Housecall Pro is fine if you're running a 20-person operation with a dispatch team. But if you're a solo operator or small crew? You're paying $600+/year for features designed for companies ten times your size.
Housecall Pro's Basic plan is $49/month. Their Essentials plan jumps to $129/month. Max is $199/month. Every month, whether you're working or on vacation.
What's in those higher tiers? Dispatching for multiple technicians. Proposal tools. Recurring invoicing (locked behind Essentials). Employee GPS tracking. Features designed for companies with office staff — not operators running solo.
SoloOp is $0/month. Not a trial. Not a stripped-down free tier. Every feature, every operator, from day one.
Schedule jobs. Optimize your route. Invoice from the job site. Get paid by card or bank transfer. Track expenses. Handle rain days. Manage recurring clients. That's the job. SoloOp does all of it.
Recurring jobs auto-generate. Rain days get rescheduled with one tap. Invoices go out in three taps. Overdue payments chase themselves. End-of-day shows what you earned and what's on tomorrow. Done.
With Housecall Pro, you pay the subscription and the processing fee comes out of your earnings. With SoloOp, there's no subscription and the processing fee gets added to your client's total. You keep 100% of your invoice amount.
Cash and checks? No fee. Either way.
Housecall Pro was built for home service companies with office managers and dispatch teams. Then they made a cheaper plan for solo operators. You're still using their enterprise architecture — just with most of it locked behind a higher tier.
SoloOp was built by an operator in the field. Every screen and workflow was designed for people who run their business from their phone. No "upgrade to unlock." You get everything. See how it works →
Your regular clients approve a payment method once. After that — finish the job, tap charge, money moves. No invoice. No reminder. No chasing. See how AutoPay works →
Cancel Housecall Pro. Download SoloOp. Save $600+ a year.