Walk any trade show or scroll any contractor Facebook group and you'll be hit with a wall of advertising for field service management software. ServiceTitan, Housecall Pro, Jobber, FieldEdge, and a dozen others all promise the same thing: a single platform that handles your scheduling, dispatching, invoicing, pricing, customer management, marketing, reporting, and more.
What they don't always advertise prominently is the price. Most of these platforms run $200 to $700 per month per user, with implementation fees, training fees, and per-transaction fees stacked on top.
For larger operations — say, 10+ trucks doing six-figure monthly revenue — these platforms can absolutely pay for themselves. But for the solo operator, the two-truck shop, or the new contractor still building their book of business, they're often a financial trap that delivers 5x the features at 50x the cost of what's actually needed.
Here's the honest case for running a small trade business on Excel and a handful of free tools — and when (if ever) you should graduate to expensive software.
What expensive contractor software actually costs
Let's get specific about pricing. As of 2026, typical monthly costs for popular field service platforms:
| Platform | Typical Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ServiceTitan | $300–$700+ per user | Implementation fees often $5,000+ |
| Housecall Pro | $65–$280 per user | Tiered features; basic tier limited |
| Jobber | $70–$350 per month | Tiered by user count |
| FieldEdge | $200–$500+ per user | Custom pricing common |
| JobNimbus | $200–$300 per user | Roofing/exteriors focused |
For a solo operator, the lowest-tier options ($65-200/month) sound manageable. Let's add it up over a typical 5-year business runway:
- $100/month average × 60 months = $6,000 over 5 years
- $300/month for higher-tier features × 60 months = $18,000 over 5 years
- Add typical credit card processing fees (2.9-3.5%) on top of standard processor rates
For a brand-new contractor, that's a meaningful chunk of capital going to software during the years when cash flow is tightest.
What you actually need (vs. what the software offers)
Field service software typically bundles 15-25 features. The core capabilities most small contractors actually use daily are about 6:
- Scheduling — knowing when and where each job happens
- Estimating/quoting — generating professional quotes with consistent pricing
- Invoicing — sending bills and tracking payment
- Customer database — keeping contact info and job history accessible
- Job costing — knowing whether a specific job was profitable
- Reporting — basic month-end financial visibility
The other 10-20 features bundled into expensive software (advanced dispatch routing, GPS tracking, automated review requests, marketing automation, payment financing, inventory management, equipment tracking, etc.) are great — but most small contractors don't use them, or use a small fraction of them, or could replicate them with free tools.
The Excel-based stack that replaces $300/month software
Here's a complete operational stack for a small contractor that costs essentially nothing per month:
Scheduling: Google Calendar (Free)
Free, syncs across all your devices, shareable with employees and customers. Add jobs as calendar events with addresses, customer info, and notes. Color-code by job type. Done. You don't need specialized scheduling software for fewer than 100 jobs per month.
Estimating/quoting: Excel-based templates (one-time cost)
A well-built Excel quote template lets you generate professional, branded estimates in 10-15 minutes. Plug in your customer info, select services from a price book, and the math is automatic. The output is a clean PDF you email to the customer.
This is where pre-built systems shine — building these templates from scratch takes serious time, but pre-built ones cost $30-100 once and last forever.
Invoicing: Excel + free PDF + email (Free)
Invoice templates in Excel generate professional invoices in under 5 minutes. Save as PDF, email to customer, copy yourself for records. For payment processing, link directly to PayPal, Venmo Business, Stripe, or Square — none of which require expensive monthly software to use.
Customer database: Excel or Google Sheets (Free)
A simple sheet with customer name, address, phone, email, job history, total spend, and notes. Searchable, sortable, exportable. For under 1,000 customers, this is functionally equivalent to a CRM at zero cost.
Job costing: Excel template (one-time cost)
A job-cost worksheet that tracks hours, materials, and revenue per job — and outputs profit margin. Reviewed monthly, this gives you better insight into job profitability than most expensive software dashboards (because the data is yours and you understand exactly where it came from).
Financial reporting: Excel + your accounting software (Free–$30/month)
QuickBooks, Xero, or Wave handle the actual bookkeeping. For management reporting (P&L by job type, gross margin trends, etc.), an Excel dashboard pulling from monthly accounting exports gives you customized visibility that prebuilt reports can't match.
Marketing/reviews: Free tools + manual workflow
Google Business Profile (free), basic review request texts via your phone (free), simple email follow-ups (free). The "marketing automation" features in expensive software are usually just preset templates and timing rules — easily replicated manually for a small business.
Total monthly cost comparison
| Stack | Monthly Cost | Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Field service platform (mid-tier) | $200-300 | $2,400-3,600 |
| Excel-based stack | $0-30 (accounting only) | $0-360 |
| Annual savings | $200-270/month | $2,400-3,240 |
That's $2,400-3,000 per year that stays in your business — money you can put toward better tools, marketing, training, or just take home as additional profit.
When you SHOULD pay for the expensive software
To be fair, expensive contractor software exists for good reasons. Here's when it actually makes sense:
- You're running 5+ trucks with employee techs. Real-time dispatch, GPS tracking, and automated workflows pay for themselves at scale.
- You're doing 200+ jobs per month. Manual coordination breaks down at high job volume.
- You're hiring and need standardized processes. Software enforces workflow consistency in a way Excel can't.
- You're growing intentionally toward acquisition or franchise. Sophisticated systems make a business more valuable to buyers.
- You have specific integrations you need (consumer financing, fleet tracking, advanced inventory management).
If you don't fit any of these criteria, you don't need the software. You need to run lean and put your capital into things that drive revenue (marketing, equipment, hiring) instead of into a monthly subscription.
The mindset shift
The reason so many small contractors over-invest in software is psychological, not operational. Expensive software feels like running a real business. The branded interface, the dashboards, the integrations — they create a sense that you're "set up properly."
But the actual measure of a real business isn't the software you use. It's whether you're profitable, whether your customers are happy, and whether you can sustain the work you have. You can build all of that on Excel and free tools. Plenty of seven-figure trade businesses do.
The key is having well-designed Excel templates rather than building everything from scratch. Most contractors who try to DIY their entire spreadsheet stack burn out and abandon the project — not because Excel can't do it, but because they don't have time to engineer 50 templates while running a business.
The bottom line
Don't let software companies convince you that you need a $300/month platform to run a real trade business. For most solo operators and small crews, an Excel-based stack with the right pre-built templates handles 90% of operational needs at 1% of the recurring cost.
Save the expensive software for the day you have so much volume that manual coordination is genuinely breaking down. Until then, run lean, run profitable, and put your money into things that actually grow the business.
The goal isn't to look sophisticated. It's to make money.