Head-to-head · Updated May 2026
Jobber vs. Procore
Jobber is best for small to mid teams (1–15 users) (from ~$39/mo (1 user)), while Procore fits large gcs, owners, specialty contractors on formal projects (from $$$$ — annual deals, often tens of thousands per year). If you're a solo operator or small crew wanting built-in AI and flat pricing, JobStack ($29/mo) is the lighter third option — included in the table below so you can compare all three at once.
| Feature | Jobber | Procore | JobStack |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Small to mid teams (1–15 users) | Large GCs, owners, specialty contractors on formal projects | Solo operators and crews up to 5 |
| Setup time | A few hours to a day | Months for full deployment | Under 5 minutes |
| Built-in AI auto-responder | Limited | Limited | Yes, on AI Assistant tier |
| Voice-to-estimate | No | No | Yes |
| Contract | Monthly or annual | Annual | Monthly, no contract |
Pricing and feature claims verified May 2026. Full plan breakdowns: Jobber pricing · Procore pricing.
Choose Jobber if…
you have a crew of 6+, need deep client portal features, or rely on mature integrations with QuickBooks, Mailchimp, or Stripe-plus-everything-else.
JobStack vs. JobberChoose Procore if…
you're a large general contractor or specialty firm running formal projects with RFIs, submittals, AIA billing, and the back-office headcount to absorb a year of onboarding.
JobStack vs. ProcoreWhere JobStack fits
Jobber and Procore lean toward construction projects and bigger teams — capability a solo operator or a crew up to five carries but rarely uses in full. JobStack takes the opposite bet: the daily essentials — scheduling, estimates, invoicing, and payments — with AI on the time sinks (texting back leads, drafting estimates from a voice note, chasing unpaid invoices), flat per-tier pricing, and setup in minutes.
Frequently asked questions
Jobber vs. Procore: which is better?
Neither is universally better — it depends on your business. Jobber is best for small to mid teams (1–15 users), starting around ~$39/mo (1 user). Procore is best for large gcs, owners, specialty contractors on formal projects, starting around $$$$ — annual deals, often tens of thousands per year. Solo operators and small crews who want built-in AI and flat pricing should also look at JobStack ($29/mo).
Is Jobber or Procore cheaper?
Jobber starts around ~$39/mo (1 user) and Procore around $$$$ — annual deals, often tens of thousands per year. Compare total cost rather than headline price — per-user fees and tier upgrades change the math quickly as you add crew.
What's a cheaper alternative to Jobber and Procore for a solo operator?
JobStack starts at $29/mo with flat per-tier pricing (no per-user fees) and built-in AI for lead replies, voice-to-estimate, and automated follow-ups. It's purpose-built for solo operators and crews up to five, where Jobber and Procore are aimed at larger teams.
More comparisons
The lighter, AI-native option.
JobStack is the CRM for solo tradespeople and small crews. Launching soon.
Notify me at launchSee the full best CRM for contractors guide or all comparisons.