Tool
FieldPulse
FieldPulse is an SMB FSM platform for plumbing and HVAC contractors priced $70–130/user/mo, headquartered in Plano TX, with strong mobile and
FieldPulse overview
FieldPulse is a field service management platform built for small and growing trade businesses, with particular traction in HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contracting. Based in Plano, Texas, FieldPulse offers a broader default feature set than most pure SMB platforms — including service agreements, a customer portal, and customizable workflows — without the enterprise pricing and implementation burden of platforms like ServiceTitan. The product targets contractors who have outgrown basic scheduling tools and want a single platform for the full service cycle, from lead to invoice.
Pricing
FieldPulse pricing is per-user and typically falls in the range of $70–130 per user per month depending on tier and features. A minimum user count may apply. Annual billing provides a discount over monthly. The per-user model means costs scale predictably as teams grow. A free trial or demo is available. Pricing is more transparent than competitors like FieldEdge or ServiceTitan.
Strengths and weaknesses
FieldPulse packs more features per dollar than most platforms in its price range — service agreement management, a customer portal, and custom fields are typically only found at higher price points. QuickBooks integration covers both Desktop and Online, which is valuable for contractors using older accounting setups. The main tradeoffs are a less refined interface than Jobber, a smaller community, and support that some users have found slower than expected.
When to pick FieldPulse (and when not to)
FieldPulse fits contractors with 3–20 technicians that need more than Jobber’s basic feature set — especially those managing recurring maintenance agreements — but don’t want to pay for ServiceTitan’s complexity. It works well for HVAC and plumbing businesses in the $1M–$10M revenue range. Skip FieldPulse if you are an early-stage business that prioritizes ease of use above all, or if you are a larger contractor needing enterprise-grade reporting and multi-location management.
Pros
- Feature-rich relative to price point — more depth than Jobber at similar cost
- Solid QuickBooks Desktop and Online integration
- Service agreements and recurring job management included
- Good mobile app with offline capability
- Customer portal for client communication
Cons
- Less polished UI compared to Jobber or Housecall Pro
- Smaller user community and fewer third-party resources
- Some advanced features require higher-tier plans
- Support response times can vary
Integrations
References
Pricing and feature data current as of April 26, 2026. Verify with vendor.