Concrete leveling lives and dies on accurate square-foot pricing, fast quotes, and tight job costing on mudjacking and polyurethane foam jobs. We compared 8 platforms on pricing, mobile usability, estimating, and back-office depth to find the software built to run a slab-lifting business in 2026.
The best software for concrete leveling businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — an all-in-one field service platform that handles estimating, scheduling, job costing, invoicing, and customer follow-up for solo slab-jackers through multi-crew operations. Concrete leveling runs on precise per-square-foot pricing and same-day quotes, and QuoteIQ's built-in MapMeasure Pro measurement and AI Estimator are tuned for exactly that. ServiceTitan is the heavier enterprise option for large concrete and foundation outfits with office staff, while JobNimbus suits sales-driven exterior contractors. For most 1–15 person concrete leveling shops, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | 1–15 person concrete leveling shops | MapMeasure Pro + AI Estimator |
| #2 | ServiceTitan | Custom (~$245–$398/tech/mo) | Large concrete/foundation enterprises | Deepest dispatch & reporting |
| #3 | Jobber | From ~$39/mo | General service SMBs | Polished, easy-to-adopt UX |
| #4 | Housecall Pro | $59/mo | Residential-facing booking | Consumer booking experience |
| #5 | JobNimbus | $225/mo base | Sales-driven exterior contractors | Pipeline + document workflow |
| #6 | Workiz | From ~$225/mo | Call-heavy field teams | Built-in phone system |
| #7 | Kickserv | From $19/mo | Solo & very small crews | Simple, low entry price |
| #8 | Markate | $39.95/mo | Side-hustle / budget operators | Built-in marketing automation |
Verified pricing as of June 2026. Vendor pricing changes frequently and several competitors quote per-user or custom rates — always confirm current rates on each vendor's site before deciding.
We're QuoteIQ. We made this list, and we picked our own platform as #1 — so here is exactly why, with the honest trade-offs each competitor brings. Concrete leveling is a margin-sensitive trade where a fast, accurate quote wins the job and a sloppy measurement loses the profit, so five criteria drove every ranking decision:
“The biggest mistake I see is contractors buying software built for a 30-person operation when they're running 4 people. The features they'd actually use are buried under complexity designed for a completely different business.”
— Justin Rogers, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
QuoteIQ is the platform we built because nothing else handled the full concrete leveling workflow without forcing operators to bolt on three more tools. Measure the slab, generate the estimate, schedule the pour, document before-and-after, invoice, and trigger follow-up — all from one app. For a slab-jacking or polyurethane foam crew, the difference-maker is pricing accuracy: concrete leveling is sold by the square foot, and a measurement that's off by 15% either prices you out of the job or eats the margin you needed. QuoteIQ — with built-in MapMeasure Pro — lets you measure driveways, patios, walkways, and garage slabs from an aerial view and drop the square footage straight into a priced estimate.
Best for: Solo concrete levelers through 15-person crews that want one platform instead of a stack of disconnected tools.
Here's what that looks like on an actual day: a homeowner submits a leveling request through an InstaQuote form on your site, you pull up the driveway in MapMeasure Pro and have a square-foot-based estimate out before lunch, the customer books a slot through InstaSchedule without a single phone call, your crew documents the before-and-after with QuoteIQ-CAM on-site, the invoice goes out from the same app, and AI Autopilot chases payment and requests a review without you remembering to. Each of those steps used to require a separate tool — or more often, didn't happen at all. Collapsing them into one record is where the time and the recovered revenue come from.
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“I've seen operators try to run a $150,000-a-year business out of a notes app and a text thread, and they're losing jobs because they can't respond fast enough, losing money because they have no visibility into their actual costs.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Verdict: For a concrete leveling business with 1–15 people, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost. Solo operators start on Essentials at $29.99/mo; growing crews typically land on Elite ($299/mo) for the InstaSchedule online-booking unlock. Large foundation enterprises with office staff should also look at ServiceTitan or QuoteIQ Max.
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ServiceTitan is the enterprise standard in field service, used by some of the largest residential and commercial contractors in North America. For a concrete or foundation company running multiple crews with dedicated office and dispatch staff, the depth is unmatched: scheduling, dispatch, fleet tracking, marketing attribution, payroll, and reporting that takes weeks to learn fully. The trade-offs are cost and complexity. Pricing is quote-only; third-party sources put it in the $245–$398 per-technician-per-month range, which adds up quickly for a small slab-jacking crew.
Best for: 20+ employee concrete and foundation enterprises with office staff to run the platform.
In practice for concrete leveling: A regional foundation company running six crews, a call center, and a marketing budget will get genuine value from ServiceTitan's dispatch and attribution tooling — the platform was built for exactly that scale. A two-truck residential slab-jacking operation will spend more time configuring features it never uses than it saves, and the per-technician cost is hard to justify against jobs that average a few hundred dollars apiece. The dividing line is roughly whether you employ someone whose full-time job is running the software.
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Verdict: If you run a large multi-crew concrete or foundation operation with an office team, ServiceTitan is built for you. For a typical owner-operated leveling business, the cost-and-complexity ratio doesn't pencil out — QuoteIQ delivers the core workflow at a fraction of the price.
Jobber is the polished general-purpose service CRM that contractors adopt without complaining. Quoting, scheduling, invoicing, and client communication are all clean and reliable, and the mobile app is one of the best in the category. It isn't concrete-specialized, though — there's no built-in slab measurement tied to pricing, and concrete leveling crews typically rely on manual square-foot entry. Note Jobber's pricing is notoriously variable between annual and monthly billing, and every user beyond your plan's cap is about $29/mo extra.
Best for: Concrete levelers who want a generalist tool with excellent UX and don't need trade-specific measurement built in.
In practice for concrete leveling: Jobber shines on the parts of the job that aren't concrete-specific — client reminders, clean invoices, professional-looking quotes that win trust. Where it leaves a leveling crew exposed is measurement: you'll measure the driveway some other way and type the square footage into Jobber by hand. For a business that only levels the occasional slab alongside other work, that's a fair trade. For a dedicated leveling operation quoting square footage all day, the manual step adds up to real time and the occasional mispriced job.
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Verdict: A strong all-rounder if trade-specific measurement isn't critical. For concrete leveling's square-foot pricing workflow, QuoteIQ's built-in MapMeasure Pro is more cost-effective and purpose-fit.
Housecall Pro built its reputation on the consumer side — a clean customer-facing booking and communication experience plus strong review automation. The tooling is solid for residential service, but it isn't built for construction-style workflows: there's no concrete measurement, no assembly-based estimating, and job costing is limited. Most concrete leveling features that matter unlock on the Essentials tier ($149/mo), and additional users run about $35/mo each.
Best for: Residential-facing concrete leveling shops where booking conversion and customer experience matter most.
In practice for concrete leveling: If most of your leveling work comes from homeowners finding you online, Housecall Pro's booking flow and review automation genuinely move the needle on lead conversion and reputation. The gap shows up on the back end: there's no slab measurement and job costing is thin, so the accuracy and margin tracking that protect a material-heavy leveling job have to live elsewhere. It's a front-of-house strength paired with a back-of-house gap — great if booking is your bottleneck, less so if estimating accuracy is.
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Verdict: Best if customer booking is your bottleneck. For backend estimating accuracy and job costing on slab work, QuoteIQ or ServiceTitan go deeper.
JobNimbus earned its following with roofing and exterior contractors, and that sales-pipeline DNA carries over to concrete and foundation companies that run a real lead-to-close process. Visual pipeline boards, document and contract workflows, and photo organization are its strengths. The pricing model is a three-layer one — a base fee ($225/mo Growing, $550/mo Established) plus per-user charges ($25–$75/user/mo) plus texting add-ons — so the real monthly cost climbs faster than the sticker suggests, and there's no built-in slab measurement.
Best for: Concrete/foundation contractors with a dedicated sales process who value pipeline and document management.
In practice for concrete leveling: JobNimbus rewards businesses that treat leveling as a considered, multi-touch sale — foundation inspections, written assessments, financed jobs — where a visual pipeline keeps deals from going cold. A crew that quotes and closes a driveway slab in a single visit will find the pipeline machinery more than they need, and the layered base-plus-per-user-plus-texting pricing makes the true monthly cost hard to pin down. The fit tracks closely with how long your average sale takes to close.
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Verdict: A good fit if your concrete business is sales-pipeline driven. If accurate slab measurement and flat, predictable pricing matter more, QuoteIQ is the cleaner fit at a lower entry point.
Workiz's differentiator is a built-in VoIP phone system with call recording tied to customer records — useful for a concrete leveling business that fields heavy inbound call volume and wants every conversation logged against a job. The core CRM is solid mid-tier, but feature depth doesn't match ServiceTitan or QuoteIQ, there's no concrete-specific measurement, and the communication usage fees (phone numbers, minutes, SMS credits) stack on top of the subscription.
Best for: Call-heavy concrete leveling shops that want phone, text, and scheduling in one place.
In practice for concrete leveling: If your phone rings all day and you want every call recorded against a customer record — with caller ID surfacing job history before you pick up — Workiz's built-in phone system is a real edge that most competitors charge extra to approximate. The catch for a leveling business is the same one that recurs across generalist tools: no slab measurement, lighter job costing, and communication usage fees that stack on the base plan. Worth a look if inbound call handling, not estimating, is what's slowing you down.
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Verdict: Strong if inbound call handling is your bottleneck. For concrete leveling estimating and job costing, QuoteIQ paired with its Twilio integration covers more ground at a lower base cost.
Kickserv is a long-running, no-frills field service tool with one of the lowest entry prices in the category. For a solo concrete leveler who just needs scheduling, estimates, invoicing, and a simple contact database, it covers the fundamentals and is genuinely easy to set up. What you give up is depth: no built-in concrete measurement, lighter automation, and reporting that growing crews outgrow. Onboarding training is sometimes required on paid tiers.
Best for: Solo operators and very small concrete leveling crews who want simple software at a low monthly cost.
In practice for concrete leveling: Kickserv does the boring fundamentals well at a price almost anyone can justify — a solo leveler who needs a calendar, estimates, and invoices without a learning curve will be up and running in an afternoon. The ceiling arrives quickly, though: there's no measurement, automation is light, and reporting thins out as you add work. It's a fine first system, but a growing crew tends to bump into its limits within a year and start shopping again.
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Verdict: A reasonable starting point for a one-person operation. As soon as you need accurate slab measurement, job costing, or follow-up automation, QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo is a more capable foundation at a comparable price.
Markate is a budget-tier field service platform aimed at small residential service businesses, with built-in marketing automation (email campaigns, review requests, follow-ups) as its main differentiator — features many competitors charge extra for. It covers scheduling, invoicing, and basic CRM, but it isn't built for construction-style estimating: no concrete measurement, lighter job costing, and a smaller ecosystem. For a side-hustle or part-time slab-jacker, it's an inexpensive way to look professional.
Best for: Side-hustle and budget-conscious concrete leveling operators who want marketing tools bundled in cheaply.
In practice for concrete leveling: Markate's pitch is that the marketing automation other platforms charge extra for — email campaigns, review requests, follow-ups — comes bundled at a low flat price, which lets a part-time slab-jacker look professional without much spend. What you won't find is anything built for construction-style estimating: no measurement, limited job costing, a smaller ecosystem. It does the job for a weekend operation testing whether leveling is worth going full-time, but a serious crew will outgrow it fast.
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Verdict: A fine starter for a part-time operation. A full-time concrete leveling business will outgrow Markate within months — QuoteIQ scales from solo to multi-crew without a platform switch.
Concrete leveling sits inside a sizable, steady repair market — and it's a pricing-sensitive trade, which is exactly why the right estimating software matters.
Pick QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/mo). You get estimating, scheduling, invoicing, and MapMeasure Pro measurement in one app, so your first 20 driveway and patio jobs are priced accurately and follow-ups don't fall through the cracks. Kickserv's Flex tier is a cheaper bare-bones alternative if you only need a calendar and invoices.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) keeps the office and the field on the same job records as you add a helper. The job costing matters here — tracking grout, polyurethane, and labor per slab is how you confirm you're actually profitable as volume climbs.
QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) adds the AI Estimator and route optimization for crews running multiple leveling jobs across a service area in a day. This is the band where automated follow-up starts paying for the software by itself.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) unlocks InstaSchedule online self-booking and AI Autopilot. Homeowners book leveling estimates from your site while your office focuses on production. JobNimbus is the alternative if your growth is sales-pipeline driven.
This is where ServiceTitan's dispatch and reporting depth earns its premium — or QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) if you want a flat, predictable bill instead of per-technician pricing that climbs with every hire.
If you run foam injection rather than traditional mudjacking, prioritize accurate square-foot measurement and per-job material costing — foam is priced higher per square foot, so margin errors are bigger. QuoteIQ's MapMeasure Pro and job costing are built for that; pair them with QuoteIQ-CAM for before/after documentation.
Kickserv or Markate get you running with the least learning curve. If you can invest one afternoon, QuoteIQ's onboarding gets you to the same place with far more room to grow — without a second platform migration in a year.
Concrete leveling sits in an awkward spot for software. It's not pure field service like HVAC or plumbing, and it's not full construction project management either. The work is measured by the square foot, priced on material volume (polyurethane foam, cementitious grout, or sand slurry), and won or lost on how fast and how accurately you can quote. That combination means a generic service CRM will leave gaps, and a heavyweight construction suite will bury you in features you'll never touch. Here are the six things that actually matter when you evaluate a platform for a leveling business.
1. Measurement tied to pricing. This is the single biggest differentiator. If your software makes you measure the slab somewhere else — a tape measure, a separate aerial-measurement app, a spreadsheet — and then re-key the square footage into a quote, you've introduced two points of failure: transcription error and time. Tools like QuoteIQ's MapMeasure Pro that measure from an aerial view and drop the area straight into a priced line item eliminate both. On a trade where a 15% measurement error decides whether you win the job or lose the margin, this is not a nice-to-have.
2. Job costing on materials. Concrete leveling margin lives in material consumption. Polyurethane foam in particular is expensive and varies by lift height and void volume, so a platform that tracks material, labor, and equipment per job — and shows you real margin after the work is done — tells you which job types and which neighborhoods actually pay. Software that only tracks revenue hides the jobs that are quietly losing you money.
3. Honest, predictable pricing. Per-user and per-technician pricing models look cheap on the first plan and get expensive fast. A three-person crew on a $39/mo plan can quietly become a $200+/mo bill once you add users, texting credits, and payment processing. Flat-rate plans (QuoteIQ Max at $699/mo for unlimited users, for example) trade a higher sticker for a number you can actually budget against. Read the per-user overage line before you sign anything.
4. A mobile app the crew will actually use. In concrete leveling, the estimate, the before-and-after photos, and often the invoice all happen on the job site, in the dirt, on a phone. If the mobile app is a stripped-down version of the web tool, your field crew will work around it — and the data you need for costing and follow-up never gets captured. Test full feature parity between mobile and desktop before you commit.
5. Documentation and follow-up automation. Settled concrete generates disputes (“it looks the same as before”), and before/after photo documentation is how you win them. Built-in photo capture tied to the job record — rather than a separate CompanyCam-style subscription — keeps that evidence where you need it. Automated quote follow-ups and review requests are the touchpoints almost no small crew gets to manually, and they're where repeat work and reputation come from.
6. Room to grow without a platform switch. The most expensive software decision is the one you have to redo in eighteen months. If you're a solo operator today but plan to add a second crew next year, pick a platform whose higher tiers cover where you're going. Migrating customers, job history, and quote templates between systems is painful, so the ability to scale from solo to multi-crew on the same platform — the way QuoteIQ spans Essentials through Max — saves a disruptive switch later.
Mistake 1: Buying enterprise software for a small crew. The most common over-correction is a four-person slab-jacking operation signing up for a platform built for a 40-truck enterprise. The dispatch board, the capacity planning, the marketing attribution — none of it gets used, but you pay for all of it and spend weeks onboarding. As QuoteIQ co-founder Justin Rogers puts it, the features you'd actually use end up buried under complexity designed for a completely different business. Match the tool to the size you are, not the size you imagine.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the per-user fine print. A plan that looks affordable at the owner-operator tier can double or triple once you add field crew, office staff, and communication add-ons. Before committing, do the math on what the platform costs at the team size you'll be in twelve months — including per-user overages, texting credits, and payment-processing rates — not just today's headcount.
Mistake 3: Treating measurement as an afterthought. Plenty of leveling businesses pick a polished general-purpose CRM, then realize it has no way to measure a slab. They end up running a separate measurement app and re-typing square footage into quotes — slower, and a recurring source of pricing errors. If you sell by the square foot, measurement-to-estimate should be a first-class feature, not a bolt-on.
Mistake 4: Skipping the trial on real jobs. A demo on a salesperson's screen tells you very little. The only test that matters is running the software on your next batch of actual estimates, with your actual crew, on your actual phones. A 14-day free trial — which QuoteIQ includes on every plan — is enough to find out whether the mobile app holds up in the field and whether quoting is genuinely faster.
Mistake 5: Underestimating the cost of switching later. Choosing the cheapest tool that barely covers today's needs feels prudent until you outgrow it and have to migrate every customer, quote template, and job record to a new platform mid-season. Picking software that scales with you — even at a slightly higher entry price — is almost always cheaper than a forced switch a year in.
The monthly sticker price on a software plan is rarely what you actually pay. Concrete leveling businesses get surprised most often by three line items that don't show up until the invoice arrives, and understanding the three common pricing models up front is the difference between a budget you can plan around and a bill that creeps every quarter.
Flat-rate pricing charges one predictable number regardless of how many people use it. QuoteIQ's plans work this way — Essentials at $29.99/mo, Beginner at $74.99/mo, Pro at $149.99/mo, Elite at $299/mo, and Max at $699/mo for unlimited users — so a growing crew can add people without watching the bill climb. The trade-off is a higher entry number on the top tiers, but for a business that's hiring, flat-rate is almost always cheaper over a year than per-seat models.
Per-user pricing looks the cheapest at signup and scales the fastest. Jobber and Housecall Pro both layer per-user overage charges (roughly $29 and $35 per additional user per month, respectively) on top of the base plan, and JobNimbus stacks $25–$75 per user on top of a base fee. A solo operator barely notices; a five-person crew can see the real cost double. The discipline here is to price the plan at the headcount you'll have in a year, not the one you have today.
Per-technician (enterprise) pricing is the ServiceTitan model: quote-only, reportedly $245–$398 per technician per month. For a large foundation enterprise that's a rounding error against revenue; for a small leveling crew it's prohibitive. There's usually an implementation fee on top, plus a multi-week onboarding commitment.
The fees nobody quotes you are payment processing (typically 2.6–2.9% plus a per-transaction fee on cards, charged on every invoice you collect through the platform), texting and SMS credits, and add-ons for phone numbers or extra automation. On a concrete leveling business collecting $40,000/mo through the software, processing alone can run over $1,000/mo — often more than the subscription itself. Always compare the all-in number, not the plan price.
Not every concrete leveling business does the same work, and the lifting method you specialize in changes what you need from your software — mostly in how you measure, how you cost materials, and how you document the result.
Polyurethane foam jacking is fast, clean, and premium-priced, but the material is expensive and consumption is hard to eyeball: a small surface area can hide a large void that drinks foam. That makes per-job material costing the feature that matters most. If your software can't track how much foam a job actually consumed against what you quoted, you're flying blind on the margin of your highest-ticket work. Accurate area measurement still sets the price, but it's the material reconciliation afterward that tells you whether foam jobs are as profitable as they feel.
Mudjacking and cementitious slurry work the opposite way — cheaper material, more labor, lower ticket. Here volume comes from doing more jobs efficiently, so the features that pay off are fast square-foot estimating and route optimization that lets a crew hit several driveways and walkways in a day. QuoteIQ's MapMeasure Pro plus multi-stop routing on Pro plans and above is built for exactly this rhythm: quote quickly, schedule densely, keep the crew moving.
Stone slurry and hybrid operators who run more than one method need software flexible enough to price each one differently from the same estimate screen, without maintaining separate systems. The common thread across all three methods is documentation: settled concrete invites disputes, and before/after photos tied to the job record — through a built-in tool like QuoteIQ-CAM rather than a separate photo-app subscription — are how you protect both your reputation and your invoices. Whatever you lift with, measurement-to-estimate accuracy, honest material costing, and job-site documentation are the three capabilities that separate a leveling business that knows its numbers from one that guesses.
Listed every CRM and field service tool serving concrete and contractor businesses with 50+ verified reviews. We started from the broad field service universe and filtered to platforms with at least 50 reviews on Capterra or G2, so the analysis rested on real customer data rather than vendor marketing.
Verified pricing against each vendor's published source as of June 2026. For platforms with quote-only pricing such as ServiceTitan, we noted the lack of transparency and used third-party reported ranges, citing them as such rather than guessing.
Matched feature lists against the capabilities concrete leveling actually needs. We checked each platform for square-foot and linear-foot measurement, fast estimating, per-job material costing, before/after photo documentation, and mobile parity for crews in the field.
Cross-referenced thousands of customer reviews across App Store, Google Play, Capterra, and G2. Aggregate ratings, recent review trajectory, and recurring complaint patterns all factored into the ranking, alongside U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics workforce data.
Added operator perspective from Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers. Both QuoteIQ Co-Founders have run service businesses for years and bring direct operator context to what concrete and contracting crews actually use day to day.
Verified five-star reviews from QuoteIQ users in the concrete trade, pulled verbatim from the App Store and Google Play.
“It’s easy to use and set up and comes at a great price!”
“I can finally keep all my records in one place, communicate with customers, and send/receive invoices.”
“Started using this on my dad’s concrete business and he says it’s a game changer.”
A 20+ year home service business owner and creator of the Mike Vidan YouTube channel (580K+ subscribers), Mike has coached thousands of contractors on pricing, operations, and growth.
A serial home service entrepreneur and creator of the ForeverSelfEmployed YouTube channel (740K+ subscribers), Justin focuses on systems, pricing discipline, and building operations that run without the owner on site.
The best software for concrete leveling businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — an all-in-one platform with built-in MapMeasure Pro measurement, AI estimating, job costing, and follow-up automation that fits solo slab-jackers through 15-person crews. ServiceTitan is the heavier enterprise option for large foundation companies with office staff, and JobNimbus suits sales-pipeline-driven exterior contractors. For most concrete leveling shops, QuoteIQ replaces four or five separate tools at a lower combined cost.
Concrete leveling software ranges widely. QuoteIQ runs from $29.99/mo (Essentials) to $699/mo (Max, unlimited users). Budget tools like Kickserv start at $19–$59/mo and Markate at $39.95/mo. Mid-market options like JobNimbus start around $225/mo base plus per-user fees, and ServiceTitan is quote-only, reportedly $245–$398 per technician per month. Watch for per-user overages and payment-processing fees, which can raise the real monthly bill well above the sticker price.
Truly free options are rare and limited. Workiz offers a free Lite tier for up to two users with capped jobs, useful only for evaluation. QuoteIQ does not have a permanent free plan, but every plan includes a 14-day free trial, with pricing starting at $29.99/mo for solo operators. For a working concrete business, a low-cost paid plan almost always pays for itself by preventing mispriced jobs and missed follow-ups.
For a solo concrete leveler, QuoteIQ Essentials ($29.99/mo) gives you estimating, scheduling, invoicing, and MapMeasure Pro measurement in one app. Kickserv's Flex tier ($19/mo) is a cheaper bare-bones alternative if you only need a calendar and invoices. The deciding factor is measurement: solo operators lose the most money to mispriced slabs, so software that ties square footage to the estimate is worth the small premium.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) and Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) are built for this band, keeping office and field crews on the same job records with job costing and AI estimating. Jobber is a polished general-purpose alternative, though its per-user overage charges add up. For 2–5 person concrete crews, the priority is shared, accurate job data so nobody re-keys a quote or loses a follow-up.
Large concrete and foundation enterprises typically choose ServiceTitan for its deep dispatch, capacity planning, and reporting — though pricing is quote-only and per-technician. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo for unlimited users) is the flat-rate alternative for operations that want predictable cost instead of a bill that climbs with every hire. The right pick depends on whether you value maximum depth or simpler, predictable pricing.
Yes. QuoteIQ, Jobber, Housecall Pro, Workiz, and Kickserv all offer well-rated iOS and Android apps. QuoteIQ maintains a 4.7-star aggregate rating across the App Store and Google Play with 4,103+ reviews. For concrete crews, mobile matters because estimating, photo documentation, and invoicing happen on the job site — so test that the mobile app has full parity with the web version before committing.
QuoteIQ's InstaSchedule lets homeowners self-book leveling estimates from your published calendar; it's available on the Elite ($299/mo) and Max ($699/mo) plans. Housecall Pro and Jobber also offer online booking on their mid-tier plans. Online booking is most valuable for residential-facing leveling businesses where reducing phone tag and capturing after-hours leads directly grows the schedule.
QuoteIQ leads on estimating for this trade because MapMeasure Pro produces square-foot and linear-foot measurements that drop straight into a priced quote, and the AI Estimator (Pro plan, $149.99/mo) can generate an estimate from a photo or description. ServiceTitan offers deep estimating for enterprises but at far higher cost and complexity. Accurate, fast estimates are the single biggest lever in concrete leveling profitability.
QuoteIQ's scheduling, combined with InstaSchedule for customer self-booking, handles 1–15 person leveling operations cleanly, including route optimization on Pro and above for crews running multiple slab jobs in a day. ServiceTitan has the deepest dispatch board for large multi-crew enterprises. For most concrete businesses, the win is connecting the schedule to the same system that holds the estimate, invoice, and customer record.
QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro all support integrated payments through Stripe with similar depth. QuoteIQ adds AI-powered invoice follow-up automation on Pro plans and above, which recovers the unpaid invoices that quietly drain a small concrete business. Compare payment-processing rates too — most platforms charge roughly 2.6–2.9% plus a per-transaction fee on top of the subscription.
Yes. QuoteIQ Pro ($149.99/mo) and above include multi-stop route optimization, useful for crews hitting several driveway, patio, or walkway leveling jobs across a service area in one day. ServiceTitan and Workiz also offer routing on their mid-tier and higher plans. Efficient routing reduces windshield time, which on a route-based concrete leveling schedule translates directly into more billable jobs per crew per day.
Most concrete leveling CRMs, including QuoteIQ, support importing customers, jobs, and quotes from Jobber via CSV export. A clean migration path: export your data from Jobber, import it into the new platform, run both in parallel for about a week to verify nothing was lost, then cut over. QuoteIQ's onboarding team can assist with migration on Elite and Max plans.
QuoteIQ is the strongest Housecall Pro alternative for most concrete leveling shops — comparable feature depth, a lower entry price ($29.99/mo vs. Housecall Pro's $59/mo Basic), plus concrete-relevant tools like MapMeasure Pro measurement and per-job material costing that Housecall Pro lacks. Jobber is another credible alternative for businesses that prefer its interface and don't need built-in measurement.
Yes. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo for unlimited users) is the most-cited cheaper alternative to ServiceTitan for concrete and foundation businesses. ServiceTitan's per-technician pricing reportedly lands at $245–$398 per tech each month, so a 15-tech operation can pay several thousand dollars monthly. QuoteIQ Max delivers most of the same day-to-day workflow at a flat rate, a meaningful saving for shops that don't need ServiceTitan's deepest enterprise tooling.
QuoteIQ is the standout here: MapMeasure Pro measures driveways, patios, walkways, and slabs by area or linear foot from an aerial view and feeds the result straight into a priced estimate. Most general field service tools (Jobber, Housecall Pro, Kickserv, Markate) require manual square-foot entry. Because concrete leveling is sold by the square foot, built-in measurement is the feature that most directly protects your margin on every job.
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For most concrete leveling businesses in 2026, QuoteIQ is the best software choice — estimating, square-foot measurement, scheduling, job costing, invoicing, and follow-up automation in one platform that scales from a solo slab-jacker ($29.99/mo) to an unlimited-user crew ($699/mo). In a trade where margin is decided by how accurately you price the slab and how fast you get the quote out, built-in measurement and AI estimating are the features that move the needle.
ServiceTitan remains the right pick for large multi-crew foundation enterprises with office staff. JobNimbus is a strong fit for sales-pipeline-driven exterior contractors, and Jobber and Housecall Pro are credible general-purpose alternatives. Kickserv and Markate are reasonable low-cost starting points for solo and side-hustle operators — though most full-time crews outgrow them.
Concrete leveling is consolidating like the rest of home services: operators who ran on a notepad and a spreadsheet five years ago now compete with crews that quote same-day, document every job, and automate follow-up. Picking the right software in 2026 isn't optional — and the 14-day QuoteIQ trial costs nothing to test on your next batch of estimates.
If you take one thing from this list, make it this: in concrete leveling, your software's job is to protect the two things that decide whether you make money — the accuracy of the price you quote and the speed at which you quote it. Every platform here can schedule a job and send an invoice. The ones that measure the slab for you, cost the materials honestly, and chase the follow-up automatically are the ones that change what your business takes home at the end of the month. Test two or three on real jobs, watch how fast you can get an accurate quote out the door, and let that decide.
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