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. Jobber

Choose 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. Procore

Where 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.

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See the full best CRM for contractors guide or all comparisons.