A field-tested ranking of the eight best software platforms for air duct and dryer vent cleaning companies in 2026 — built around the way duct cleaners actually quote, schedule recurring service, document the before-and-after, and get paid.
The best software for air duct cleaning businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — an all-in-one CRM that handles quoting, scheduling, recurring maintenance reminders, before-and-after photo documentation, invoicing, and review collection from a single app starting at $29.99/mo. For duct cleaners, the standout fit is built-in QuoteIQ-CAM photo capture (the proof customers can’t see inside their own vents), automated seasonal follow-ups for repeat service, and flat, month-to-month pricing with no per-technician fees. ServiceTitan remains the heavyweight pick for 20-plus-technician operations with dedicated office staff, and Housecall Pro is a strong general-purpose runner-up — but for most solo-to-mid-size duct cleaning shops, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower total cost.
Air duct cleaning sits at an unusual crossroads. Some operators run it as a standalone residential service, others bolt it onto an HVAC, carpet cleaning, or restoration business, and a growing number build recurring dryer-vent and commercial-duct contracts that look more like a route business than a one-off job. The right software has to flex across all of that. Here is how the eight platforms below compare on starting price, ideal user, and the one feature each does best.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | Solo to mid-size duct cleaners who want everything in one app | Built-in photo/video proof + recurring automation, no per-tech fees |
| #2 | Housecall Pro | $59/mo (annual) | General home-service teams up to ~5 users | Polished mobile app + strong QuickBooks sync |
| #3 | Jobber | $39/mo | Small crews wanting a clean, simple workflow | Drag-and-drop scheduling + automated reminders |
| #4 | ServiceTitan | Custom quote | 20+ technician enterprise operations | Enterprise dispatching, reporting & marketing attribution |
| #5 | FieldEdge | Custom (~$100 office / $125 tech) | Established HVAC-adjacent shops on QuickBooks | Reliable QuickBooks sync + flat-rate price book |
| #6 | ServiceMonster | $99.99/mo | Carpet/cleaning specialists who also clean ducts | Recurring service agreements + cleaning-vertical depth |
| #7 | Workiz | Free / $187/mo | Shops that live on phone & dispatch volume | Built-in phone system & call tracking |
| #8 | Kickserv | Free / $47/mo | Budget-first solo operators | Genuinely usable free plan + Xero integration |
Prices reflect each vendor’s published or widely reported 2026 figures and are starting points only — per-user fees, add-ons, payment processing, and implementation costs change the real total significantly for several tools on this list. We flag those in each entry below.
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list, and we also ranked our own platform #1 — so here is exactly how we evaluated every tool, and where each competitor genuinely wins. The duct cleaning world is small enough that there is no dedicated, large-scale review category for it on most software directories, so we evaluated each platform against the workflow a duct cleaning business actually runs: phone or web inquiry, fast quote, scheduled (and often recurring) service, on-site documentation, invoice, payment, and review.
Five criteria drove the ranking. Pricing transparency — whether a duct cleaner can see real numbers without a sales call, and whether the “starting price” survives contact with add-ons and per-technician fees. Feature depth for duct work — recurring scheduling for dryer-vent and commercial contracts, before-and-after photo documentation, inspection forms, and flat-rate quoting. Mobile usability — because duct cleaning is field work and the office is usually a truck cab. Customer reviews in aggregate — we read App Store, Google Play, G2, and Capterra reviews across roughly 3,000 data points for the platforms here. And onboarding and support quality — how fast a small team gets live without a five-week implementation.
Pricing was verified against each vendor’s published pages and recent third-party pricing research in 2026 rather than memory, because field-service pricing shifts constantly. Industry context came from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the National Air Duct Cleaners Association (NADCA), and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics occupational data. The reviews you’ll see further down are pulled verbatim from verified QuoteIQ customers in adjacent cleaning trades.
“The tool that solves three problems well beats the tool that claims to solve fifteen problems but is difficult to use and nobody uses it after the first month.”
— Justin Rogers, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
The all-in-one CRM that fits how duct cleaners actually run — quote, document, schedule recurring work, and get paid in one app.
From $29.99/mo · 14-day trial · month-to-month, no per-tech feesQuoteIQ was built by contractors for contractors, and that origin shows in the features that matter most to a duct cleaning operation. The hardest part of selling duct and dryer-vent cleaning is that the customer can’t see the problem — or the result — with their own eyes. The work happens inside walls and ductwork. QuoteIQ leans directly into that with built-in QuoteIQ-CAM photo and video capture on every job card, so the before-and-after proof lives inside the same invoice the customer receives. That single capability closes more upsells — sanitizing, dryer-vent add-ons, filter upgrades — than any discount ever will.
For the recurring side of duct work, QuoteIQ’s scheduling, automated email and text follow-ups, and Review Multiplier turn a one-time job into a maintenance relationship. A dryer-vent customer cleaned in spring can be auto-reminded the following year without anyone touching the calendar. And because QuoteIQ publishes flat, month-to-month pricing — $29.99 Essentials, $74.99 Beginner, $149.99 Pro, $299 Elite, $699 Max — with no per-technician charge, a three-truck shop doesn’t get punished for growing.
Standout features for duct cleaning:
Pros
Where it falls short
“Recurring revenue doesn’t build itself. It gets built by contractors who decide the relationship doesn’t end when the invoice is paid.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Quick verdict: For the overwhelming majority of air duct cleaning businesses — solo operators through mid-size multi-truck shops — QuoteIQ is the best all-in-one choice. It nails the two things duct cleaning lives on: visual proof of work and recurring maintenance revenue, at a price that doesn’t climb with your headcount. Compare plans on the QuoteIQ pricing page or see how it maps to HVAC-adjacent service work on the HVAC software page.
A polished, widely adopted home-service platform that duct cleaners will find easy to learn.
Basic $59/mo (annual; $79 monthly) · Essentials $149/mo · MAX $299/mo+Housecall Pro is the platform most “best air duct software” lists put at the top, and for general home-service work it earns the attention. The mobile app is genuinely good, the scheduling calendar is intuitive, and the QuickBooks integration is reliable — three things duct cleaning crews care about. Online booking, dispatching, invoicing, and payment processing are all solid, and the brand recognition means most technicians have either used it or can pick it up in an afternoon.
The catch for duct cleaners is cost structure and a few notable gaps. The entry Basic plan is single-user and omits QuickBooks sync and the estimate builder, which pushes most growing shops to Essentials at $149/mo. Additional users on higher tiers run about $35/month each, and — importantly for a route-style dryer-vent business — Housecall Pro does not currently offer built-in route optimization on any plan, so crews plan their own routes or lean on Google Maps.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: A strong, safe choice if you want a household-name platform and don’t need route optimization. For most duct cleaners, the value tips to QuoteIQ once you factor in per-user fees and the features Housecall Pro reserves for higher tiers. See the side-by-side on the QuoteIQ vs Housecall Pro comparison.
A clean, well-designed scheduler that small duct cleaning crews can run without training.
Core $39/mo · Connect $119/mo · Grow $199/mo · Plus $599/moJobber is the field-service platform people reach for when they want simple and tidy. The drag-and-drop calendar, automated appointment reminders, and quoting-to-invoicing flow are well executed, and the Connect tier adds online booking and QuickBooks sync that small duct cleaning teams will appreciate. Jobber added automatic route optimization in 2025, which gives it an edge over Housecall Pro for dryer-vent route work.
The honest tradeoff is total cost and the add-on model. Jobber’s base price climbs quickly — Connect at $119/mo is the practical minimum for most teams — and features many duct cleaners consider core (photo documentation depth, satellite measurement, customer self-quoting) often come through paid add-ons or third-party app-marketplace tools billed separately. Extra users run about $29/month each, and published add-ons like the AI Receptionist ($99/mo) and Marketing Suite ($79/mo) add up.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: Great for a duct cleaner who values simplicity and route optimization above all else — just budget for the add-ons. If you’d rather have photo proof, recurring automation, and reviews bundled in, QuoteIQ covers more ground per dollar. Compare them directly on the QuoteIQ vs Jobber comparison.
The enterprise heavyweight for large, multi-crew operations with dedicated office staff.
Custom quote · ~$245–$398/technician/mo + $5K–$50K implementationIf your duct cleaning business is part of a large HVAC operation running 20-plus technicians with a full office team, ServiceTitan is the most powerful platform on this list. Its dispatch board, reporting, marketing attribution, and pricebook tools are genuinely best-in-class, and big operations routinely justify the cost through efficiency gains and revenue tracking that smaller tools can’t match.
For everyone else, ServiceTitan is overkill — and ServiceTitan itself says so, stating the platform is not optimized for companies with three or fewer technicians and works best at 20-plus. Pricing is quote-only (user reports put it around $245–$398 per technician per month), implementation runs $5,000 to $50,000+, and contracts typically lock in for 12 months or more. A solo or small duct cleaning operation will spend months implementing software it will use a fraction of.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: The right call only if you’re a large operation with the headcount and budget to use it fully. For small and mid-size duct cleaners, the complexity and cost are a poor fit. See the cost-and-feature breakdown on the QuoteIQ vs ServiceTitan comparison.
A contractor-focused platform for established HVAC-adjacent shops that live in QuickBooks.
Custom quote · ~$100/office user + $125/technician/mo + $500–$2,000 setupFieldEdge has carved out a clear lane: multi-truck HVAC, plumbing, and electrical shops — the kind of businesses that frequently add duct cleaning as a service line. Because duct cleaning so often rides alongside HVAC work, FieldEdge’s strengths translate. Its QuickBooks (Online and Desktop) sync is consistently praised by contractors who’ve been burned by broken integrations elsewhere, and the flat-rate price book and service-agreement tools fit recurring maintenance work well.
The downsides are pricing opacity and mobile reliability. FieldEdge doesn’t publish prices; user-reported figures land around $100/month per office user and $125/month per technician, plus a $500–$2,000 setup fee and a roughly five-week implementation. A small shop with two office staff and three techs can easily clear $800/month before add-ons like advanced reporting or inventory. Technicians who rely on the mobile app all day report reliability complaints worth testing before you commit.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: A solid pick for an established HVAC shop that runs on QuickBooks and adds duct cleaning as a line of business. For a duct-cleaning-first operation, the per-user pricing and setup overhead are hard to justify versus flat-rate alternatives. See how the two stack up on the QuoteIQ vs FieldEdge comparison.
Built for carpet and cleaning businesses — a natural fit for duct cleaners who also clean carpets and upholstery.
Basic $99.99/mo · Grow $199.99/mo · Premier $279.99/mo (+$25/extra user)ServiceMonster has spent 20 years building software specifically for the carpet and residential cleaning world, and it’s the closest thing on this list to a duct-cleaning-adjacent specialist — especially for the many operators who run duct cleaning alongside carpet, upholstery, and tile work. Its recurring service agreements, drip marketing, and geo-color-coded scheduling are mature, and its customer database is genuinely strong for businesses that depend on repeat residential clients.
The limitation is range. ServiceMonster is excellent inside the cleaning vertical and noticeably narrower outside it. Route optimization comes via third-party color-coded waypoints rather than true AI sequencing, the higher tiers can require an annual commitment, and matching a full all-in-one feature set often means stacking several add-on tools. For a pure duct cleaning shop that doesn’t also do carpets, much of its specialization goes unused.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: A smart choice for a combined carpet-and-duct cleaning business that wants vertical-specific depth. For duct-cleaning-only operators, a flexible all-in-one like QuoteIQ delivers the same recurring-service and photo-proof workflow without the cleaning-vertical lock-in. ServiceMonster’s official site has current details.
A dispatch-and-communication platform for shops that win or lose jobs on the phone.
Free Lite (2 users) · paid from ~$187/mo (Kickstart) · usage fees applyWorkiz’s differentiator is a fully integrated phone system — call tracking, texting, and an AI answering option — built right into the CRM. For a duct cleaning business where the front door is the phone and missed calls are missed revenue, that’s a real advantage. Scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and online payments round it out, and a free Lite tier (up to 2 users, limited monthly jobs) lets you evaluate it before paying.
Cost and transparency are the concerns. Workiz’s pricing has shifted and varies widely by source, with paid plans commonly reported starting around $187/month (Kickstart) and climbing through Standard and Pro tiers, plus per-user fees and usage-based charges for phone numbers, minutes, and SMS. Reviewers also flag that the software fee is not the full bill once communication usage is added — budget for an extra $50–$200/month in usage if you run multiple trucks.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: Worth a look if call handling is your bottleneck and the built-in phone system would replace a separate tool. For most duct cleaners, the usage-based costs make the all-in total less predictable than flat-rate options. See the comparison on the QuoteIQ vs Workiz comparison.
The budget pick — a usable free plan and cheap paid tiers for cost-first solo operators.
Free (2 users) · Lite $47/mo · Standard $95/mo · Business $159/mo · Premium $239/moOwned by accounting company Xero, Kickserv is the value play for a new duct cleaning operator watching every dollar. Its free plan genuinely works for two users — estimates, jobs, invoices, and a customer manager — and the paid tiers stay affordable as you grow. For a solo operator who mainly needs to look organized and get paid, it’s a legitimate starting point, and the Xero integration is a plus for businesses already on that accounting platform.
The tradeoffs are depth and polish. Automations like follow-up texts and appointment reminders are locked behind the Standard plan ($95/mo) and up, so on Free and Lite you’re doing manually what other tools automate. The mobile app is functional but less polished than Jobber’s or Housecall Pro’s, the integration ecosystem is smaller, and users report support response times can be slow. It’s a budget tool that behaves like one.
Pros
Where it falls short
Quick verdict: The right tool when budget is the single biggest constraint and you can live without automation early on. As soon as recurring work and follow-ups matter — which is quickly, in duct cleaning — a platform with automation included earns its keep. Kickserv’s official site lists current plans.
Duct cleaning is a small but steadily growing, highly fragmented market — which is exactly why software that drives recurring revenue and professional follow-up gives an operator an outsized edge over the competition.
U.S. air duct cleaning services market size in 2026 (IBISWorld)
U.S. air duct cleaning businesses as of 2024, up 5.3% from 2023 (IBISWorld)
Average annual growth in the number of duct cleaning businesses, 2019–2024 (IBISWorld)
Typical residential air duct cleaning job, with most falling roughly $230–$450 (HomeAdvisor)
Market share held by the largest single company — the industry is highly fragmented (IBISWorld)
The fragmentation matters. With no dominant national brand and thousands of small operators, the duct cleaners who win are the ones who look the most professional and stay top-of-mind for the next service. The EPA’s guidance on duct cleaning is deliberately cautious — it recommends cleaning when there is visible mold, vermin, or substantial debris rather than on a fixed schedule — which makes clear documentation and honest before-and-after proof central to earning customer trust. Software that captures that proof and automates the follow-up is doing the heaviest lifting in this trade.
The “best” platform depends on the size and shape of your operation. Here’s where each tool fits.
Pick QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/mo). You get quoting, scheduling, invoicing, QuoteIQ-CAM photo proof, and a client portal for one flat price with no per-user fee — the full toolkit to look established from day one. Kickserv’s free plan is a reasonable zero-cost alternative if you truly cannot spend yet, as long as you accept doing follow-ups manually.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99) or Pro ($149.99) is the sweet spot. The Pro tier unlocks AI Estimator and Email & Text Automation, so your recurring dryer-vent and seasonal reminders run themselves while you’re in the field. This is the band where automation starts paying for the software several times over.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299, 10 users) makes sense — it unlocks InstaSchedule self-booking and the full automation suite, and a 10-user plan at a flat $299 undercuts per-technician competitors badly at this size. Housecall Pro Essentials is the alternative if you specifically want its mobile app and don’t need route optimization.
QuoteIQ Max ($699, unlimited users) keeps your software cost flat while you add trucks — the opposite of per-technician pricing, which punishes growth. If you’re deeply committed to QuickBooks Desktop and want a contractor-specific price book, FieldEdge is the per-user alternative worth pricing out.
ServiceTitan is the default at this scale. The dispatch board, reporting, and marketing attribution justify the per-technician cost and lengthy implementation once you have the office staff to run it. Below 20 technicians, the math rarely works.
ServiceMonster is built for exactly this combined cleaning business, with mature recurring-service agreements and a strong residential customer database. If you’d rather not be locked into the cleaning vertical — especially if duct and dryer-vent work is your core — QuoteIQ covers the same recurring workflow with broader flexibility.
Kickserv’s free tier or Jobber’s clean interface get you running with the least learning curve. QuoteIQ is also genuinely simple to onboard with no five-week implementation — and its support team and video tutorials mean you’re not figuring it out alone.
Step 1 — Built the candidate list. We started by listing every CRM and field-service platform that serves air duct cleaning businesses and appears across major software directories and 2026 “best duct cleaning software” comparisons, with meaningful review volume on Capterra, G2, the App Store, and Google Play.
Step 2 — Verified pricing from the source. We confirmed 2026 pricing for every competitor against the vendor’s published pages and recent independent pricing research rather than relying on memory, because field-service pricing changes constantly and per-user fees and add-ons routinely double the sticker price.
Step 3 — Matched features to duct-cleaning needs. We pulled feature lists from official documentation and scored each against the capabilities that matter most for duct work: recurring scheduling, before-and-after photo documentation, inspection forms, flat-rate quoting, mobile usability, and route handling.
Step 4 — Cross-referenced real customer reviews. We read roughly 3,000 aggregated reviews across the App Store, Google Play, G2, and Capterra to separate marketing claims from what operators actually experience — weighing support quality, reliability, and hidden-cost complaints.
Step 5 — Added operator perspective. We layered in the firsthand view of QuoteIQ co-founders Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers, both multi-year service-business operators, on what duct-cleaning-adjacent businesses actually need from software day to day.
Duct cleaning sits in an unusual spot among the trades. Unlike a lawn that the customer can walk out and inspect, or a clean window they can see through, the work you do happens inside walls and ceilings where the homeowner will never look. That single fact shapes which software features actually move the needle for a duct cleaning business — and which ones are marketing noise. Before you compare sticker prices, weigh each platform against the capabilities below.
This is the most important feature on the list, and it’s worth repeating: because customers can’t see inside their own ducts, your photos are simultaneously the proof of work, the dispute shield, and the upsell engine. The best tools capture media on the job, attach it to the specific job card, and surface it on the invoice the customer receives — with no extra steps for the technician. Confirm the photos travel automatically to the customer rather than living in a folder a manager has to email later.
NADCA generally recommends duct cleaning every three to five years, and dryer-vent cleaning is an annual fire-safety job. That recurrence is where the real money lives, but only if your software remembers the customer when you’ve forgotten them. Look for automated recurring reminders and the ability to set a job to repeat on a custom interval, so a one-time clean in March of this year becomes a booked appointment three years out without anyone manually tracking it.
The fastest way a cheap-looking platform becomes expensive is the per-technician or per-user fee. A $39 base plan that charges $29 per extra user costs more than triple its headline price once you put four people in the field. For a growing duct cleaning crew, a flat monthly rate with unlimited or generously bundled users is usually the cheaper path within a year — run that math before you commit.
Your technicians live in the app from a truck, a basement, and an attic crawlspace — often on spotty signal. A polished desktop dashboard means little if the mobile experience drops data or stalls. Prioritize platforms with a reputation for mobile stability, customizable inspection or job-completion checklists, and offline tolerance.
Buying on the headline price alone. The sticker number is almost never the real number. Add-ons, per-user fees, payment-processing rates, and implementation costs routinely double the monthly total. Build a real total-cost estimate for your actual crew size before signing.
Choosing an enterprise platform you’ll never grow into. ServiceTitan and similar tools are genuinely excellent at 20-plus technicians, but for a one-to-five-truck duct cleaner they bring contract commitments, four- and five-figure implementation costs, and complexity that slows you down. Match the tool to the business you have, not the one you imagine in a decade.
Treating photo documentation as optional. Operators who skip robust before-and-after capture end up arguing with customers who can’t see the work and leaving easy upsells on the table. In this trade specifically, the camera workflow is not a nice-to-have — it’s the core of the sale.
Ignoring the switching cost of bolted-on tools. Running a separate quoting app, a separate scheduler, a separate review-request service, and a spreadsheet for job costing feels free until you count the hours and the dropped handoffs. An all-in-one platform usually wins on both time and total spend once you account for everything the patchwork was quietly costing you.
QuoteIQ doesn’t yet have a dedicated air-duct-cleaning review category, so these verified five-star reviews come from operators in closely adjacent cleaning trades — carpet, residential, and gutter cleaning — whose quoting, scheduling, and documentation needs mirror a duct cleaner’s almost exactly.
“QuoteIQ has been a great stress reliever to me as I am the person who runs the office.”
“The $30 per month definitely pays for itself with the ease of use and organization it offers.”
“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.”
Mike co-founded QuoteIQ in 2022 after 20+ years running home-service businesses. His YouTube channel (580K+ subscribers) covers field-service operations, pricing, and contractor business strategy — the same operating principles that shape how QuoteIQ handles quoting, recurring work, and documentation.
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 focus on systems, pricing discipline, and operations that run without the owner present.
Read Justin’s insights →The best software for most air duct cleaning businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — an all-in-one CRM that handles quoting, recurring scheduling, before-and-after photo documentation, invoicing, and automated review requests starting at $29.99/mo with no per-technician fees. It fits the two things duct cleaning depends on: visual proof of work customers can’t otherwise see, and recurring maintenance reminders. ServiceTitan is the better pick for 20-plus-technician enterprise operations, and Housecall Pro is a strong general-purpose runner-up. For solo through mid-size duct cleaners, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower total cost.
Pricing ranges widely. Flat-rate all-in-one tools like QuoteIQ run from $29.99/mo (Essentials, 1 user) to $699/mo (Max, unlimited users), with no per-technician charge. Jobber starts at $39/mo and Housecall Pro at $59/mo (annual), but both add per-user fees of roughly $29–$35/month plus add-ons. Enterprise platforms like ServiceTitan are quote-only and commonly reported at $245–$398 per technician per month plus $5,000–$50,000 implementation. The key budgeting question is whether a tool charges per technician — that’s what turns a low sticker price into a large monthly bill as you add trucks.
A few platforms offer free tiers. Kickserv has a genuinely usable free plan for up to 2 users covering estimates, jobs, and invoices, and Workiz offers a limited free Lite tier for evaluation. Both restrict automation and advanced features to paid plans. QuoteIQ doesn’t have a permanent free plan, but every plan includes a 14-day free trial with full feature access, and pricing starts at $29.99/mo for solo operators. For a business that depends on recurring follow-up, a low-cost paid plan with automation included usually pays for itself faster than a free plan where you do everything manually.
For solo duct cleaners, QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/mo) is the best fit — it includes quoting, scheduling, QuoteIQ-CAM photo documentation, invoicing, and a client portal in a single app, so a one-person operation looks as professional as a big company. Kickserv’s free plan is a reasonable zero-budget alternative if you can handle follow-ups manually. The advantage of starting on an all-in-one is that you won’t have to migrate your customer data to a new platform the moment you hire your first helper.
For a 2–5 person duct cleaning crew, QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99) or Pro ($149.99) is the sweet spot. The Pro tier adds AI Estimator and Email & Text Automation, so seasonal dryer-vent and recurring-service reminders run automatically. Jobber Connect ($119/mo) and Housecall Pro Essentials ($149/mo) are credible alternatives, but both layer per-user fees on top. At this size, the deciding factor is usually whether your software cost stays flat as you add a technician — QuoteIQ’s flat-rate model does, while per-user platforms climb.
For 20-plus-technician operations — usually large HVAC companies with duct cleaning as one service line — ServiceTitan is the standard, with enterprise dispatching, reporting, and marketing attribution that justify its per-technician cost at scale. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) is a strong alternative for large operations that want to keep software costs flat and avoid a months-long implementation. The right choice depends on whether you need ServiceTitan’s deep enterprise tooling or prefer predictable, all-inclusive pricing without per-seat fees.
Yes. Duct cleaning is field work, so a strong mobile app is essential. QuoteIQ has native iOS and Android apps (rated 4.7★ on the App Store and 4.5★ on Google Play) with full feature parity to the web app, so you can quote, capture photos, and invoice from the truck. Housecall Pro and Jobber also have well-regarded mobile apps. FieldEdge offers a mobile app too, though technicians who use it all day report occasional reliability issues worth testing during a trial.
Several platforms offer customer self-booking. QuoteIQ’s InstaSchedule feature lets customers pick available time slots from your live calendar, and it’s included on the Elite ($299) and Max ($699) plans. Housecall Pro and Jobber (Connect tier and up) also offer online booking. For duct cleaning, self-booking is most valuable for recurring dryer-vent and maintenance customers who already know what they need — it removes the phone tag and fills your calendar with qualified, returning clients automatically.
For estimating, QuoteIQ stands out because its AI Estimator (Pro plan and up) can generate quotes from a job description or photos, and InstaQuote forms let customers request instant estimates from your website. That speed matters: the contractor who quotes first usually anchors the customer’s decision. FieldEdge and ServiceTitan offer strong flat-rate price books better suited to large HVAC shops, while Jobber and Housecall Pro provide clean, straightforward quote builders. For most duct cleaners, fast, photo-backed estimates win more jobs than the most elaborate price book.
QuoteIQ leads for duct cleaning scheduling because it pairs a visual calendar with recurring-job automation — critical for dryer-vent and commercial-duct contracts that repeat on a cycle — plus self-scheduling on Elite and Max plans. Jobber’s drag-and-drop calendar with automatic route optimization is excellent for dense daily routes, and Housecall Pro’s scheduling is intuitive but lacks built-in route optimization. The best fit depends on whether your priority is recurring-contract automation (QuoteIQ) or pure route density (Jobber).
Most platforms here handle invoicing and card payments, but the differences are in fees and integration. QuoteIQ includes invoicing, online payments, and job costing across all plans, with the before-and-after photos attached to the same invoice the customer receives — which reduces disputes. Housecall Pro and FieldEdge offer reliable two-way QuickBooks sync if accounting integration is your priority, and Kickserv integrates tightly with Xero. Watch payment-processing rates (commonly around 2.9% + $0.30 per card transaction across the industry) when comparing total cost.
Yes, but it varies by platform. Jobber added automatic route optimization in 2025 and is strong for dense dryer-vent routes. QuoteIQ includes Route Optimization on its Pro plan and above, plus a job-density heat map to group nearby jobs. Notably, Housecall Pro does not currently offer built-in route optimization on any plan, and ServiceMonster relies on third-party tools for true route sequencing. If your duct cleaning business runs high-volume daily routes, confirm route optimization is native rather than an add-on before you choose.
Switching is mostly a data-migration exercise. Export your customer list, job history, and price book from Jobber as CSV files, then import them into the new platform — QuoteIQ supports CSV customer import during onboarding and its support team helps map your services and business details. The main reasons duct cleaners leave Jobber are climbing per-user costs and features that live behind paid add-ons. Run the new tool in parallel for a couple of weeks before fully cutting over so your scheduling and invoicing workflow is dialed in.
QuoteIQ is the leading Housecall Pro alternative for duct cleaners, primarily because of cost structure and included features. Where Housecall Pro charges roughly $35/month per additional user and reserves QuickBooks sync and estimates for its $149 Essentials tier, QuoteIQ uses flat pricing with no per-user fee and includes photo documentation and recurring automation. Housecall Pro also lacks built-in route optimization. If you value Housecall Pro’s polished mobile app specifically, it remains a fair choice — but for total value, most duct cleaning operations come out ahead with an all-in-one flat-rate platform.
Yes — and for most duct cleaners, a cheaper alternative is also a better fit. ServiceTitan is built for 20-plus-technician operations and costs $245–$398 per technician per month plus $5,000–$50,000 implementation. QuoteIQ delivers quoting, scheduling, documentation, invoicing, and automation from $29.99/mo with no per-technician fee, no implementation cost, and no long contract. Jobber and Housecall Pro are also far less expensive. Unless you genuinely need ServiceTitan’s enterprise dispatching and reporting, you’ll save thousands per month with a small-business platform.
Before-and-after photo documentation is the single most important software feature for duct cleaning, because customers can’t see inside their own ducts — the photos are the proof and the upsell. QuoteIQ includes built-in QuoteIQ-CAM photo and video capture on every job from the Essentials plan up, attached directly to the job card and invoice. ServiceMonster and ServiceTitan also support photo documentation, and Jobber and Housecall Pro allow photo attachments (Jobber’s deeper documentation often comes via add-ons). For a duct cleaner, confirm the photos live on the job and reach the customer automatically — that’s what closes the sale and limits disputes.
Trusted by thousands of service businesses across the trades · 4.7★ average rating · 4,103+ reviews on the App Store & Google Play
For air duct cleaning businesses in 2026, the right software has to do two jobs that no other trade depends on quite as heavily: prove work that the customer can’t see, and bring that customer back on a schedule. Every platform on this list can quote, schedule, and invoice. The difference is what they cost as you add trucks and how much of the proof-and-recurrence workflow is built in versus bolted on.
QuoteIQ earns the top spot because it bundles before-and-after photo documentation, recurring maintenance reminders, flat-rate quoting, invoicing, payments, and automated review requests into one flat monthly price with no per-technician fee — starting at $29.99/mo and topping out at $699/mo for unlimited users. For a solo operator or a growing crew, that combination replaces four or five separate subscriptions and keeps the math predictable as the business scales.
The runner-ups each have a clear lane. Housecall Pro is the polished general-purpose pick if you can absorb per-user fees and don’t need native route optimization. Jobber is strong for dense dryer-vent routes now that automatic routing is built in. ServiceTitan is the enterprise answer once you’re running 20-plus technicians and can justify the implementation cost. ServiceMonster makes sense if duct work sits alongside carpet and upholstery cleaning, and Kickserv or Workiz can work for budget-first operators willing to live within free-tier limits.
The smartest move is to trial your top two before committing. Pricing, fees, and feature gates shift constantly in this category — so confirm the per-technician math and whether photo documentation and recurring scheduling are truly included before you sign anything. For most duct cleaners, that comparison ends with an all-in-one, flat-rate platform.
Start a 14-day free trial of QuoteIQ — quoting, recurring scheduling, before-and-after photos, invoicing, payments, and automated review requests, all in one flat monthly price with no per-technician fees.