Straight answers about what SnapEstimate actually does today — the product, the price, the stack, and the things we explicitly don’t do yet.
Right. Sign up with your work email, company name, and business zip code — that’s it. The 14-day trial gives you time to embed the widget on your site, configure your price book, and see real estimates generated against Craftsman pricing for your zip. You only enter payment when you’re ready to convert to Pro.
Small, remote-quotable handyman work — repairs, maintenance, honey-do lists, and punch-list items. Faucet swaps, drywall patches, door installs, light fixtures, fan replacements, paint touch-ups.
SnapEstimate is not designed for full bathroom remodels, kitchen rebuilds, room additions, framing, roofing, HVAC, or anything that needs a site visit to scope properly. When the engine detects out-of-scope work, it automatically routes the homeowner to a “schedule a site visit” flow instead of guessing at a price range.
Web only, today. Both the contractor dashboard and the homeowner-facing widget run in the browser. The widget is fully responsive — it works on phone, tablet, and desktop. There is no native iOS or Android app.
$49/month. Includes the embeddable estimating widget, the lead inbox, your custom price book and trade multipliers, minimum trip-charge protection, and email lead routing. Billing is processed monthly by Stripe.
See the Pricing page for the full tier comparison.
Yes — month-to-month, cancel from your portal settings or by contacting us. You retain access through the end of the current billing period. We don’t prorate refunds for partial billing periods. Full cancellation policy is in the Terms of Service.
Account, contractor settings, and estimate data live in Supabase (managed PostgreSQL + auth). The application is hosted on Railway. We use OpenAI for the chat and estimating engine, and Resend for transactional email (lead notifications).
That’s the full sub-processor list. We don’t run advertising trackers, sell data to brokers, or share homeowner PII with anyone outside that set. The data-controller relationship and your rights as the operator are spelled out in the Privacy Policy.
2026 Craftsman National Building Cost data, indexed per zip code. The estimating engine pulls a base unit price from the catalog and applies your custom trade multipliers on top.
Estimates are non-binding ballpark figures meant as a starting point — final quotes always belong to you. Per the Terms of Service, you’re solely responsible for verifying pricing before presenting a final quote to your customer.
Not today. Leads currently route via email when a homeowner submits an estimate request — you receive a scoped notification with the line items and contact info, and respond from your own inbox.
Native pushes to HousecallPro / ServiceTitan / Jobber and a public REST API are on the roadmap but not shipped. If you have a specific integration need, contact us and we’ll let you know where it falls in the queue.
A real person on our team will respond — not a bot. Or just start for free and try it for yourself.