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Jobber vs Yardbook (2026): Which Lawn Care Software Wins?

A head-to-head on price, scheduling, routing, invoicing, and apps. Yardbook is free; Jobber starts around $29/mo annual. Which one fits a solo operator, and which is worth paying for as you grow.

5 min read
Freshly mowed green lawn with stripe pattern
Photo via Unsplash

About this guide: Pricing and features were checked against each vendor's pricing page (or current third-party comparisons where a page blocked access) in June 2026, linked inline. This pricing changes, so confirm the live number before signing up. Rankings are editorial. No vendor pays for placement and we earn nothing if you sign up.

Intro

This comparison comes down to one fork: free with trade-offs, or paid and polished. Yardbook gives you a working business-management tool at $0. Jobber gives you a smoother, more capable one starting at $29/mo (annual). The right answer depends entirely on where your business is today.

The short answer

Pick Yardbook if you are solo or running a small crew and price is the deciding factor. The free tier genuinely runs a lawn care business: scheduling, invoicing, CRM, basic routing, even satellite lot measurement, at no cost.

Pick Jobber once the rough edges start costing you time and you have the revenue to cover it. The native iOS app, turn-by-turn route optimization (on the Connect tier), and automated quote and invoice follow-ups are the difference, and they matter more as you grow.

If you are weighing other tools too, see our best scheduling software for lawn care roundup and Jobber vs LMN.

Pricing

Yardbook

PlanPriceNotes
Starter$0Scheduling, invoicing, CRM, basic routing, lot measurement, chemical tracking. Ads shown.
Business$34.99/moFlat rate. Adds GPS tracking and bulk SMS.
Enterprise$49.99/moFlat rate. Adds QuickBooks sync.

Flat-rate, no annual discount. Source: confirmed via Connecteam and FieldCamp, since Yardbook's pricing page blocked direct access.

Jobber

PlanMonthlyAnnualUsers
Core$49/mo$29/mo1
Connect$139/mo$99/mo5
Grow$199/mo$149/mo10
Plus$699/mo$529/mo15

No free tier, 14-day trial only. Extra users are $29/mo each. Confirm current rates at getjobber.com/pricing.

The price gap is the headline. Yardbook is free or $34.99/mo flat. Jobber's useful tier for a real crew is Connect at $99/mo (annual) or $139/mo monthly, because that is where route optimization lives.

Feature comparison

FeatureJobberYardbook
SchedulingAll plansAll plans (free)
InvoicingAll plansAll plans (free)
Route optimizationTurn-by-turn (Connect+)Basic (all plans)
CRMFull client recordsProperty mgmt + satellite measurement
QuickBooks syncConnect+Enterprise only
PaymentsMultiple processorsStripe only
iOS native appYes (well rated)No (web-based on iOS)
AI featuresCopilot AINone
Lot measurementNoYes (satellite)

Where each one wins

Yardbook wins on cost, and it is not close. A solo operator gets scheduling, invoicing, a client database, and basic routing for nothing. Two features even beat Jobber outright: satellite lot measurement for quoting, and chemical and regulatory tracking built in. For a one-person operation, that is a complete tool at $0.

Jobber wins on polish and on the things that scale. The native iOS app is the clearest gap, Yardbook's iOS experience is web-based, which crews feel every day in the field. Turn-by-turn route optimization, multiple payment processors, and automated follow-ups on quotes and invoices are the rest. None of these matter much at one truck. All of them matter at three.

The cost objection to Jobber is real and consistent. On Capterra, one user put it plainly: "Jobber looked to be a good product but price point for a small growing business where every penny counts is unrealistic." That is exactly the gap Yardbook fills.

Which should you pick?

  • Solo, every dollar counts: Yardbook free. It runs the business today.
  • Small crew, want lot measurement and chemical tracking: Yardbook, free or Business at $34.99/mo.
  • 2-5 trucks, scheduling and routing are the daily pain: Jobber, budgeting for the Connect tier to get real route optimization.
  • Field crew on iPhones: Jobber, for the native app alone.

The practical path for most new operators: start on Yardbook free, run it until the missing pieces (native app, turn-by-turn routing, automated follow-ups) are costing you more than Jobber's bill, then switch. Export your client list before you move.

FAQ

Is Yardbook free, or is it a trial? Genuinely free. The Starter plan has no time limit. It is funded by in-app ads and a higher payment-processing surcharge, not a countdown.

Why is Jobber's real price higher than the headline? The Core plan is one seat without route optimization. The features a growing crew actually wants live on Connect, which is a 5-seat plan at $99/mo (annual) or $139/mo monthly. Price the tier you will use.

Can I move from Yardbook to Jobber later? Yes, and it is a common path. Export your clients and job history from Yardbook first. Time the switch for a slow week so the crew can adjust to the new app.

Does either integrate with QuickBooks? Both do, but it is gated. Jobber syncs on Connect and up; Yardbook syncs on its Enterprise tier ($49.99/mo). See our landscaping invoice software guide for the accounting side.

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Have feedback on this review or a tool we missed? Email me.

We re-verify pricing and feature comparisons quarterly. Last updated June 2, 2026.