The construction industry runs on coordination — between owners, general contractors, subcontractors, suppliers, and field crews. The right software doesn’t just save time; it prevents the cost overruns, miscommunications, and schedule delays that eat into every project’s margin. This is a breakdown of the best software platforms across every phase of a construction project — from preconstruction and bidding through project management and final closeout.
Estimating and Bidding Software
1. Procore Estimating (Formerly Levelset)
Best For: General contractors managing bid packages and subcontractor bids at scale
What It Does: Procore Estimating allows GCs to create detailed cost databases, generate bids, and manage subcontractor bid solicitations in one system. It integrates directly with Procore’s project management platform so your estimate becomes the project budget with no double entry.
Key Features:
- Cost database with customizable assemblies
- Subcontractor bid solicitation and comparison tools
- Direct integration with Procore project management
- Markup and bid proposal generation
Pricing: Subscription-based; custom pricing tied to annual revenue. Request a demo for quote.
Best Used When: Your company is already on or migrating to Procore. Standalone, it is expensive relative to alternatives.
2. Buildertrend Pre-Construction
Best For: Residential builders and remodelers
What It Does: Buildertrend’s bidding tools are tailored for residential construction — custom home builders, remodelers, and specialty contractors. It handles proposals, bid requests, and allows clients to approve estimates and selections through a client portal.
Key Features:
- Online proposals with e-signature
- Budget templates and bid requests to subs
- Client-facing portal for estimate review and approval
- Integrated scheduling and project management
Pricing: Starts at approximately $99/month (essential tier) up to $399/month (premium).
3. Stack Construction Technologies
Best For: Specialty contractors and subs doing takeoffs and quantity measurement
What It Does: Stack is purpose-built for digital takeoffs from PDF plans. It converts plan sets into measurable quantities — linear feet, square footage, counts — that feed directly into your bid. It’s fast, accurate, and significantly better than manual measurements on paper.
Key Features:
- PDF plan markup and measurement tools
- Multi-trade templates (concrete, framing, electrical, etc.)
- Cost integration and bid export
- Cloud-based with team collaboration
Pricing: Starts at approximately $1,999/year for a single user.
Best Used When: You are a specialty sub who needs fast, accurate takeoffs but doesn’t need a full project management suite.
Project Management Software
4. Procore
Best For: Mid-to-large commercial general contractors
What It Does: Procore is the market leader for commercial construction project management. It handles submittals, RFIs, daily reports, drawings, specifications, change orders, and financial management in one integrated platform. It is the standard in commercial construction — most large GCs and owners require subcontractors to use it.
Key Features:
- Drawing and spec management with version control
- RFI tracking with automatic deadline alerts
- Submittal log management
- Change order workflow (owner, GC, and sub-facing)
- Daily reports and field logs
- Unlimited project access for external collaborators
Pricing: Custom pricing; typically $375-$1,200+/month depending on modules and company size.
Best Used When: You work on commercial projects over $1M where owners and GCs require document control and field tracking at scale.
5. Buildertrend
Best For: Residential builders and remodelers under $10M/year
What It Does: Buildertrend covers the full residential construction lifecycle — bids, contracts, scheduling, purchase orders, client communication, and financial summaries. It’s the residential alternative to Procore, and it’s more affordable and easier to implement for smaller teams.
Key Features:
- Project scheduling with Gantt and calendar views
- Purchase orders and subcontractor management
- Client portal with photo sharing and messaging
- Time tracking for field crews
- Warranty and service request management
Pricing: $99-$399/month depending on tier.
6. CoConstruct
Best For: Custom home builders and high-end remodelers
What It Does: Now owned by Buildertrend (they merged), CoConstruct has historically been the top choice for custom homebuilders who need strong client-facing features — detailed selections management, client communication logs, and transparent budget tracking. Buildertrend continues to operate CoConstruct separately with its own feature set.
Key Features:
- Client selection sheets with allowances
- Real-time budget vs. actual for clients
- 3-way messaging (client, trade, and team)
- Custom specifications and finish schedules
Pricing: Contact for current pricing post-merger.
Financial Management and Job Costing Software
7. Sage 100 Contractor (Formerly Sage Timberline)
Best For: General contractors who need full accounting and job costing integration
What It Does: Sage 100 Contractor is purpose-built for construction accounting — job costing, payroll (including certified payroll for prevailing wage jobs), accounts payable, billing (AIA-format pay applications), and financial reporting. It is not a project management tool; it is an accounting system that understands construction.
Key Features:
- Job cost reports by phase, cost code, and cost type
- AIA-format billing (Schedule of Values)
- Subcontractor lien waiver tracking
- Certified payroll reporting (Davis-Bacon)
- Workers’ comp and general liability insurance tracking
Pricing: Starts around $150-$200/user/month for cloud version; on-premise pricing varies.
Best Used When: You run public work (prevailing wage) projects or you need real construction accounting — not a workaround in QuickBooks.
8. QuickBooks + Knowify Integration
Best For: Small specialty contractors and subs under $3M revenue
What It Does: QuickBooks is not construction-specific, but when paired with Knowify — a construction-specific job costing and project management add-on — it becomes a viable system for smaller contractors. Knowify handles job budgets, time entry, purchase orders, and contract billing, then syncs to QuickBooks for accounting.
Key Features of Knowify:
- Job-cost budgets by trade and phase
- Purchase order management
- Time and material billing
- T&M vs. fixed-price contract management
Pricing: QuickBooks Online ($25-$200/month) + Knowify ($149-$499/month).
Best Used When: You already use QuickBooks and are not ready to migrate to a full construction accounting system.
Scheduling Software
9. Microsoft Project
Best For: Complex project schedules that require full CPM (Critical Path Method) logic
What It Does: Microsoft Project remains the industry standard for sophisticated project scheduling — particularly on large commercial, civil, and industrial projects where owners require CPM schedules in .MPP format. It supports predecessors/successors, resource loading, and baseline tracking.
Key Features:
- Full CPM scheduling with critical path highlighting
- Resource leveling and allocation
- Baseline schedule vs. current schedule comparison
- Export to PDF and share with owners
Pricing: $10-$55/user/month depending on plan.
10. Buildertrend / Procore Scheduling
Best For: Day-to-day field scheduling on residential and commercial projects
What It Does: Both Procore and Buildertrend include built-in scheduling tools with Gantt chart views, task dependencies, and automated notifications when tasks are complete or behind schedule. These are not as sophisticated as MS Project, but they are practical for field supervisors and PMs who need a living, shareable schedule — not a contract document.
Field and Punch List Software
11. PlanGrid (Now Autodesk Construction Cloud)
Best For: Field teams tracking drawings and markups on mobile devices
What It Does: PlanGrid — now rebranded into Autodesk Construction Cloud — allows field superintendents and PMs to access current drawing sets, add markups and RFIs, and track punch list items from any mobile device. It integrates with BIM 360 for BIM-enabled projects.
Key Features:
- Always-current drawing distribution to field
- Photo-linked field notes and markups
- Punch list creation and assignment by location
- Offline access when working in basements or remote sites
Pricing: Part of Autodesk Construction Cloud; pricing starts around $500/user/year.
12. iSqFt / ConstructConnect
Best For: General contractors looking for bid leads and plan rooms
What It Does: ConstructConnect (which includes iSqFt and Bid Clerk) is a construction project leads database that helps GCs and subs find bid opportunities, download plans, and manage their bid pipeline. For companies actively marketing for new work, this is an essential prospecting tool.
Key Features:
- Project lead database by geography and trade
- Plan downloads and spec sheets
- Bid calendar management
- Network of GCs and owners posting bids
Pricing: Subscription-based; typically $2,000-$5,000/year depending on geography and access level.
How to Choose the Right Stack for Your Company
The right construction software stack depends on three variables: company size, project type, and phase of the construction process you are trying to fix. Here’s a simplified framework:
- Under $2M revenue, residential trades: Buildertrend or CoConstruct + QuickBooks. Simple, affordable, client-friendly.
- $2M-$15M revenue, GC or specialty contractor: Procore (or Buildertrend for residential) + Sage 100 or QuickBooks + Knowify for job costing.
- $15M+ revenue, commercial GC: Procore full suite + Sage 300 CRE or Viewpoint Vista for accounting. MS Project for CPM scheduling.
- Specialty sub doing takeoffs: Stack for estimating + your trade-specific accounting (QuickBooks or Sage).
Implementation Warning
The biggest mistake contractors make is buying software and not implementing it. Software only creates value when your team uses it consistently. Before you commit to any platform, evaluate three things: (1) Will your field crew actually use it? (2) Does your accounting team have the bandwidth to learn it? (3) Do you have someone who owns implementation and training?
A $400/month software that your team uses delivers more value than a $1,500/month system nobody logs into. Choose the platform that fits where your company is today — not where you hope it will be in five years.
