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Software

Best Cleaning Business Software for House Cleaning

Compare cleaning business software for house-cleaning operators by booking, scheduling, estimates, invoices, payments, payroll, and time tracking needs.

By CleanBizStack Editorial

Published Updated

Last reviewed by the editorial team on

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Photo: Adolfo Félix · Unsplash License

Editor's picks

  1. Best overall

    Jobber
  2. Residential

    ZenMaid
  3. Commercial

    Workwave

Recommended cleaning business software

  • Editor's pick
    Jobber

    Best for residential cleaning teams of 1–15

    Field service software with scheduling, quoting, invoicing, and a client hub — the default starting point for residential cleaning operators.

    Starts at $49/mo

  • Housecall Pro

    Best for cleaning operators wanting marketing tooling baked in

    Field service platform with bundled marketing automation — strong fit for cleaning operators who'd otherwise pay separately for review and email tooling.

    Starts at $69/mo

  • ZenMaid

    Best for maid services and residential cleaning teams

    Purpose-built scheduling and CRM software for maid services and residential cleaning — workflows reflect how a maid service actually runs.

    Starts at $58/mo

  • BookingKoala

    Best for cleaning operators that want a strong online booking experience

    Booking-first cleaning business software — the customer-facing widget is the central feature, with FSM and team management around it.

    Starts at $27/mo

  • Workwave

    Best for mid-market commercial cleaning operators (10–50 cleaners, multi-site contracts)

    Field service platform built for commercial cleaning operators with route-heavy multi-site operations — sales-led, residential-pick step-up.

    Starts at Custom

  • ServiceTitan

    Best for large commercial cleaning operators with >50 cleaners

    Enterprise field service software for large commercial cleaning operations — overkill below 50 cleaners, the right fit at enterprise scale.

    Starts at Custom

This is the parent hub for cleaning business software and house-cleaning software decisions: the single tool to buy first, the cheapest credible all-in-one, the maid-service-specific pick, and the commercial-cleaning pick. The four picks above answer the broad "best cleaning business software" search in one screen. The body below shows how the workflow categories fit together — booking, scheduling, estimating, invoicing, payments, payroll, and time tracking — without splitting the same intent across thin pages.

The short version

The right tool depends on the operator. The honest defaults, by stage and business type:

  • Solo cleaner with 2–10 jobs a week → Jobber. Entry tier covers everything; you grow into the tool instead of around it.
  • Brand new and price-sensitive → BookingKoala. $27 per month, the cleanest residential booking widget in the set.
  • Residential cleaning company, 1–15 cleaners, maid-service only → ZenMaid. Templates, workflows, and the booking flow are built around maid-service reality.
  • Mixed residential and commercial, growing past five cleaners → Jobber, then layer category-specific tools as bottlenecks appear.
  • Commercial cleaning, 10–50 cleaners, route-heavy → Workwave. Multi-team dispatch and route optimization.
  • Large multi-location commercial, 50-plus cleaners → ServiceTitan. Enterprise tier, justified once you have an operations team.

If you're shopping for one tool today, those six rules cover roughly 90% of the operators landing on this page. The rest of the body is the why behind each pick and the sequencing for everything else you'll eventually buy.

Compare cleaning business software by workflow

Most house-cleaning operators do not need 12 separate subscriptions. They need one reliable operating tool first, then a few category-specific add-ons when a real bottleneck appears.

WorkflowWhat it handlesWhere to go deeper
Online bookingWebsite forms, quote requests, recurring-clean intake, and card-on-file setupOnline booking
Scheduling and dispatchRecurring visits, cleaner assignments, route view, reminders, and job historyScheduling
Estimating and proposalsWalkthrough notes, quote follow-up, deposits, and commercial scope documentsEstimating, with proposals when contracts get formal
Invoicing and paymentsCard processing, invoice delivery, receipts, and late-payment follow-upInvoicing, with payments usually bundled
Time tracking and payrollClock-ins, GPS-aware time logs, payroll runs, and W-2 cleaner recordsTime tracking, then payroll when cleaners join
CRM, reviews, and follow-upClient records, repeat-service prompts, review requests, and retention messagesCRM, review management, and SMS marketing

Use this table as the map. The summaries below tell you which workflow matters first, which one can stay bundled inside your scheduling tool, and which one only matters once the business has cleaners besides you.

The one tool every cleaning business needs first

Scheduling. It's the single source of truth for jobs, clients, and dispatch, and it's the tool that breaks first when you try to run a house-cleaning business out of a notebook and a group text. Past five recurring weekly jobs, the failures start compounding — a double-booking, a forgotten key code, an invoice that goes out three weeks late because the receipt was in the truck. The scheduling category breaks down the picks by operator stage, and the solo cleaner stack shows scheduling in context as the anchor tool for the cheapest credible setup.

Everything else — payments, invoicing, payroll, accounting — is downstream of "did the right cleaner show up at the right house at the right time." Pick the scheduling tool first; the rest of the stack arranges itself around it.

Short summaries by workflow category

Booking. House-cleaning software usually starts with the booking widget because residential clients shop after business hours. BookingKoala and ZenMaid are strongest when the customer-facing form needs to collect home size, bedrooms, bathrooms, add-ons, and recurring-clean cadence before you ever call back.

Scheduling. This is the load-bearing category for almost every cleaning business. Jobber, Housecall Pro, ZenMaid, and BookingKoala all bundle scheduling with customer records, reminders, and invoicing; the right pick depends on whether you are mostly recurring residential, per-job field service, or commercial routes.

Estimating and proposals. Most residential house cleaners can use the quote tools bundled into their scheduling app. Dedicated estimating and proposal workflows matter once you quote larger one-off jobs, commercial contracts, or post-construction work where the written scope prevents the "I thought that was included" argument.

Invoicing and payments. Most operators should not buy standalone invoicing first. Use the invoice and payment flow inside the scheduling tool until card volume, accountant needs, or processing-fee math gives you a real reason to separate the category.

Time tracking and payroll. This category starts when cleaners besides you are on the schedule. Time tracking proves hours worked; payroll turns those hours into a compliant pay run. If you are still solo, this is a later purchase.

CRM, reviews, and follow-up. The built-in client record is enough until your memory starts dropping preferences, gate codes, and rebooking opportunities. Review management is usually the first growth add-on because a steady post-clean review request does more for local search than another generic marketing subscription.

How the picks compare

Best overall: Jobber. Most-used scheduling tool in residential cleaning. The entry tier at $49 per month covers a solo cleaner, and the client hub, recurring schedules, route view, invoicing, and online-booking widget all live on the same record. The day you hire your first cleaner, you stay on the same tool and add a seat. Honest weakness: per-user pricing climbs faster than the entry-tier headline suggests — by your fourth cleaner the monthly bill has moved meaningfully past where it started.

Budget pick: BookingKoala. The cheapest credible cleaning-shaped tool at $27 per month, with the cleanest customer-facing booking widget in the residential set. For a brand-new operator who wants the booking page to do most of the work — strangers searching at 11pm convert to clients without a phone call — BookingKoala is the right starting point. Honest weakness: it's booking-first by design. The calendar, dispatch, and mobile-app side are thinner than Jobber's, which starts to matter once you have multiple cleaners running concurrent jobs.

Residential / maid-service pick: ZenMaid. Purpose-built for maid services at $58 per month. Recurring-clean templates, key-code fields, supplies-per-clean tracking — the workflows reflect maid-service reality rather than approximating it with generic custom fields. Honest weakness: residential-only. Any commercial work, multi-site bidding, or route-based dispatching and it's the wrong call.

Commercial pick: Workwave. Custom pricing, sales-led. Multi-team dispatch, route optimization, and the commercial bidding flow are real features built for the job, not approximations bolted onto a residential UX. The right call for commercial cleaning operators with multi-site contracts. Honest weakness: the custom-pricing sales call is the only way to get a real number, and the platform doesn't scale down to under-10-cleaner operations economically.

You'll also see Housecall Pro and ServiceTitan named on most "best cleaning software" lists. Housecall Pro is the closest functional alternative to Jobber, with marketing automation bundled at a higher entry price; ServiceTitan is the enterprise FSM tier that becomes relevant past 50 cleaners. Neither is a pick on this page because they're slotted differently — Housecall Pro lives as the budget pick on the dedicated scheduling page, and ServiceTitan is the enterprise step up from Workwave once a real operations team is in place.

What each pick actually costs

As of 2026:

  • Jobber Core: $49/mo entry, then seat-based pricing as you add cleaners.
  • BookingKoala: $27/mo entry. Most affordable cleaning-shaped tool in the set.
  • ZenMaid: $58/mo starting. Maid-service-specific.
  • Workwave: Custom pricing, sales-led. Typical entry above $200/mo.
  • Housecall Pro: $69/mo entry. Marketing automation on higher tiers.
  • ServiceTitan: Custom pricing, enterprise-tier.

Hidden costs across all of them: per-user tiering on the residential tools, and payment-processing fees on the bundled processors (most charge in the 2.9% + $0.30 range for invoiced transactions, which is a percentage of revenue rather than a fixed line). Both are normal; both belong on the napkin math.

The other software categories you'll eventually want

Scheduling is the first purchase. The rest of the stack arrives in stages:

Every cleaning business eventually wants:

  • Scheduling software — the anchor, covered above.
  • Payment processing software — card processing, usually bundled into the scheduling tool but worth a separate look at $5,000-plus monthly volume.
  • Invoicing software — usually bundled too; the standalone case is the accountant-driven one.
  • Accounting software — QuickBooks territory, kicks in around $50,000/year revenue or the first W-2 hire.

When you make your first hire:

  • Payroll software — Gusto is the residential default; QuickBooks Payroll if you're already in the QB ecosystem.
  • Employee scheduling software — shift assignments and crew-management, not the customer-facing calendar.
  • Time tracking software — Connecteam-shaped, GPS-aware, for hourly cleaners.

When you start spending on growth:

  • CRM software — once the scheduling tool's built-in client records aren't enough.
  • Review management software — the post-job loop that drives next-month's traffic. The single highest-leverage growth tool for residential cleaning.
  • SMS marketing software — transactional confirmations and review-request automation.
  • Website builder software — the site itself; Wix and Squarespace handle most cleaning operators.
  • Online booking software — the widget on the site, often bundled into the scheduling tool.

Commercial / specialty categories that matter for some operators:

  • Field service management software — the FSM platform conversation, residential and commercial picks.
  • Route planning software — drive-time optimization for route-heavy commercial.
  • Team communication software — Connecteam-shaped, for deskless crews.
  • Client portal software — where commercial clients log in to manage their account.

What we don't recommend yet

A few category pages on this site don't have a defensible standalone pick yet, and we'd rather tell you that honestly than invent one. email marketing software is the clearest example — for most cleaning operators, the bundled email features inside Jobber or Housecall Pro cover the retention job, and the standalone tools we'd recommend if you actually need them (Mailchimp, Brevo, ConvertKit) aren't in our affiliate catalog. proposal software and janitorial inspection software sit in similar territory — both feature sets are usually bundled into your FSM tool until you're large enough to need a real standalone. When that changes, the picks will appear on the relevant page.

The trust-building version of this is: don't buy a tool just because every cleaning-software roundup names a "winner" in the category. Some categories don't have a defensible winner yet, and the right answer is "use what's bundled."

How to sequence your software spend

A simple timeline keyed to operator stage:

  • Month 0 — Scheduling, general liability insurance, business bank account. Business formation services cover the formation side; insurance services cover the GL piece.
  • Month 0–6 — Payments (usually bundled with scheduling), a simple website. The solo cleaner stack is the canonical setup at this stage.
  • Month 6–12 — Review management once you have a recurring base to ask for reviews. The new cleaning business stack layers growth tools on top of the solo setup.
  • Year 1, first hire — Payroll, employee scheduling, time tracking. Accounting software with help from a bookkeeper. The cleaning business with employees stack is the transition.
  • Year 2-plus — CRM if the scheduling tool's built-in isn't enough, email and SMS retention, possibly team-communication. Commercial operators move toward the commercial and premium cleaning business stacks.

How this fits with the rest of our content

This page is the editorial overview. The software directory goes deeper on the picks for one category at a time. Stack recommendations put those picks together by operator stage, with cost callouts and upgrade-path notes. The software stack guide covers the educational side — what each category does, when it matters, and the operator-decision framing. And the state startup guides handle the regulatory layer — formation, licensing, insurance minimums — that varies by state and shapes what you buy from day one.

Frequently asked questions

What's the most important software for a cleaning business?
Scheduling, every time. It's the single source of truth for jobs, clients, and dispatch, and it's the tool that breaks first when you try to run a cleaning business out of a notebook and a group text. Everything else — payments, invoicing, payroll, accounting — is downstream of "did the right cleaner show up at the right house at the right time," which is what the scheduling tool answers.
What software does a brand-new cleaning business need?
Three things on day one — a scheduling tool, a payments tool, and general liability insurance — plus a basic website by month two. The cheapest credible combination as of 2026 is BookingKoala for scheduling, Square for payments, and Next Insurance for general liability. That lands under $75 per month all-in. Everything else is a thing to add when there's a real bottleneck, not on day one.
Is Jobber the best software for cleaning businesses?
For the median residential cleaning operator, yes — the entry tier covers a solo through three hires, the client hub is clean, and the per-user scaling is more forgiving on a small team than the alternatives. It's not the right call for maid-service-only operators who want template depth (ZenMaid) or commercial operators with route-heavy multi-site work (Workwave). "Best" is always relative to the operator; the page above breaks that down by stage and business type.
What's the cheapest credible cleaning business software?
BookingKoala at $27 per month for the entry tier is the lowest credible price among tools built for cleaning businesses, as of 2026. Below that price point, you're either on a generic appointment-booking tool that wasn't built for cleaning or you're DIYing on a calendar app. Both work for the first handful of weekly jobs; both stop working past five recurring clients.
Do I need separate software for scheduling, invoicing, and payments?
For most residential cleaning operators, no — Jobber, Housecall Pro, ZenMaid, and BookingKoala all bundle scheduling, invoicing, and a built-in payment processor on one record. You only need separate tools when the all-in-one's bundled processor charges a noticeably higher rate than Square or Stripe direct, which is worth running the math on at $5,000-plus monthly card volume, or when your accountant needs accounting-specific features that a scheduling tool's bundled invoicing doesn't have.
How much should a cleaning business spend on software per month?
At the solo stage with one to five jobs a week, $30–$70 per month total covers scheduling, insurance, and a basic website. At the 1–5 cleaner stage, plan on $150–$300 per month across scheduling, payment processing, accounting, and review management. At the 5–15 cleaner stage with W-2 employees, $400–$800 per month covers all of the above plus payroll, time tracking, and HR comms. Beyond that, software cost as a percentage of revenue tends to plateau — most healthy cleaning operations spend 1–3% of revenue on software, total.
When should a cleaning business switch software tools?
Almost never on schedule. Migration costs more than the monthly fee difference for at least the first year, so the trigger should be structural — the current tool can't handle your cleaner count, the workflows don't fit your service mix, or you've crossed into something it wasn't built for, like commercial bidding or multi-state operations. If the only reason is "I saw a competitor advertised cheaper," wait.
What software do commercial cleaning businesses use?
Most commercial cleaning operators under 10 cleaners run Jobber the same way residential operators do. Past 10 cleaners with multi-site contracts and route-heavy dispatch, Workwave is the residential-pick step up — it handles the routing and multi-site bidding that Jobber's residential-shaped UX doesn't scale to. ServiceTitan is the enterprise tier above that, justified at 50-plus cleaners with a real operations team. Beyond that, the conversation shifts from "what software" to "what software plus what internal ops headcount."