Water losses don’t wait for business hours, and neither does the documentation that gets you paid. We compared eight platforms across pricing, mobile field documentation, drying-log depth, insurance workflows, and how fast a crew can actually get a job moving — so you can match the right tool to how your restoration business really runs in 2026.
The best all-around software for most water damage restoration businesses in 2026 is QuoteIQ — one affordable platform that handles estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, customer follow-up, and marketing automation, with transparent pricing starting at $29.99/mo. Restoration-specific platforms like Albi, Encircle, and CoreLogic’s DASH go deeper on water-mitigation documentation — moisture mapping, psychrometric drying logs, and Xactimate-linked workflows — and are the better fit for high-volume, insurance-heavy operations. Jobber and Housecall Pro are strong general-purpose options, while PSA serves large multi-crew restoration firms. The right pick depends on how much of your work is insurance-funded mitigation versus owner-billed repair and reconstruction.
| Rank | Platform | Starting Price | Best For | Standout Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | QuoteIQ | $29.99/mo | Solo to mid-size restoration & repair businesses | All-in-one CRM + AI Estimator + automation |
| #2 | Albi | $60/user/mo ($6k/yr min) | Restoration-only contractors | Moisture mapping + drying logs |
| #3 | Encircle | From $250/mo (unlimited users) | Field documentation & insurance evidence | Mobile-first loss documentation |
| #4 | CoreLogic DASH | Custom quote | Scaling, compliance-driven firms | Equipment tracking + AI property data |
| #5 | PSA | Custom quote | Large multi-crew restoration ERPs | Accounting + job management in one |
| #6 | JobNimbus | From $225/mo + per-user | Restoration + roofing crossover | Visual production boards |
| #7 | Jobber | $39/mo | General field service teams | Polished UX |
| #8 | Housecall Pro | $59/mo | Residential service + booking | Consumer-facing booking |
Pricing verified against vendor sources as of May 2026. Restoration software pricing changes frequently and several platforms quote per user or by job volume — confirm current rates directly with each vendor before you commit.
We’re QuoteIQ. We made this list, and we also picked our own platform as #1 — so here’s exactly why, with an honest accounting of where the restoration-specialist tools beat us. Water damage restoration is one of the few trades where purpose-built software genuinely matters, because the work is documentation-heavy and insurance-funded in a way that general field service isn’t. Five criteria drove every ranking decision:
We aggregated data from vendor documentation, third-party review platforms, the Insurance Information Institute, FEMA, and the EPA. Where a specialist tool is genuinely stronger than QuoteIQ for a particular kind of restoration shop, we say so plainly — honest editorial earns trust, and trust is the only reason a comparison like this is worth reading.
“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
QuoteIQ is the platform we built because most restoration operators were stitching together four or five tools that didn’t talk to each other — a CRM here, a separate scheduler there, an estimating tool, a marketing add-on, and a documentation app on top. For solo and mid-size restoration businesses, especially the many that also handle reconstruction, build-back, or adjacent home-service work, QuoteIQ consolidates estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, payments, customer follow-up, and marketing automation into a single app that techs and office staff share. It does this at a published price that starts at $29.99/mo and tops out at a flat $699/mo for unlimited users — a meaningful contrast with restoration platforms that quote per user or hide pricing entirely.
Best for: Solo restorers through roughly 20-person restoration and repair businesses that want one affordable, easy-to-use platform for the whole job lifecycle — from the 2 a.m. emergency call through the signed scope, the invoice, and the review request.
Pros
Where it falls short
“Documentation is not bureaucracy. It is your protection, and it costs nothing but the habit.”
— Mike Vidan, Co-Founder of QuoteIQ
Verdict: QuoteIQ is the best all-in-one for restoration businesses that want a single, affordable platform to run the business — lead to paid invoice — rather than a stack of disconnected tools. Solo operators start at $29.99/mo; growing crews land on Elite ($299/mo) for online booking and automation. If your work is almost entirely high-volume, insurance-funded water mitigation where carriers demand Xactimate line items and IICRC-grade drying logs, run QuoteIQ for business operations and add a documentation specialist like Encircle — or look hard at Albi and DASH below. For the large share of restoration firms that also do repair, build-back, and owner-billed work, QuoteIQ does more of the whole job in one place, for less.
Albi (from Albiware) was built by restoration contractors who were frustrated with everything else on the market, and it shows in the feature set. It is a true restoration-first platform: moisture mapping through its AlbiScope tool, drying documentation, photo capture, asset tracking, and Xactimate integration for estimating, all wrapped around a CRM and job workbook designed around how a water, fire, or mold job actually moves. Reviewers consistently praise its reliability, customization, and responsive support. The trade-off is cost and structure — pricing is per user with a $6,000 annual minimum, which is steep for a one- or two-person shop just getting started.
Best for: Restoration-only contractors who want purpose-built mitigation documentation and don’t mind paying per user for it.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: If you do nothing but restoration and want documentation built for the trade, Albi is the strongest specialist pick on this list. For shops that also handle repair, reconstruction, or other home services — or that can’t justify a $6,000 annual floor — QuoteIQ covers more of the business at a lower entry cost.
Encircle isn’t a full business-management platform — it’s the best field documentation app in restoration, and that focus is its strength. The mobile app is designed to be used at the source of a loss, under bad conditions, with minimal taps: capture photos, videos, notes, floor plans, moisture readings, drying logs, contents inventories, and e-signatures, then package the whole story of the loss into a clean, carrier-ready report in minutes. Every photo carries date, time, and location metadata, which is exactly the kind of data integrity that holds up when a claim is questioned. Pricing is unlimited-user and tied to job volume, starting around $250/mo, which is friendly for crews of any size.
Best for: Restoration firms whose biggest pain is field documentation and justifying estimates to adjusters.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: Encircle is a documentation specialist, not a competitor to an all-in-one. The common, sensible setup is QuoteIQ (or another business platform) for running the company, plus Encircle in the field for bulletproof loss documentation. If documentation is your only gap, it’s an excellent, fairly priced addition.
DASH, from CoreLogic (formerly Next Gear Solutions), is one of the most established names in restoration job management and a default choice for firms scaling into multi-location, high-compliance operations. It’s a web-and-mobile platform that centralizes customer information, job costs, automated workflows, and compliance task lists, and it leans on CoreLogic’s property-intelligence database to auto-populate property details. A standout detail for restorers: DASH won’t let you close a job until all company equipment has been logged as removed and returned — the kind of asset-accountability guardrail that prevents lost air movers and dehumidifiers. It also carries SOC 2 Type II certification for data security. Pricing is quote-only.
Best for: Growing restoration firms that need enterprise compliance, asset tracking, and carrier-program workflows.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: DASH is built for restoration firms that have outgrown lightweight tools and need enterprise compliance and asset control. Below that scale, the complexity and quote-based cost don’t pencil out — QuoteIQ or Albi will get a small or mid-size shop running faster and cheaper.
PSA is a restoration-industry ERP — it bundles accounting, job management, CRM, and analytics into one package, which is the appeal for larger firms that want their financials and operations under a single roof rather than synced across tools. For multi-crew restoration companies running complex water, fire, and contents jobs, PSA’s job tracking, moisture documentation, and Xactimate and QuickBooks integrations streamline the path from dispatch to closeout. The trade-offs are familiar for software at this tier: a steeper learning curve, pricing that scales quickly, and some reporting customization that requires add-ons or support. Pricing is quote-only.
Best for: Established, multi-crew restoration firms that want accounting and operations integrated in one ERP.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: PSA makes sense for mid-to-large restoration firms that want a single system of record for both the books and the jobs. Smaller operators will find it heavier and pricier than they need — QuoteIQ paired with QuickBooks Online delivers a leaner, cheaper version of the same idea.
JobNimbus made its name as an all-in-one roofing app, and that lineage is exactly why it’s a fit for the many restoration companies that also do storm, roof, and exterior work. Its visual production boards, custom job workflows, lead tracking, and QuickBooks two-way sync give crossover contractors a single pipeline from sales through production and billing. For pure water-mitigation documentation it’s less specialized than Albi or Encircle, and the three-layer pricing — base plan, per-user fees, and a separate texting subscription — can climb faster than the headline number suggests.
Best for: Contractors who blend restoration with roofing or exterior storm work and want one production pipeline.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: JobNimbus is a smart pick if a real slice of your work is roofing or exterior storm restoration. If you’re a dedicated water and mold mitigation shop, a restoration specialist serves you better; if you want all-in-one breadth without the per-user math, QuoteIQ’s flat tiers are easier to budget.
Jobber is the polished general-purpose field service CRM, and plenty of restoration-and-repair businesses run on it because the basics — quoting, scheduling, invoicing, client communication — are clean and techs adopt it without complaint. What it isn’t is restoration-specialized: there’s no moisture mapping, no drying logs, and no Xactimate workflow, so the water-mitigation documentation side falls outside its lane. Pricing is transparent and starts at $39/mo for a solo Core plan, though per-user costs and add-ons like the AI Receptionist and Marketing Suite push the real number higher as you grow.
Best for: Restoration-adjacent and repair businesses that want a great generalist tool with excellent UX.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: Jobber is a strong all-rounder if restoration-specific documentation isn’t critical to your work. For restoration shops that want comparable ease of use plus AI estimating and a flat unlimited-user tier, QuoteIQ is more cost-effective as you scale.
Housecall Pro is a well-built home-services platform with a reputation for a strong consumer-facing booking experience and solid Google reviews automation. For restoration companies that lean residential and bill the homeowner directly — smaller water cleanups, mold jobs, owner-paid repairs — it handles scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and payments cleanly. Like the other generalists here, it has no native restoration tooling: no moisture mapping, drying logs, or carrier-claim workflow. Most restoration features readers will want live on the Essentials plan ($149/mo) or above, and additional users on MAX run $35/mo each.
Best for: Residential, owner-billed restoration and repair where booking conversion matters more than claim documentation.
Pros
Where it falls short
Verdict: Housecall Pro is a fine fit for residential, homeowner-billed restoration where the front-end booking experience drives the business. For insurance-funded mitigation it lacks the documentation backbone, and for all-in-one value QuoteIQ starts lower and includes AI estimating.
Most field service software is built for a job that starts when a customer books and ends when you collect payment. Water damage restoration breaks that model in three ways, and understanding them is the difference between buying the right tool and buying an expensive one you abandon in a month.
1. The work is an emergency, so speed and dispatch come first. A burst pipe at 2 a.m. doesn’t schedule itself for Tuesday. The EPA notes that water-damaged materials should be dried within 24 to 48 hours before mold takes hold, which means your platform has to turn an after-hours call into a dispatched crew fast. Real-time scheduling, mobile access, and automated customer communication aren’t nice-to-haves here — they’re the job. As Mike Vidan puts it, response speed is the most controllable variable in winning service work, and in restoration it’s also a health-and-safety clock.
2. The work is documentation-heavy because it’s insurance-funded. Roughly a quarter of all homeowners insurance claims involve water damage or freezing, and most of your invoices ultimately get paid by a carrier, not the homeowner. That changes everything. You need photos with reliable metadata, moisture readings, psychrometric drying logs, contents inventories, and signed scopes — the evidence that justifies your estimate to an adjuster. This is where restoration specialists like Albi, Encircle, and DASH earn their keep, and where a general CRM needs a documentation tool alongside it. Whatever you choose, prioritize the speed and defensibility of your documentation above almost everything else.
3. Estimating runs on a different standard. Many carriers and third-party administrators expect estimates in Xactimate line-item format. Restoration-specific platforms integrate directly with it; general platforms don’t. If most of your work is carrier-assigned mitigation, an Xactimate workflow is close to mandatory. If you do a lot of owner-billed repair, build-back, and reconstruction, a flexible AI-assisted estimator like QuoteIQ’s covers far more of your day-to-day quoting.
The practical takeaway: decide what share of your revenue is high-volume, carrier-funded water mitigation versus owner-billed repair and reconstruction. The more carrier-funded mitigation you do, the more a restoration specialist (or a specialist paired with a business platform) pays off. The more mixed your work — and most restoration businesses are more mixed than they think — the more an affordable all-in-one like QuoteIQ does in one place.
Pick QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo. You get estimating, scheduling, invoicing, customer follow-up, and built-in photo capture for documentation without paying a per-user minimum you can’t justify yet. The 14-day trial lets you confirm the fit before any charge, and you can document the loss with QuoteIQ-CAM and inspection forms from day one.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) or Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users). Pro unlocks the AI Estimator, which speeds up quoting mitigation and repair together. If your jobs are almost all carrier-assigned water mitigation, weigh Albi’s restoration-specific documentation against the per-user cost.
QuoteIQ Elite ($299/mo, 10 users) for online booking and automation, or Albi if documentation depth is your top priority and you’re restoration-only. Many shops this size land on QuoteIQ for the business and add Encircle in the field for loss documentation — a combination that’s still cheaper than a full restoration ERP.
QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) if you want flat, predictable pricing as headcount grows, or CoreLogic DASH if you need enterprise compliance, asset-return enforcement, and carrier-program workflows. Get demos of both and weigh transparency and onboarding speed against feature depth.
PSA or CoreLogic DASH. Both are built for the volume, compliance, and accounting integration that large restoration firms need. PSA’s ERP approach appeals if you want financials and operations in one system; DASH appeals for its restoration pedigree and asset controls.
JobNimbus. Its production boards and sales pipeline are built for roofing and crossover storm restoration, giving mixed contractors one pipeline from lead to billing. Just budget carefully for the base-plus-per-user-plus-texting pricing structure.
Encircle for the field, paired with QuoteIQ for the back office. Encircle’s app is built to be used in bad conditions with minimal taps, so even a tech-resistant crew can capture a defensible record. QuoteIQ keeps the scheduling, invoicing, and follow-up simple on the office side.
More than any other home-service trade, restoration lives and dies on documentation. A plumber gets paid when the leak stops. A restorer gets paid when an insurance adjuster — sometimes weeks later, sometimes after a desk review or a dispute — agrees that the scope, the drying, and the charges were justified. That single difference is why “best restoration software” rarely has the same answer as “best field service software,” and why the right pick depends almost entirely on how much of your revenue is carrier-funded.
The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) publishes the S500 standard that defines what a water-damage job should look like: categorize the water, establish the extent of migration, set drying goals, and monitor moisture until materials reach a documented dry standard. A platform built for restoration helps you produce that record almost automatically — moisture readings logged by room and day, psychrometric data that proves the drying chamber was working, equipment placement and run-time, and a contents inventory if you’re packing out a home. When a carrier challenges a claim, that record is the difference between getting paid in full and eating the difference. As QuoteIQ Co-Founder Mike Vidan puts it, “Documentation is not bureaucracy. It is your protection, and it costs nothing but the habit.”
Then there’s Xactimate. For a large share of insurance-funded mitigation work, the carrier expects the estimate in Xactimate’s line-item format, priced against its regional price list. Restoration specialists like Albi and CoreLogic DASH are built to live alongside that workflow; some integrate directly. General field service tools — including QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro — do not produce Xactimate estimates, because they’re built for owner-billed work where you set your own prices. This is the single clearest dividing line in the category. If most of your jobs are carrier-assigned and estimated in Xactimate, a restoration-specific platform earns its higher price. If most of your work is owner-paid repair, reconstruction, and build-back — where you quote your own numbers and need fast estimating, scheduling, and invoicing — an all-in-one like QuoteIQ does the job for a fraction of the cost.
The practical reality for most shops is that the work is mixed. You might run carrier-funded water mitigation in the morning and an owner-paid bathroom rebuild in the afternoon. That’s why a growing number of restoration businesses run two tools deliberately: a documentation-first app like Encircle for the field capture on insurance jobs, and an affordable all-in-one like QuoteIQ for estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and customer follow-up across everything else. Paying $250-plus per month for enterprise mitigation software to run a business that’s only one-third carrier work is a common and expensive mistake.
After comparing the platforms in this guide against how restoration shops actually operate, the same avoidable errors show up again and again. Watch for these before you sign anything.
CoreLogic DASH and PSA are excellent platforms — for large, carrier-heavy operations with the volume and staff to use their depth. A two- or three-person shop that signs a custom enterprise contract usually ends up paying for compliance and asset-tracking features that sit idle while the basics they actually need every day, like fast estimating and clean invoicing, feel heavier than they should. Match the tool to your size and your claim mix, not to the most impressive demo.
Headline pricing hides the real cost. Albi’s roughly $60-per-user monthly rate and $6,000 annual minimum is reasonable for a busy mitigation crew but punishing for a solo operator or a seasonal business. Encircle’s volume-based pricing scales with jobs. Always model your true 12-month cost at your real headcount and job count before comparing platforms — the cheapest sticker price is frequently not the cheapest tool.
They aren’t. Documentation tools prove what happened on a job; estimating and back-office tools get the job quoted, scheduled, invoiced, and paid. A platform can be superb at one and weak at the other. Decide which problem is actually costing you money — lost claims and disputes, or slow quotes and messy billing — and weight your decision accordingly. For many shops, the honest answer is that they need both, from two tools that each do their job well.
The most capable software is worthless if your technicians won’t open it on a wet, chaotic loss site. Offline capture, a small number of taps to log a reading, and an interface that survives gloves and bad lighting matter more than feature checklists. As Justin Rogers, QuoteIQ’s other Co-Founder, frames it: “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.” Pilot any platform with your least tech-friendly crew member before rolling it out.
Demos are staged; real losses are not. Before committing to an annual contract, run a genuine job — or a close reconstruction of one — through the platform end to end: estimate, schedule, field documentation, invoice, and follow-up. QuoteIQ offers a 14-day free trial specifically so you can do this without risk. Whatever you choose, insist on testing the full workflow, not just the feature you were most excited about, before money changes hands.
Listed every CRM and job-management tool serving restoration businesses with a meaningful review base. We started from the platforms restoration contractors actually search for and shortlist — restoration specialists and the general field service tools they compare against — and filtered out tools with thin or stale customer review histories.
Verified pricing against each vendor’s published source as of May 2026. For quote-only platforms like DASH and PSA we noted the lack of transparency rather than guessing, and we pulled per-user and minimum-commitment details from vendor pages and third-party reviews where published.
Matched feature lists against the documentation that defines restoration work. Moisture mapping, psychrometric drying logs, contents inventories, equipment tracking, offline mobile capture, Xactimate integration, and carrier-claim workflows — the capabilities that separate a restoration tool from a generic CRM.
Cross-referenced customer reviews across the App Store, Google Play, Capterra, and G2. Aggregate sentiment, recent review trajectory, and recurring complaint patterns all factored into the ranking, alongside guidance from the IICRC and the Restoration Industry Association on what restorers need.
Layered in operator perspective from Mike Vidan and Justin Rogers. Both QuoteIQ Co-Founders have built and run service businesses, and both bring four-plus years of product context from building QuoteIQ around how field crews and office staff actually work.
QuoteIQ doesn’t yet have a dedicated water-damage-restoration industry page, so these verified 5-star reviews are drawn from adjacent water-and-office-intensive trades on our platform — carpet cleaning and plumbing — where the day-to-day operations closely mirror a restoration shop’s quoting, scheduling, and office workflow.
“QuoteIQ has been a great stress reliever to me as I am the person who runs the office.”
“After that I immediately upgraded, and really like the app as it better fits my needs and is easy to use”
“It’s a reliable, feature-rich, and user-friendly solution that I highly recommend to anyone seeking to enhance their customer relationship management.”
Mike co-founded QuoteIQ in 2022 after 20-plus years running home-service businesses. His YouTube channel (580K+ subscribers) covers field service operations, pricing, and the documentation discipline that protects contractors when a customer or carrier disputes a job.
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 software that crews actually use.
Read Justin’s insights →For most restoration businesses in 2026, QuoteIQ is the best all-around software — one affordable platform for estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and customer follow-up, starting at $29.99/mo. Restoration-specific platforms like Albi, Encircle, and CoreLogic DASH go deeper on water-mitigation documentation such as moisture mapping and drying logs, and are the better fit for high-volume, insurance-funded operations. The right choice depends on how much of your work is carrier-assigned mitigation versus owner-billed repair and reconstruction.
Restoration software pricing in 2026 ranges widely. All-in-one platforms like QuoteIQ start at $29.99/mo and scale to $699/mo for unlimited users. Restoration specialists run higher: Albi is about $60/user/mo with a $6,000 annual minimum, and Encircle starts around $250/mo for unlimited users priced by job volume. Enterprise platforms like CoreLogic DASH and PSA are custom-quoted. Most small to mid-size restoration shops spend between $30 and $300/mo, with carrier-heavy operations paying more for documentation depth.
There is no full-featured free software built for water damage restoration. Restoration is too documentation-heavy and insurance-driven for free tools to cover it well. Most platforms, including QuoteIQ, offer a 14-day free trial but no permanent free tier. QuoteIQ plans start at $29.99/mo for solo operators. The cost typically pays for itself by replacing several separate tools — estimating, scheduling, invoicing, and follow-up — and by getting claims documented and paid faster.
QuoteIQ Essentials at $29.99/mo is the best fit for solo restorers — full estimating, scheduling, invoicing, follow-up, and built-in photo documentation in one app, with no per-user minimum. Jobber Core ($39/mo) is a capable general-purpose alternative. Restoration specialists like Albi tend to carry per-user pricing and annual minimums that are hard for a one-person shop to justify until volume grows.
QuoteIQ Beginner ($74.99/mo, 2 users) or Pro ($149.99/mo, 4 users) covers most small restoration teams, with Pro unlocking the AI Estimator for faster quoting. If nearly all your work is carrier-assigned water mitigation, Albi’s restoration-specific documentation may justify its per-user cost at this size. Teams that also handle roofing or storm work should look at JobNimbus.
For large, multi-crew restoration firms, CoreLogic DASH and PSA are the two main contenders. DASH brings enterprise compliance, asset-return enforcement, and a deep restoration pedigree; PSA bundles accounting and operations into one ERP. Both are custom-quoted. QuoteIQ Max ($699/mo, unlimited users) is a transparent, lower-cost alternative for large teams that don’t need the full enterprise feature surface and want predictable, flat pricing as they grow.
Yes. QuoteIQ, Encircle, Albi, Jobber, and Housecall Pro all have well-rated iOS and Android apps. For field documentation specifically, Encircle is built mobile-first and works offline, which matters in a flooded basement with no signal. QuoteIQ’s mobile app maintains a 4.7-star aggregate rating across the App Store and Google Play with 4,103+ reviews, and gives techs and office staff the same shared platform on any device.
Restoration-specific platforms integrate with Xactimate, the estimating standard most carriers expect on a claim. Albi and PSA both offer Xactimate integration, and DASH operates within the CoreLogic ecosystem alongside it. General platforms like QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro don’t sync natively with Xactimate. If most of your work is carrier-assigned mitigation requiring Xactimate line items, prioritize a specialist; if you do significant owner-billed repair, a flexible AI estimator covers more of your quoting.
For carrier-funded mitigation, the strongest estimating runs through Xactimate-integrated platforms like Albi and PSA. For owner-billed repair and reconstruction, QuoteIQ’s AI Estimator (Pro plan, $149.99/mo) generates estimates from a photo or job description in seconds, which is faster for mixed work. Many restoration firms use both worlds — a specialist for Xactimate claims and a flexible estimator for everything else.
For fast, emergency-driven dispatch at 1-15 person shops, QuoteIQ’s scheduling — combined with InstaSchedule for online booking on Elite ($299/mo) and Max plans — handles restoration cleanly. CoreLogic DASH offers the deepest dispatch and compliance controls for large multi-crew operations. Because water losses are emergencies, prioritize real-time mobile access and automated customer communication over calendar bells and whistles.
QuoteIQ supports integrated payments via Stripe and QuickBooks Online sync, with AI-powered invoice follow-up on Pro plans and above — useful when a carrier check takes weeks. Albi and PSA add deeper job-costing and accounting integration suited to insurance-funded billing. The biggest invoicing challenge in restoration is documentation: an invoice backed by clear photos, moisture logs, and a signed scope gets approved faster, whichever platform processes the payment.
Restoration-specific platforms do. Albi includes moisture mapping (AlbiScope) and drying documentation, Encircle captures moisture readings and drying logs in the field, and DASH and PSA support drying progress tracking. General platforms like QuoteIQ, Jobber, and Housecall Pro do not include psychrometric drying engines — restoration firms that need that depth typically pair an all-in-one business platform with a documentation specialist like Encircle.
Most platforms, including QuoteIQ, support importing customers, jobs, and quotes from Jobber via CSV export. The clean migration path is to export your Jobber data, import it into the new platform, run both in parallel for about a week to confirm nothing’s missing, then cut over. QuoteIQ’s onboarding team can assist on Elite and Max plans. Whatever you switch to, confirm your historical documentation exports cleanly before you cancel the old tool.
QuoteIQ is the best Housecall Pro alternative for most restoration businesses — comparable ease of use, lower entry pricing ($29.99/mo vs Housecall Pro’s $59/mo Basic), plus AI estimating and built-in photo documentation. For restoration firms that need true mitigation documentation, a specialist like Albi or a documentation tool like Encircle is the better alternative. Housecall Pro remains a fine pick if your work is residential and owner-billed.
Yes. DASH and PSA are enterprise restoration platforms with custom, quote-based pricing that scales quickly. QuoteIQ Max delivers all-in-one business management at a flat $699/mo for unlimited users, and Albi offers restoration-specific documentation at $60/user/mo. Smaller and mid-size firms that don’t need full enterprise compliance and accounting integration usually find one of these meaningfully cheaper, with faster onboarding and transparent pricing.
Encircle is the standout for field documentation — photos, moisture readings, contents inventories, floor plans, and e-signatures with reliable date, time, and location metadata that holds up when a claim is questioned. Albi and DASH build documentation into a full restoration platform. For shops that run an all-in-one like QuoteIQ for the business, pairing it with Encircle in the field is a common, cost-effective way to keep claim documentation tight without a single $1,500/mo enterprise tool.
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For most restoration businesses in 2026, QuoteIQ is the best all-around software choice — estimating, scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, follow-up, and marketing automation in one affordable platform that scales from solo operators ($29.99/mo) to unlimited-user teams ($699/mo), with transparent published pricing in an industry full of hidden quotes. For the large share of restoration firms that also do repair, build-back, and owner-billed work, it does more of the whole job in one place than any specialist tool.
Where the work is almost entirely high-volume, carrier-funded water mitigation, the restoration specialists earn their place. Albi is the strongest restoration-only platform, with moisture mapping and drying documentation built in. Encircle is the best field-documentation tool, and pairs naturally with an all-in-one for the back office. CoreLogic DASH and PSA serve large, compliance-driven, multi-crew operations. JobNimbus is the pick for restoration-and-roofing crossover, and Jobber and Housecall Pro remain solid general-purpose options for residential, owner-billed work.
The restoration industry runs on speed and documentation — the EPA’s 24-to-48-hour drying window and the carrier paying the invoice both reward the contractor who responds fast and documents thoroughly. The right software is the one your crew will actually use to do both, on the worst day a property owner has had in years. Whatever shortlist you build from this list, start with how your own revenue splits between mitigation and repair, then test the top one or two before you commit. The 14-day QuoteIQ trial costs nothing to try.
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