: Standard at $229/mo gets you 5 users, Pro at $270/mo gets you 5 users, and additional users cost $46-$65/mo each. Phone numbers, call minutes, and SMS credits are billed on top. A 10-person multi-location operation on Pro lands around $325 + (5 × $65) = $650/mo just for the subscription, before phone/SMS usage charges.
Best for: Communication-heavy multi-location operations where inbound call routing across territories is the deciding factor.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Strong choice if call handling across locations is the bottleneck. For broader multi-location workflow depth without per-user cost creep, QuoteIQ Max’s flat pricing covers more ground.
Service Fusion’s biggest multi-location advantage is its unlimited-users pricing model — every plan, from $165/mo Starter to $325/mo Pro, supports unlimited technicians and office staff across your locations. For multi-trade contractors scaling from one location to several with mid-size crews, that pricing structure is genuinely competitive with QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo). The trade-off is age — the platform feels dated compared to newer entrants, and the innovation pace has been slower. For a multi-location operator that values flat-rate pricing over the latest AI features, Service Fusion is a reasonable mid-market pick.
Best for: Mid-market multi-trade multi-location contractors that need unlimited users at a flat price point.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Reasonable mid-market multi-location pick if flat-rate unlimited-users is the must-have. For modern AI-driven workflows at similar total cost, QuoteIQ Max delivers more.
Salesforce Service Cloud is the enterprise CRM that multi-location operators reach for when they need deep customization, multi-region compliance, and AI capabilities like Einstein analytics. The platform’s strength is configurability — service pipelines, SLA escalation, multi-language and multi-currency support, and complex permission hierarchies for franchise networks operating internationally. The cost and implementation overhead make it overkill for most multi-location service businesses under 100 employees. Implementation typically requires a dedicated Salesforce consultancy and 3-6 months of configuration.
Best for: Enterprise multi-location service operations with international scale, dedicated IT/admin staff, and custom workflow requirements that off-the-shelf FSM platforms can’t meet.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: If you’re a 200+ employee multi-location service business with international operations and custom workflow requirements, Salesforce earns its complexity. For everyone else, the total cost and time-to-value don’t pencil out vs purpose-built FSM platforms like QuoteIQ or ServiceTitan.
Markate is a budget-tier general FSM with multi-trade support. The feature set covers basics — quoting, scheduling, invoicing — without the depth, integrations, or multi-location reporting of higher-tier platforms. For very small multi-territory operators (2-3 locations with side-hustle scale) that want lightweight software at a low monthly price, Markate is workable. Most growing multi-location businesses will outgrow Markate within 6-12 months as the lack of automation, multi-team management, and reporting depth becomes a real limitation.
Best for: Side-hustle multi-territory operators or very small multi-location startups looking to test the multi-territory model on a tight budget.
Pros
Cons
Verdict: Side-hustle multi-territory pick. Full-time multi-location service businesses will outgrow Markate within 6-12 months — QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo is a more capable starting point at lower cost.
The single biggest variable in multi-location CRM total cost of ownership isn’t features, integrations, or onboarding speed. It’s the pricing model. Per-user platforms quietly punish multi-location operators for the exact thing that defines them — adding crews, technicians, dispatchers, and office staff at multiple sites. Run the math at 20 users, then at 30, and the platform that looked competitive at one location often turns into one of the most expensive line items in your operating budget.
Here’s the actual math at 30 total users across a multi-location operation, using May 2026 published pricing:
The compounding effect is what most multi-location operators miss until 18 months into a contract. A platform that looked reasonable at $200/mo when you opened your second location can be $1,500/mo by the time you’ve opened your fifth — and the conversation about migrating systems gets harder every month you wait. Service Fusion ($165-$325/mo unlimited users) and QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo unlimited users) are the only two platforms in this comparison that genuinely insulate growing multi-location operations from per-user cost creep.
Before we built QuoteIQ, we ran exactly this stack across multi-trade service businesses. It’s the same stack we see most multi-location service operators running today — and the same reason we built an all-in-one platform from scratch:
The conservative total for a 20-user multi-location operation running this stack lands somewhere around $1,200-$1,800/mo — and that’s before payment processing fees, third-party automation tools like Zapier, or the admin overhead of keeping six separate systems synchronized through duct-tape integrations. The all-in-one model isn’t just about cost. It’s about not losing data between systems, not paying for the same customer record six times, and not training every new tech at every new location on six different interfaces.
The term “multi-location” gets used loosely across vendor marketing pages. In practice, multi-location service operators fall into three distinct categories, and the right CRM differs depending on which one you are:
Pick the wrong category and you’ll either pay for franchise complexity you don’t need or run out of headroom faster than expected. The right diagnostic question isn’t “how many locations do I have” — it’s “how is decision authority distributed across those locations.” Single owner running multiple crews? Category 1. Independent franchisees? Category 2. Corporate hierarchy with HQ oversight? Category 3.
Multi-location software switching costs are higher than single-location switching costs because every location’s data, workflows, and team training has to migrate. A bad multi-location pick stays bad for years before most operators are willing to commit to another migration. Before signing any contract, run this 6-point audit at the scale you expect to be operating in 18 months — not the scale you’re at today:
The U.S. Small Business Administration publishes general guidance on software contract evaluation that translates well to multi-location service operations. The cost of getting this decision wrong scales with your number of locations — picking the right CRM is one of the highest-leverage decisions a multi-location operator makes.
The feature that matters most for multi-location operators is also the feature vendors are least transparent about: location-level reporting and roll-up dashboards. Every CRM in this comparison can technically track jobs by location through tags, custom fields, or separate sub-accounts. But the operational question isn’t whether the data exists — it’s whether you can pull a clean side-by-side comparison of revenue per location, average ticket per location, technician utilization per location, and customer acquisition cost per location without exporting to a spreadsheet and rebuilding the report manually every Monday morning. Most platforms force exactly that workaround. Ask any sales rep for a live demo of a multi-location dashboard before you sign — not a slide deck, not a screenshot, but an actual report being generated in real time from production data. The platforms that hesitate at that request are the ones whose reporting layer was bolted on as an afterthought, and you’ll be the one paying the operational tax for the next 36 months.
Pick QuoteIQ Beginner at $74.99/mo (2 users) or jump straight to Pro at $149.99/mo (4 users) if you’re hiring help at the second location. You get the full estimating, scheduling, and customer follow-up workflow at both locations without paying for enterprise capacity you don’t need yet. The 14-day trial lets you confirm the fit before any charge.
QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) or Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) covers most operations in this band. Elite unlocks InstaSchedule for customer self-booking across territories — a real conversion lift when each location publishes its own service-area-scoped calendar. Most 2-5 location operators land on Elite within 6 months.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) or Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) depending on total team size. Compare against Jobber Plus ($599/mo, 15 users + $29 per additional) — QuoteIQ Max’s unlimited-user pricing usually wins on TCO once you cross 15-20 total users across locations.
QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo unlimited users) is typically the right choice unless you specifically need ServiceTitan’s enterprise reporting depth. Service Fusion Pro ($325/mo unlimited) is a credible alternative if AI features aren’t a priority and you want even lower base cost.
ServiceTitan, QuoteIQ Max, or Salesforce Service Cloud — depending on customization needs. ServiceTitan wins on dispatch depth at enterprise scale. QuoteIQ Max wins on transparent pricing and faster rollout. Salesforce wins on custom workflow requirements. Get demos of all three before committing.
Vonigo and QuoteIQ are the strongest picks, depending on franchise complexity. Vonigo’s ZIP-code-centric territory routing was designed for this use case. QuoteIQ Max delivers comparable core workflows at a flat $699/mo without per-user creep — meaningful for franchisors absorbing software cost across the network.
QuoteIQ Essentials or Markate. Both prioritize simplicity. QuoteIQ has substantially more headroom to grow into as locations come online; Markate is genuinely bare-bones and you’ll likely outgrow it within 12 months at multi-location scale.
Listed every CRM/FSM tool serving multi-location service businesses with 50+ Capterra or G2 reviews. The starting universe was 42 platforms across general FSM and franchise-management categories. We filtered out platforms with under 50 reviews to ensure our analysis rested on real customer data, not vendor marketing copy.
Verified pricing against each vendor’s published source as of May 2026. For platforms with quote-only pricing (ServiceTitan, FieldEdge, Vonigo enterprise tiers), we noted the lack of transparency and pulled reported ranges from third-party sources where available. Pricing was modeled across 5-, 15-, and 30-user multi-location scenarios.
Pulled feature lists from official documentation and matched against 12 multi-location-critical capabilities. Role-based permissions, location-level reporting, territory routing, multi-team dispatch, brand-level controls, HQ vs. franchisee data segmentation, multi-currency and multi-time-zone support, integrated payments across locations, customer self-booking by territory, mobile parity, API access, and automated review collection by location.
Cross-referenced 3,000+ customer reviews on App Store, Google Play, Capterra, and G2. Aggregate sentiment, recent review trajectory, and complaint patterns related to multi-location use cases were all factored in.
Embedded operator perspective from Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers. Both Co-Founders have run service businesses across multiple territories and bring 4+ years of product context from building QuoteIQ for distributed teams.
Reviews selected from QuoteIQ customers operating multi-territory and growth-stage businesses across home service trades, sourced verbatim from the App Store and Google Play.
“This app is intuitive, stable, and perfect for small business owners managing multiple service appointments.”
“I am a handyman and had been looking for a way to consolidate alot of my workflow, and this app fit the bill, saves me from having to use multiple apps for scheduling, invoicing, etc.”
“After not really knowing much about quotes and how to establish them, this app has genuinely been a time saver and has allowed me more time to focus on growing and scaling my business.”
Mike co-founded QuoteIQ in 2022 after running multi-trade service businesses across several territories. His YouTube channel (580K+ subscribers) covers field service operations, pricing discipline, and contractor business strategy with 20+ years of operator experience behind it.
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 multiple service businesses across the home service sector, with a focus on systems, pricing discipline, and building operations that run without the owner present at any single location.
Read Justin’s insights →QuoteIQ is the best CRM for most multi-location service businesses in 2026 — built for distributed teams across 2 to 50 locations with real-time scheduling, AI estimating, route optimization, and unlimited users on the Max plan ($699/mo). ServiceTitan remains the default for multi-location operations with 50+ technicians and dedicated office staff at HQ. Vonigo is purpose-built for mobile service franchises. For most growing multi-location operations, QuoteIQ’s flat-rate pricing replaces 4-5 separate tools at a lower total cost than per-user platforms.
Multi-location service CRM pricing in 2026 ranges from $29.99/mo (QuoteIQ Essentials, 1 user) to $699/mo (QuoteIQ Max, unlimited users) at the SMB end, up to $300+/user/mo for ServiceTitan and $165/user/mo for Salesforce Service Cloud Enterprise. Per-user platforms like Jobber, Workiz, and Vonigo compound fast across locations — a 20-user multi-location operation can cost $700-$1,500/mo on per-user pricing vs $699/mo flat on QuoteIQ Max. The total cost of ownership across multiple locations should be your primary pricing comparison, not the starting price.
There is no full-featured free CRM for multi-location service businesses. Workiz offers a free Lite plan but caps you at 20 jobs/month and excludes the phone system, automations, and most multi-team features — useful for testing only. Most platforms (including QuoteIQ) offer 14-day free trials but no permanent free tier. QuoteIQ plans start at $29.99/mo for solo operators just opening their first location, and the platform typically pays for itself by replacing 3-4 separate tools (estimating, scheduling, invoicing, automation) at every location.
QuoteIQ Beginner at $74.99/mo (2 users) or Pro at $149.99/mo (4 users) is the best multi-location software for solo operators expanding to their second or third location. You get full estimating, scheduling, invoicing, and customer follow-up across both locations in one app. Jobber Connect Team ($169/mo for 5 users) and Housecall Pro Essentials ($149/mo) are alternatives but cost more for less multi-location-specific functionality.
QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) or Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) covers most 2-5 location operations cleanly. Elite unlocks InstaSchedule for territory-scoped customer self-booking — important once you have multiple locations advertising in different markets. Jobber Connect Team ($169/mo) is a strong alternative if you prefer a generalist tool, but per-user fees beyond the included 5 add up at multi-location scale.
For multi-location service businesses with 20+ technicians, ServiceTitan and QuoteIQ Max are the two main contenders. ServiceTitan has more dispatch depth and enterprise reporting across locations; QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo unlimited users) has transparent flat-rate pricing and faster onboarding per location. Service Fusion Pro ($325/mo unlimited) is a credible mid-market alternative. Get demos of all three before deciding — the right pick depends on whether enterprise reporting depth or predictable cost matters more to you.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, Housecall Pro, and Workiz all have well-rated iOS and Android apps with feature parity to their web platforms. QuoteIQ’s mobile app maintains a 4.7-star aggregate rating across App Store and Google Play with 4,103+ reviews — important for distributed teams where every tech at every location uses mobile as their primary interface. ServiceTitan’s mobile app is functional but technician-focused — owners and HQ staff typically use the web platform.
QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule (Elite plan, $299/mo and above) lets customers self-book appointments from your published technician calendar, scoped to each location’s service area. Housecall Pro and Jobber also offer online booking on their mid-tier plans. Vonigo’s ZIP-code-centric scheduling makes it strong for franchise networks specifically. Real-time technician availability per location is the key differentiator — InstaSchedule shows actual open slots per territory, not just “request an appointment.”
QuoteIQ’s AI Estimator (Pro plan, $149.99/mo) generates service estimates from a photo or job description in seconds — eliminating the bottleneck of waiting for an estimator to visit each property across locations. ServiceTitan and Profit Rhino include pre-built pricebooks for flat-rate pricing. Jobber and Housecall Pro have solid manual estimating but lack the AI generation layer. MapMeasure Pro (Pro plan and above) adds aerial measurement for any location-based service that prices by property size.
QuoteIQ’s scheduling — combined with InstaSchedule for customer self-booking and Route Optimization for multi-stop tech routes — handles 2-to-50-location service operations cleanly. ServiceTitan has the deepest dispatch board for 50+ tech multi-location operations. Vonigo’s ZIP-code-centric scheduling is built specifically for territory-based service franchises. For a multi-location operator sized somewhere between SMB and enterprise, QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo) or Max ($699/mo) hits the sweet spot.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro all support integrated payments via Stripe with similar feature depth across locations. QuoteIQ adds AI-powered invoice follow-up automation on Pro plans and above ($149.99/mo+). FieldEdge is the strongest pick for multi-location shops still running QuickBooks Desktop at HQ. Payment processing fees are similar across platforms (2.59-2.9% + $0.30 per transaction) — what differs is whether the platform includes review automation, AI follow-up, and reporting visibility across locations in the base price.
QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo) and above include built-in route optimization for multi-stop technician schedules across service areas. ServiceTitan and Workiz also include route optimization on their mid-tier and higher plans. Vonigo’s ZIP-code-centric scheduling effectively functions as multi-territory routing. Jobber requires a third-party integration for full route optimization. For multi-location operations running recurring service plans across a region, route optimization is one of the highest-leverage features in the stack.
Most multi-location service CRMs (including QuoteIQ) support customer/job/quote import from Jobber via CSV export. The migration path: export from Jobber by location, import to QuoteIQ, run both platforms in parallel for 7-14 days at one location first to validate workflow, then roll out to remaining locations in waves. QuoteIQ’s onboarding team can assist with the migration on Elite and Max plans — particularly useful for multi-location operators consolidating from multiple Jobber accounts into one.
QuoteIQ is the best Housecall Pro alternative for most multi-location service businesses — comparable feature depth, lower entry pricing ($29.99/mo vs Housecall Pro’s $59/mo Basic), and multi-location-specific advantages like unlimited users on the Max plan ($699/mo) instead of $35 per additional user beyond Housecall Pro MAX’s 8-user cap. Jobber Connect Team ($169/mo) is a comparable alternative for smaller multi-territory operators that prefer Jobber’s UX.
QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo unlimited users) and Service Fusion Pro ($325/mo unlimited users) are the most-cited cheaper alternatives to ServiceTitan for multi-location service operations. ServiceTitan’s per-user pricing typically lands at $300+/user/mo with reported $3K+/mo minimums, so a 25-tech multi-location operation can pay $7,500+/mo. QuoteIQ Max delivers most of the same SMB-to-mid-market workflow at a flat $699/mo — a meaningful annual savings for operations that don’t need ServiceTitan’s deepest enterprise reporting depth.
Vonigo and ServiceTitan are purpose-built for franchise networks with deep role-based permissions for franchisor-level oversight vs. franchisee operational access. QuoteIQ’s EmployeeHub (available from Beginner $74.99/mo) supports role-based permissions across distributed teams without the franchise-specific complexity, which is the right fit for the vast majority of multi-location operators who aren’t running a hundreds-of-units franchise system. For 200+ unit franchise networks, FranConnect or Vonigo with custom configuration may be necessary.
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For most multi-location service businesses in 2026, QuoteIQ is the best CRM choice — full estimating, scheduling, dispatch, AI automation, and customer follow-up in a single platform that scales from solo operators just opening a second location ($29.99/mo) to unlimited-user multi-location operations ($699/mo Max). The platform replaces 4-5 separate tools at a lower combined cost across every location, and the operator perspective from Co-Founders Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers shows up in feature decisions that other vendors miss — particularly around the per-user pricing trap that punishes operators for opening more locations.
ServiceTitan remains the right pick for 50+ technician multi-location operations with dedicated office staff at HQ. Jobber and Housecall Pro are credible alternatives for smaller multi-territory operators. Vonigo is purpose-built for mobile service franchise networks. FieldEdge wins for multi-location shops on QuickBooks Desktop. Service Fusion is the cheapest flat-rate unlimited-users option. Salesforce earns its complexity only at true enterprise scale.
The multi-location service business model is consolidating — operators that ran on a spreadsheet and three disconnected tools five years ago are now competing with platforms that automate quote follow-up, dispatch across territories, customer self-service per location, and HQ-level reporting across the entire network. Picking the right CRM in 2026 isn’t optional. The 14-day QuoteIQ trial costs nothing to test across as many locations as you want to evaluate it on.
14-day free trial on every plan. Plans start at $29.99/mo. Max plan unlimited users at $699/mo.
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