Do it yourself
Compare the AI tools for plumbers by price and fit, then set one up over a couple weekends. We walk you through the steps.
Hire a local AI pro
Tell us your area and your biggest bottleneck — missed calls, dispatch, slow quotes — and we match you with a local consultant who works with plumbers.
The point isn't the tools. It's getting matched with a local pro who sets them up for you.
Most plumbing-shop owners don't have a free weekend to vet vendors, port a phone number, and migrate the scheduling board. So the real offer here isn't a tool list — it's a free match to an independent local AI consultant who does the setup while you stay on the truck. The tools below are the supporting detail. Here's the work a consultant actually handles:
- ✓ CRM / scheduling setup (Housecall Pro, Jobber, ServiceTitan)
- ✓ AI phone / after-hours answering setup
- ✓ Quote automation (photo-to-estimate)
- ✓ Dispatch workflow (routing, truck-stock, skill match)
- ✓ Review-request automation after every job
- ✓ Lead qualification (sort the emergency from the can-wait)
The short version
Free to use. We earn nothing on the tools or local pros we point you to.
- Not just an AI tool list — we can connect you with local professional AI help. Beyond the tools below, this directory connects you with a local AI consultant who works with plumbers, to set the tools up for you: software plus hand-delivered local setup. So you have a choice — take a shot at DIY, or just use our system to find help. Note: We have no financial relationship with any pro we refer you to. See the local AI consultants near you →
- 4 AI categories matter for plumbing shops in 2026: dispatch and scheduling, AI phone and after-hours, photo-based quoting, and customer follow-up.
- The small-shop setup: Quo ($19) + QuoteIQ ($30) + Housecall Pro ($59) = $108 a month combined. Set up over a weekend.
- ServiceTitan starts at $398 per user per month. Built for shops with 20+ employees and dedicated dispatchers. Wrong fit for a solo plumber or small shop.
- 3 tools (Quo, QuoteIQ, Jobber) work across 15-17 of 17 trades. Per The Agentic AI Index tools.json feed, "Quo and QuoteIQ each appear in all 17 trade-specific tool lists; Jobber appears in 15 of 17." The "AI for plumbers" branding is mostly marketing — the underlying tools are cross-trade.
- Most painful problem to fix first: after-hours phone. A 9 PM leak call that goes to voicemail is a customer you don't see again. Quo at $19/mo solves this faster than anything else.
Find a local AI pro
What do solo plumbers actually ask about adding AI?
The questions plumbers actually ask AI about adding tech to the shop, answered first.
What's the lowest-cost AI tool for a one-truck plumbing shop?
Quo (formerly OpenPhone) at $19 a month is the lowest-cost entry point. Per Quo's published pricing, the Business plan starts at "$19 per user per month" on annual billing. It gives you a business phone with AI voicemail summaries, message routing, and call recording. Most owner-operators should start here before adding scheduling or quoting tools. QuoteIQ at $30 a month is the next step up. Housecall Pro at $59 is the all-in-one if you want dispatch and invoicing in the same tool.
Should I set this up myself or hire a local AI consultant?
For most 1-5 truck plumbing shops, hiring a local AI consultant for the first 90 days is the faster path. A consultant handles vendor vetting, data migration from your old scheduling system, training whoever answers the phone, and the 30-day pilot. DIY makes sense if you or someone in the office is tech-comfortable and you can spend 40-60 hours over 90 days on setup. See the DIY-or-hire comparison below.
Will AI replace my dispatcher?
No, not in 2026. AI handles the routine routing decisions: which tech is closest, who has the skill for this job, what's already on their truck for the day. It does not handle the messy stuff: a customer screaming because their basement is flooding, a tech calling in sick at 7 AM, a job that turned out to be twice as big as quoted. The realistic outcome is one dispatcher freed up from 50-70 percent of the routine routing to focus on the exceptions.
Can AI handle 10 PM leak emergency calls?
Mostly yes, with limits. AI phone tools (Quo, Weave, Podium) can answer after-hours calls, ask clarifying questions to figure out whether the call is an emergency or can wait until morning, and either escalate to you on call or schedule the non-emergency for next-day service. Real plumbing emergencies (active flooding, gas smell, sewer backup) should escalate to a human within 60 seconds. Most AI phone tools handle this routing well; some don't. Test it on yourself before going live.
How accurate is AI quoting from a photo for a multi-fixture job?
Accurate enough for a draft estimate that needs human review, not accurate enough to send to the customer untouched. QuoteIQ and similar tools take a photo of the job site, identify the fixtures and likely scope, and generate an itemized estimate in under 60 seconds. The tech still needs to verify access, check for hidden problems (rotted subfloor, corroded shutoffs), and confirm parts. The win is that the estimate is ready before the truck leaves the driveway instead of three hours after.
What if I'm still on paper invoices and a clipboard?
Then start with the phone, not the dispatch system. Quo at $19 a month replaces the cell phone you're using as a business phone, gives you call recording and voicemail transcripts, and works from your existing phone number. Get comfortable with that for 60 days. Then move to Housecall Pro or Jobber for scheduling. Trying to go from paper to full AI dispatch in one weekend usually fails because the change is too much for everyone in the shop.
How long does it take to set up AI tools in a plumbing shop?
Phone tools (Quo, Weave) take 1-2 weeks including porting your number and training the team. Scheduling tools (Housecall Pro, Jobber, Workiz) take 2-4 weeks because of data migration from whatever you were using before. Enterprise tools (ServiceTitan) take 6-12 weeks because they integrate with everything and require dedicated configuration. A local AI consultant typically compresses these timelines by 30-50 percent.
What does AI actually do for a plumbing business?
Four areas across the customer journey: (1) getting found, (2) capturing the inquiry, (3) running the job, (4) keeping the customer. Most shops start with one, see results in 30 days, then add a second within 12 months.
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01
Get found by new customers — how customers search has changed
When a homeowner has a burst pipe at 9 PM, they do not open a plumber directory. They search "plumber near me" on Google, ask Siri or ChatGPT to find one, or scroll Google Maps. The shop they pick is the one their search engine finds — and how customers find you has split into two paths in 2026:
- The Google way (still the biggest): Customers search Google and Google Maps. Visibility comes from your Google Business Profile, reviews, and your website.
- The AI way (new and growing fast): Customers ask ChatGPT, Siri, Google AI, or Perplexity. Visibility comes from how AI assistants read your website and where you're mentioned across the web.
AI tools handle the work on both paths. So does a local AI pro. Without showing up on either, you are invisible to the homeowner searching when their basement is flooding.
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02
Capture every inquiry, including after hours
AI phone tools answer when you can't. One captured after-hours call per month usually pays for the tool for a year.
- Answer 9 PM emergency calls and Saturday morning quote requests
- Qualify the lead and schedule the appointment automatically
- Escalate true emergencies to you within 60 seconds
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03
Run the work — dispatch, scheduling, quoting, billing
AI handles the routine. The dispatcher (or you when you are the dispatcher) handles the exceptions.
- Route calls to the right tech based on skill, drive time, and what's on the truck
- Draft estimates from a photo or voice memo in under 60 seconds
- Turn completed work orders into invoices the same day
Tools: Housecall Pro, Jobber, Workiz, QuoteIQ, ServiceTitan.
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04
Keep customers coming back
Customer retention is the work owners always mean to do and never get around to. AI does it automatically.
- Automated appointment reminders cut no-shows 20-35 percent
- Post-job review requests turn happy customers into Google reviews (which feed back into the local-search loop)
- Annual recall reminders bring customers back for water heater flushes, seasonal checks, drain maintenance
The lifetime value of a kept customer is 5-10 times the cost of finding a new one.
Which AI tools work for plumbing businesses?
Pricing reflects published vendor information as of May 2026. Verify current pricing directly with each vendor before purchase.
| Tool | Category | Use case | Starting price | Setup time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quo | AI phone | Solo + small shops; after-hours coverage | $19/mo | 1-2 weeks |
| LeadTruffle | AI receptionist + missed-call text-back | After-hours lead capture for home-service shops | $229/mo | 1-2 weeks |
| QuoteIQ | AI quoting from photo | Field quoting on residential jobs | $30/mo | 1-2 weeks |
| Jobber | Scheduling + dispatch | 1-15 truck shops; simple UI | $49/mo | 2-4 weeks |
| Housecall Pro learn more › | All-in-one (scheduling + invoicing + comms) | 1-20 truck shops; the small-shop default | $59/mo | 2-4 weeks |
| Workiz | Scheduling + dispatch | Multi-service shops; built-in marketing | $65/mo | 2-4 weeks |
| Podium | AI phone + reviews + comms | Shops focused on review velocity | $249/mo | 1-2 weeks |
| ServiceTitan | Enterprise platform Larger Shops | 20+ truck shops; multi-location | $398/user/mo | 6-12 weeks |
An owner-operator or 1-2 truck shop should start with Quo ($19) for the phone, then add QuoteIQ ($30) or Housecall Pro ($59) within 60 days. ServiceTitan is a good answer for shops with dedicated dispatchers and 20+ techs. Maybe not as good for the small end of the trade.
Feature-by-feature: which tool does what
Same five tools, lined up by the features a plumbing shop actually cares about. A check means the feature is built in; "add-on" means it's there but on a higher tier or via an integration. Verify current capabilities with each vendor — they ship changes often.
| Tool | AI call answering | Photo estimates | Dispatch AI | Best-for shop size | Starting price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quo | Yes | No | No | Solo / 1 truck | $19/mo |
| LeadTruffle | Yes | No | No | Small / mid | $229/mo |
| QuoteIQ | No | Yes | No | Solo / small | $30/mo |
| Jobber | Add-on | Add-on | Yes | 1-15 trucks | $49/mo |
| Housecall Pro | Add-on | Yes | Yes | 1-20 trucks | $59/mo |
| ServiceTitan Larger Shops | Yes | Yes | Yes | 20+ trucks | $398/user/mo |
What the columns mean, in plain English:
- AI call answering — picks up when you can’t, gets the job details, and books it or texts you. A 9 PM call stops going to voicemail.
- Photo estimates — the customer (or you) snaps a photo and the tool drafts a price, instead of driving out just to quote.
- Dispatch AI — the traffic controller for your trucks: it sends the nearest right plumber to each job and reshuffles the day when an emergency hits. See exactly what it does, with a plumbing example ↓
- Best-for shop size — roughly how many trucks the tool is built for.
Read it left to right: Quo is the cheapest way to stop missing calls, QuoteIQ is the cheapest way to quote from a photo, and the three platforms (Jobber, Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan) are where dispatch AI lives. Most shops pair a phone tool with one platform rather than buying a platform that does everything at once.
What “Dispatch AI” actually means — the column above, in action
It’s the part of the shop that decides who goes where and when — usually the owner or whoever runs the phones, juggling the schedule board. “Dispatch AI” is software that does that juggling for you. It sounds vague until you watch it work on a busy Monday, so here’s the concrete version in a plumbing shop specifically:
- Live rerouting on an emergency. A sewer backup comes in at 10:40 AM. The software sees which tech is closest, who's already running 30 minutes long, and whose next job is a flexible drain-cleaning that can slide to 2 PM. It proposes the reroute; the dispatcher hits accept. The flooded basement gets the nearest qualified tech instead of whoever happens to answer.
- Phone triage on the inbound call. The AI phone doesn't just take a message — it asks the caller the questions a good dispatcher would. "Is water actively running right now? Can you reach the shutoff valve under the sink or at the meter, and turn it clockwise to stop the flow?" That one question can keep a slow leak from becoming a ceiling collapse before the truck arrives, and it tells the system whether this is a tonight job or a tomorrow job.
- Parts-on-truck matching. The job says "replace 40-gallon gas water heater." The software checks which trucks are stocked for that — the right flex connectors, a drain pan, a sediment trap — and routes the job to a truck that won't need a parts-house detour. Fewer second trips, more jobs closed same-day.
None of this replaces the plumber's judgment — the dispatcher still overrides the messy calls, and the tech still verifies the job on site. The AI just stops the routine routing decisions from eating the morning.
What does an AI setup actually cost for a plumbing shop?
Real monthly bundles by shop size, based on published vendor pricing as of May 2026. Verify each tool's current pricing before purchase.
| Shop size | Tools | Total per month | Setup time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solo plumberyou + truck | Quo ($19) | $19/mo | 1-2 weeks |
| Small shop2-5 trucks | Quo ($19) + QuoteIQ ($30) + Housecall Pro ($59) | $108/mo | 4-6 weeks |
| Mid-size shop6-15 trucks | Housecall Pro ($59) + Podium ($249) + QuoteIQ ($30) | $338/mo | 6-10 weeks |
| Larger shops20+ trucks | ServiceTitan + Podium | $4,000-$8,000+/mo | 6-12 weeks |
ServiceTitan pricing varies by user count; the estimate above assumes 10-20 paid seats. The small-shop $108/mo bundle is the most common starting point for plumbing businesses adopting AI in 2026.
What does the rollout actually look like, by shop size?
Three honest rollouts — a one-truck owner-operator, a 3-5 truck shop, and a 10+ truck operation. Same shape (Week 1, Week 2, Week 4), different scope and budget. These are typical sequences, not guarantees.
1-truck owner-operator
Week 1: Set up Quo ($19) on your existing number. Get AI voicemail summaries and after-hours capture working. Test the emergency-escalation on yourself.
Week 2: Run it live on real after-hours calls. Listen back to a few transcripts. Tune the greeting and the "is this an emergency?" question.
Week 4: If you're catching calls you used to miss, add QuoteIQ ($30) for photo quoting. Don't add a full dispatch platform yet — you don't need it.
Rough budget: $19-49/mo.
Common mistake: buying an all-in-one platform on day one. You'll use 10% of it and resent the bill.
3-5 truck shop
Week 1: Stand up Housecall Pro ($59) or Jobber ($49) for dispatch and invoicing. Migrate your customer list and open jobs first.
Week 2: Train whoever runs the phones before the techs touch it. Add Quo ($19) for after-hours so nothing falls through at night.
Week 4: Turn on automatic review requests and appointment reminders. Add QuoteIQ ($30) for field quoting if your techs quote on site.
Rough budget: $108-140/mo.
Common mistake: migrating mid-busy-season with no clean customer data — do the data cleanup first or it carries the mess forward.
10+ truck operation
Week 1: Scope a platform that fits a dedicated dispatcher — ServiceTitan ($398/user/mo) or a fully-loaded Housecall Pro tier. Map your current workflow before you configure anything.
Week 2: Configure routing rules, truck-stock profiles, and skill tags. Run a pilot on one crew or one location, not the whole shop at once.
Week 4: Layer in Podium ($249) for review velocity and roll the platform out to the remaining crews once the pilot crew is comfortable.
Rough budget: several thousand/mo, scaling with seats.
Common mistake: flipping the whole fleet over in one weekend. Pilot one crew, fix what breaks, then expand.
A week with AISee what a typical week with AI might look like in a small plumbing shop → +
Here's what a typical week could look like for a 3-truck shop running Quo for the phone, Housecall Pro for dispatch, and Podium for reviews. Hypothetical illustration; your results depend on shop size, market, and how consistently the team uses the tools.
Monday 6:42 AM. Three after-hours voicemails sit in your inbox, already summarized by Quo. The 9:18 PM Sunday call from "Maria on Maple Street" was a slow leak under her kitchen sink, not an emergency. The 11:14 PM call was a wrong number. The 5:30 AM call was a frozen pipe at a rental property — escalated to your on-call tech automatically.
Tuesday morning. Housecall Pro routes the 4 service calls based on tech location and skill. Two reroutes happen automatically when one tech runs long. The dispatcher (or you, if you're the dispatcher) handles only the one job that turned out to be twice as big as quoted.
Wednesday afternoon. Tech takes a photo of a rotted vanity install on a multi-fixture remodel. QuoteIQ drafts the estimate in 47 seconds. Tech adds three line items the AI missed (corroded shutoff valve, drywall cut needed). Customer gets the estimate by text before the truck leaves the driveway.
Thursday 2 PM. A 9-month-old customer gets an automatic recall reminder about her annual water-heater flush. She books for next Tuesday. Without the reminder, she would have called a different plumber.
Friday end of day. Podium fires 6 review requests to this week's completed jobs. Two leave 5-star Google reviews by Saturday morning, which feed back into the local-search loop that brings new customers Monday.
None of this replaces the plumber. AI handles the routine routing, capturing, reminding, and asking. The plumber still does the actual work.
DIY or hire a local AI consultant?
Both paths work. The right one depends on time, expertise, and how much disruption your shop can absorb during a busy season. Click the path that fits.
DIY makes sense if...
- You or someone in the office is tech-comfortable
- Someone can review vendor agreements and security claims
- The shop can absorb 40-60 hours of setup over 90 days
- You're only adding one AI tool at a time
- You've done at least one prior software migration
Hire a local AI consultant if...
- You want to add 2 or more AI tools in the same year
- You have not done vendor due-diligence before
- Time is the constraint, not budget
- You want someone who has done this in 5+ other plumbing shops
- You want to skip trial-and-error on vendor selection
Not sure what one of these pros actually does? See what a local AI pro does for your business →
A typical local AI consultant for a plumbing shop will quote you on a flat-fee or retainer basis.
How do I start using AI in my plumbing shop?
A solo plumber or small shop can run through these steps over a couple weekends. About 40-60 hours of setup spread across 90 days, depending on the tool.
5 stepsSee the DIY plan for plumbing → +
- Pick the highest-leverage pain
Identify the single biggest time drain. For most solo plumbers and small shops it's the after-hours phone (missed 9 PM leak calls), invisibility in "plumber near me" searches, or the dispatch board (juggling 6 service calls on a Monday morning).
- Pick one tool, not three
Match the pain to one tool. After-hours phone problem? Start with Quo. Dispatch chaos? Start with Housecall Pro or Jobber. Slow quoting? Start with QuoteIQ. Don't buy all three at once.
- Run a 30-day pilot on real calls
Roll the tool out on a subset of jobs, customers, or shifts for 30 days. Measure the specific thing you wanted to fix: missed-call rate, dispatch time, quote turnaround, no-show percentage.
- Train whoever answers the phone first
The dispatcher (or you when you're the dispatcher) is the heaviest user. Get them comfortable before the techs in the field touch the system.
- Measure, then either expand or swap
After 30 days, check the metric. If it moved (15 percent drop in missed calls, 5 hours per week back on dispatch), expand. If it didn't, swap the tool, not the category.
- Want the whole thing start to finish?
Read the full DIY guide for plumbers → — the same path explained in plain English, end to end.
How do I find a local AI pro for my plumbing shop?
Enter your zip to see local pros near you, and get a free introduction. No cost to you, and no obligation.
Some areas with listed pros
See all 51 states →We list more than 2,000 local pros across all 51 states; these are some of the biggest areas — enter your zip below to see pros near you. Most are general small-business web, marketing, and AI shops. The setup work (scheduling, AI phones, customer follow-up, websites) is the same for a plumbing shop, so any can help yours.
Now search the real directory (live)
This is the working search. Enter your zip and it queries the live directory; if there's nobody close yet, it shows the nearest we have and tells you how far away, plainly.
Listings are for informational purposes only. The Agentic AI Index does not endorse or certify any provider. Always verify credentials before engaging any service.
Local AI consultants in the directory — for example:
- iORSO — Cumming (Atlanta) · AI automation, consulting, workflow
- SEODesignLab — Daytona Beach (Daytona-Volusia) · SEO, web design, AI email, automation
- Volusia Creative — Daytona Beach (Daytona-Volusia) · web design, AI assistant, automation
- Websoftware — DeLand (Daytona-Volusia) · web design, AI automation, lead gen
- 47 Industries — Gainesville (Gainesville) · web development, apps, AI
Free to use: We earn nothing on the tools or local pros we point you to.
Sources
- Vendor published pricing pages reviewed 2026-05-27 — getquo.com, quoteiq.com, housecallpro.com, getjobber.com, workiz.com, podium.com, servicetitan.com
- No-show reduction figures: vendor-reported customer case studies from Weave, Podium, Housecall Pro, 2024-2025 (vendor-reported, verify before citing)
- Plumbing & Mechanical magazine — "Smart Tools in Skilled Hands" (Nov 13, 2025) for context on enterprise AI adoption in the trade
- Cross-trade tool coverage figures (3 of 7 tools serving 14-17 of 17 trades) from The Agentic AI Index tools.json feed
Last reviewed: 2026-06-11. The Agentic AI Index does not provide legal, compliance, or business advice. Verify all claims, pricing, and vendor terms directly with each vendor.