Software advice for electrical contractors. From someone who’s been in the office.
ElectricianStack compares field-service software, pricing, and business tools for small to mid-sized electrical shops. Not the vendor pitch. The operational reality.
Most shops don’t have a software problem. They have an operations-discipline problem — and the wrong software makes it more expensive. Everything on this site is built around that idea.
What you’ll find here
ElectricianStack covers the tools that run an electrical contracting business: field-service management software, estimating tools, pricing, QuickBooks sync, and the business systems that hold it all together.
We compare software by how it performs in a real shop — with dispatchers in the morning, invoices going out by end of day, and techs who may or may not read the training documentation. We do not rate software by feature count or demo impressions.
Start here
The most useful places to start, depending on where your shop is:
- 1–5 techs: Best software for small electrical shops
- 6–15 techs: Best software for growing electrical contractors
- Comparing options: Jobber vs. Housecall Pro for electricians
- Enterprise consideration: What ServiceTitan actually costs
Compare pricing and software side-by-side
Ready to dig into specifics? Here’s every pricing breakdown and comparison we’ve published:
- ServiceTitan pricing explained — what you’ll actually spend
- Jobber pricing breakdown — per-tech and per-job costs
- Housecall Pro pricing — full cost comparison
- Service Fusion pricing — flat-rate vs. percentage models
- Workiz pricing — what it costs to run
Not sure which tool is worth the cost? Start with the Jobber vs. Housecall Pro comparison — the two tools most shops consider first.
Not sure where to start?
Get the Electrical Software Buyer Checklist — the questions to ask before you sit through a demo, in the order that matters.
Who reads this site
Owners, office managers, dispatchers, and operations leads at electrical contracting businesses with 1 to 20 techs. Residential service and light commercial. The people who will actually have to set up the software, train the techs, and keep it running once the sales rep stops calling.
If you’re evaluating software at a 50-tech commercial shop with a dedicated IT team, this site is less useful for you. If you’re the person who runs the office and also answers phones when it’s busy, it’s written for you.
ElectricianStack covers software, tools, specs, and pricing. We do not provide electrical installation, wiring, code, or safety advice.
