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Jobber for general contractors: the tool whose AI actually answers your bid calls
The short version:
- The reason a GC looks at Jobber: its AI Receptionist answers the phone when you can't, so a bid request doesn't roll to voicemail and die.
- What the base tool covers: quoting, scheduling and dispatching your crew, invoicing, and collecting payment — the office side of running jobs.
- What it costs: Core is $29/mo billed annually, $39/mo on a one-year term, or $49/mo month to month. The AI Receptionist adds $29/mo (30 conversations, then $0.79 each).
- Where it's weak for a GC: it's not a deep estimating or job-costing tool. Change orders, draws, and detailed takeoffs live better in JobTread or Knowify.
- Best fit: smaller crews mixing service calls with projects who want a cheap way in and want AI catching the phones first.
See it in action
▶ Click to play · 47s, silent
Key points from the explainer (our own)
Our own short explainer. A homeowner calls about a big addition while you're framing a wall, and a call that rolls to voicemail goes to the next contractor. Jobber's AI Receptionist answers when you can't, takes the details, and books the estimate, while the base tool handles quoting, scheduling, and invoicing. It's $29/mo, plus $29/mo for the receptionist. Best for small crews mixing service calls with projects.
What does Jobber do for a general contractor?
Jobber runs the office side of your jobs from one app: you send a quote, schedule and dispatch the crew, turn an approved quote into an invoice, and collect the money. For a GC the pull is less about the scheduling and more about the phones. When a homeowner calls about a kitchen remodel and you're forty feet up on a roof or wrapping up at 7 PM, that call is worth thousands. Jobber's AI Receptionist is the piece built to catch it. The rest of the tool keeps a small crew organized without a week of setup, which is why it lands with contractors who want cheap and simple over deep and heavy.
Can Jobber's AI answer bid-request calls after hours?
Yes, and that's the whole reason it earns a spot here. The AI Receptionist picks up when you can't, takes the caller's name, number, and what the job is, and books the follow-up so a warm lead doesn't go cold. On a service trade a missed call is a $200 drain job. On a GC job it can be a $30,000 remodel that walks to whoever answered their phone first. The add-on runs $29/mo and includes 30 conversations a month, then charges $0.79 for each one after that. It comes bundled free on the Plus plan, which starts at $399/mo, so once you're at that tier you stop paying for it separately.
What does Jobber cost for a GC?
The Core plan is $29/mo when you pay for a year up front, $39/mo on a shorter one-year term, or $49/mo billed month to month. Add the AI Receptionist and you're at roughly $58/mo on the annual Core price — still cheap next to the value of one caught remodel. Higher tiers add users and features, and the Plus plan ($399/mo) folds the AI Receptionist in for free. Price the plan against the seats and features you'll actually use, and confirm the numbers with the vendor before you sign up.
Pricing is vendor-published and changes; confirm the current tiers on getjobber.com/pricing (vendor-published, checked 2026-07-08).
Where does Jobber fit a contractor, and where doesn't it?
Strong if…
- Missed bid calls are costing you real jobs and you want AI catching them.
- You run a smaller crew and want a low, predictable monthly cost.
- Your work mixes service calls with projects rather than being all big multi-phase builds.
- You want to be quoting and dispatching in days, not after a long onboarding.
Maybe not if…
- You need serious estimating and takeoffs — JobTread and Knowify are built for that, Jobber isn't.
- Change orders, draws, and progress billing are the core of your money and you want them tracked tight.
- You're running a stack of concurrent construction projects with a lot of subs to schedule.
- You'd rather one platform own project accounting end to end than bolt an AI add-on onto a lighter tool.
Weighing it against the all-in-one option? See Housecall Pro vs Jobber, or the full contractor software comparison.
Common questions
How much does Jobber cost for a general contractor?
Core is $49/mo month to month, $39/mo on a one-year term, or $29/mo billed annually. The AI Receptionist is a separate $29/mo add-on (30 conversations, then $0.79 each), and it's free on the Plus plan ($399/mo). Confirm current tiers with the vendor.
Can its AI answer bid-request calls when I'm on a jobsite?
Yes. The AI Receptionist picks up missed calls, takes the caller's details, and books the follow-up so a bid request doesn't go to voicemail and vanish. For a GC that can be the difference between landing a remodel and losing it.
Is Jobber good for estimating and job-costing?
It handles quotes, but it's not a heavy estimating or job-costing tool. For detailed takeoffs, draws, and change-order accounting on multi-week builds, JobTread or Knowify are built for that work; Jobber is lighter and cheaper.
Can a local pro set Jobber up for me?
Yes. A local consultant can migrate your customer list, turn on the AI Receptionist, and set up scheduling and quoting so you're running from day one. Find one by zip below.
Sources
Pricing verified from the vendor's own page in July 2026. Confirm current pricing before you buy.
Jobber — getjobber.com/pricing (Core $49/mo monthly, $39/mo one-year term, $29/mo billed annually; AI Receptionist $29/mo add-on, 30 conversations then $0.79 each, free on Plus $399+). Vendor-published, checked 2026-07-08. Last reviewed: 2026-07-08.
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