Tech Stack for Tire Shops in 2027
Direct Answer
A 2027 tire shop runs on Tekmetric ($199-$439/mo) or Mitchell 1 Manager SE ($199-$259/mo) as the shop-management core, with the Tekmetric Tire Suite ($39/mo) or TireConnect/TireSize fitment data layered on top, Sunbit point-of-sale financing for the $700+ ticket, QuickBooks Online Plus ($115/mo) for accounting, and Gusto payroll for techs.
The single most-important pick is the shop-management system because every other tool either bolts onto it or replaces revenue you would otherwise lose.
Why Tire Shops Operate Differently
A tire shop is not a general auto-repair shop with rubber on the wall. The ticket mix is heavier on tire SKUs (which can run 8,000-20,000 variations by size, brand, load index, and speed rating), commercial-account billing for fleets, and same-day install windows that other shops do not face.
A customer who walks in for four tires expects to leave in 90 minutes, not 90 hours.
That changes the software priority order. A general repair shop can survive with a basic shop-management system (SMS) and a parts catalog. A tire shop cannot.
It needs a tire-fitment database that returns the right size and load rating from a VIN or year/make/model in under two seconds, inventory-matrix pricing that handles size-and-brand combinations, DOT registration to track the Department of Transportation identification numbers on every tire sold, and commercial-account net-30 invoicing for the fleet customers who keep the bays full Monday morning.
The 2027 wrinkle: EV-specific tire SKUs (lower rolling resistance, higher load rating for battery weight) are now 18-22% of the tire mix in urban markets, and they have different fitment rules. The stack has to keep up.
Core Stack
The five-to-seven systems that actually run the shop. Real 2027 prices quoted at list — most shops negotiate 10-20% off annual if they push back.
1. Shop Management System (SMS) — the spine.
- Tekmetric Start at $199/mo ($179/mo annually), Grow at $349/mo, Scale at $439/mo. Unlimited users, unlimited repair orders, no per-user fees. The Tire Suite add-on is $39/mo per shop and adds tire-spec lookup, DOT registration, and fitment data inside the same UI.
- Mitchell 1 Manager SE runs $199-$259/mo per workstation depending on contract; ProDemand labor-times add-on is roughly $169/mo. Older shops with legacy data tend to stay on Manager SE; new shops increasingly pick Tekmetric for the cloud-native UX.
- Shopmonkey Basic Monkey at $199/mo, Clever Monkey at $324/mo, Genius Monkey at $475/mo. Strong tire-matrix inventory; weaker on commercial accounts than Tekmetric.
2. Tire-Fitment Database.
- Tekmetric Tire Suite ($39/mo) for shops on Tekmetric — covers fitment, DOT, and TPMS spec.
- TireConnect by Bridgestone (typically bundled free with Bridgestone/Firestone dealer programs; otherwise $99-$199/mo standalone).
- TireSize.com API / DriveRightData for shops that want an independent fitment feed — $50-$200/mo depending on call volume. Returns OE size, plus-size options, and load-rating spec by VIN.
3. Payment + Financing.
- Sunbit point-of-sale BNPL — the #1 BNPL in auto-repair / tire by share, approves roughly 90% of applicants, instant 30-second decision, no hard credit pull, 0% APR available on qualifying terms. No monthly software fee; Sunbit takes a merchant discount (typically 2-6% of financed amount) on each transaction. Critical because the average four-tire ticket is $900-$1,400 and roughly 40% of customers will not put that on a credit card.
- Snap Finance as a secondary lease-to-own option for sub-prime customers Sunbit declines.
- Card processing: Stripe, Square, or Tekmetric Payments at roughly 2.6% + $0.10 card-present, 2.9% + $0.30 keyed.
4. Accounting.
- QuickBooks Online Plus at $115/mo (post-2025 increase) — class tracking lets you separate tires, service, and alignments as distinct profit centers. Pair with Hubdoc or Dext at $25-$50/mo for receipt capture.
- QuickBooks Desktop Pro Plus for shops that still need it — $650/yr subscription, but Intuit is steering everyone to Online.
5. Payroll + HR.
- Gusto Simple at $49/mo + $6/employee for shops with W-2 techs only. Add the Plus tier at $80/mo + $12/employee if you need PTO management and team-survey tools across multiple bays. A typical 6-tech shop runs $85-$152/mo all-in.
- ADP Run as the enterprise alternative at $60-$180/mo + $6-$10/employee — overkill for a single location.
6. Customer Messaging + Reviews.
- Podium Core at $399/mo — review requests, SMS inbox, webchat, text-to-pay. Review velocity matters because 88% of tire-shop customers check Google reviews before booking. The Pro tier at $599/mo unlocks AI replies.
- Cheaper alternative: Birdeye at $299-$449/mo or NiceJob at $75-$125/mo for solo shops.
7. Marketing + Local SEO.
- Google Business Profile (free) is the highest-leverage asset — keep tire-specific photos current and post weekly.
- Demandforce or Kukui at $299-$599/mo if you want full marketing automation. Most solo shops should skip this for the first 12 months.
That stack covers 8 of the 9 systems every tire shop needs. The 9th — a parts-procurement catalog like PartsTech (free with most SMS integrations) or MyPlace4Parts — comes bundled.
Real Operators
Five named tire-shop operators and what they actually run.
- Discount Tire (≈1,200 stores) runs a proprietary stack built on top of Oracle Retail and a custom fitment engine — but their corporate procurement model includes single-store franchise tooling. Independent shops that compete with Discount Tire on price use Tekmetric + Tire Suite + Sunbit to match their financing offer at the counter.
- Mavis Tire (≈1,700 stores) uses an in-house management system layered on Mitchell 1 ProDemand for service data. They publish their stack approach in industry interviews with Tire Review and Modern Tire Dealer.
- Tire Discounters (≈170 stores, Midwest) runs Tekmetric in a portion of their network for tire-suite functionality, paired with Constant Contact and Podium for customer outreach (per Tire Business reporting).
- Best-One Tire dealer-network shops typically run Mitchell 1 Manager SE as the core with TireConnect layered on for OE fitment data — the dealer-network agreement bundles TireConnect at no incremental cost.
- Belle Tire (≈170 stores, Michigan) uses a custom SMS but exposes a customer-facing TireSize.com-style fitment lookup on the booking flow.
The pattern: chains run custom or heavily-customized stacks; independents win by stitching Tekmetric or Mitchell 1 + Tire Suite/TireConnect + Sunbit + QuickBooks + Podium.
Integration
How the stack actually connects. Most tire-shop owners assume integration is automatic. It is not — there is real work to wire it up.
The critical handoffs:
- SMS to fitment: The VIN-decode-to-tire-size lookup is the single most-used function in a tire shop. Tekmetric Tire Suite and Mitchell 1 both handle this natively; Shopmonkey requires a TireConnect bolt-on.
- SMS to financing: Sunbit pushes a text-to-apply link into the customer's phone from the Tekmetric or Mitchell 1 invoice. The customer pre-qualifies in 30 seconds, then the SMS auto-marks the invoice paid when Sunbit funds it (T+1).
- POS to accounting: Tekmetric → QuickBooks Online sync runs nightly via the native integration ($0 incremental); Mitchell 1 → QBO uses Mitchell 1 Accounting Link ($29/mo) or a Zapier bridge.
- Payroll to accounting: Gusto pushes journal entries into QuickBooks Online daily; no manual entry.
- DOT registration: Federal NHTSA rules require every tire sold to be registered to the buyer within 30 days. Tekmetric Tire Suite automates this; Mitchell 1 has it as a separate workflow. Skipping registration creates real recall liability.
Integration cost beyond software: budget 6-12 hours of consultant time at $125-$200/hr to wire it correctly the first time. The shops that try to DIY usually have broken QBO sync inside 90 days.
Failure Modes
The five ways tire shops actually screw up the stack.
- Picking the SMS based on price alone. A shop saves $150/mo by going with a lighter SMS, then loses $8,000/yr in mis-quoted tires because the fitment data is wrong or stale. The math is brutal — the SMS is the cheapest leverage point in the entire business.
- Skipping Sunbit (or equivalent BNPL). Operators look at the 2-6% merchant discount and decide it costs too much. In reality, 30-40% of $900+ tire tickets disappear without financing. Losing one ticket per week to "I'll think about it" is $45,000-$60,000/yr in vanished gross profit.
- Letting tire inventory drift. Without matrix pricing (size + brand + load + speed rating), a shop ends up with $30,000 sitting in dead SKUs by year two. Tekmetric, Mitchell 1, and Shopmonkey all support matrix inventory — the failure is not using it.
- Ignoring DOT registration. When a tire is recalled and the shop cannot prove who bought it, the shop owns the recall cost. Bridgestone Firehawk recalls in 2024-2025 cost non-registering shops $3,000-$15,000 each.
- Stacking too many marketing tools. Podium + Demandforce + Kukui + Birdeye is $1,300/mo of overlap. Pick one messaging tool, one review tool (or one combined tool), and stop.
- No commercial-account workflow. Fleet customers want net-30 invoicing, monthly statements, and per-vehicle history. Tekmetric and Mitchell 1 both support this — Shopmonkey is weaker. Shops that try to run commercial accounts in QuickBooks alone lose 20-30% of fleet revenue to billing errors.
Budget
Realistic monthly software spend, all-in. 2027 list prices, expect to negotiate 10-20% off if you commit annually.
Solo shop (1 location, 2-4 bays, 4-8 employees):
- SMS: Tekmetric Start $199 + Tire Suite $39 = $238/mo
- Accounting: QuickBooks Online Plus $115/mo
- Payroll: Gusto Simple $49 + 6 employees × $6 = $85/mo
- Reviews/SMS: NiceJob $99/mo or Podium Core $399/mo
- Financing: Sunbit $0 base (merchant fees on transactions only)
- Total: $537-$837/mo depending on review tool choice.
1-3 locations (12-25 employees, 8-15 bays per location):
- SMS: Tekmetric Grow $349 + Tire Suite $39 + Multi-Shop $70 per additional shop. For 3 locations: $349 + $39 + ($70 × 2) = $528/mo
- Accounting: QuickBooks Online Advanced $235/mo
- Payroll: Gusto Plus $80 + 25 × $12 = $380/mo
- Reviews/SMS: Podium Core $399 + 2 extra locations × $50 = $499/mo
- Marketing: Demandforce $399/mo
- Financing: Sunbit transaction fees only
- Total: $2,041/mo base. Add card-processing fees on top.
4-10 locations (50-100 employees):
- SMS: Tekmetric Scale $439 + Tire Suite $39 + Multi-Shop $70 × 9 = $1,108/mo
- Accounting: QuickBooks Online Advanced $235/mo + Bill.com $79/mo for AP
- Payroll: Gusto Premium $180 + 75 × $22 = $1,830/mo (or move to ADP Workforce Now)
- Reviews: Podium Pro $599 + 9 extras × $50 = $1,049/mo
- Marketing: Kukui $599/mo + Google Ads $4,000-$8,000/mo
- BI: Tekmetric Reporting native + Tableau at $75/user/mo for the ops team
- Total: $5,000-$9,000/mo software before ad spend.
The headline number for an owner-operator deciding what to budget: plan on $0.85-$1.40 per repair order in software cost. If you do 600 ROs/mo, that is $510-$840/mo. If you do 3,000 ROs/mo, that is $2,550-$4,200/mo.
30 / 60 / 90 Day Rollout
Days 1-30 — Spine in place. Pick the SMS (Tekmetric for new shops, Mitchell 1 if you already have legacy data). Import customer history, vehicle history, and last 12 months of repair orders. Wire QuickBooks Online sync.
Train every service writer on the new ticket flow. Sunbit goes live at the counter on day 30 — the single highest-ROI software move you will make this quarter.
Days 31-60 — Tire-specific layer. Turn on Tire Suite (or TireConnect). Build out matrix pricing for every tire size you stock. Activate Podium and set the post-service review-request workflow to fire 2 hours after ticket close. Set up commercial-account templates in the SMS for your top 5 fleet customers. Train techs on DOT registration.
Days 61-90 — Back office and marketing. Migrate payroll to Gusto (run parallel with the old system for one cycle). Audit DOT registration compliance — every tire sold in days 1-60 should be registered. Turn on whichever marketing automation tool you picked.
Pull the first 90-day report: revenue per RO, gross margin on tires vs. Service, review velocity, and finance attach rate. That report is your baseline.
By day 90 you should be able to answer four questions in under 5 minutes: what was last month's revenue, what was my finance attach rate, how many reviews did I generate, and what is my dead-SKU dollar amount? If the stack cannot answer those, it is not configured correctly.
FAQ
Do I really need a tire-specific SMS, or can I use a generic auto-repair SMS? You need tire-specific. A generic SMS will not handle the 8,000+ SKU matrix, DOT registration, or the VIN-to-fitment lookup. Tekmetric with Tire Suite, Mitchell 1 with the tire add-on, or Shopmonkey are the three real options.
R.O. Writer is a fourth for legacy operators.
Is Sunbit worth the merchant discount? Yes. The merchant fee is 2-6% of financed amount; the alternative is losing 30-40% of $900+ tickets. Even at the high end of the fee range, Sunbit pays for itself 4-6x in capture rate.
The single most-quoted operator data point at the 2025 SEMA Show was tire-shop Sunbit attach rates of 18-28% on tickets above $700.
Can I just use Square or Stripe and skip a real SMS? Only if you do under 30 tickets/month. Above that, the lack of inventory management, customer history, and DOT registration will cost more than the SMS subscription saves.
How do I handle commercial fleet accounts? Tekmetric and Mitchell 1 both have net-30 invoicing, monthly statement runs, and per-vehicle service history. Set them up as a separate customer class. Use QuickBooks A/R aging to chase the 60+ day buckets. Most fleet customers will pay in 35-45 days, not 30 — budget accordingly.
What about EV tires — does my stack need to change? The fitment data layer needs to be current. Tekmetric Tire Suite and TireConnect both updated their EV-specific fitment tables in 2025-2026 (Tesla Model 3/Y, Rivian R1S/R1T, Ford F-150 Lightning, Hyundai Ioniq 5, GM Ultium platform).
If you are on an older Mitchell 1 build, force the fitment-data refresh quarterly. Mis-quoting an EV tire because the load-rating spec is stale costs about $280/incident in goodwill comps.
Sources
- Tekmetric Pricing — official pricing page, https://www.tekmetric.com/pricing
- Tekmetric Tire Suite product page — https://www.tekmetric.com/feature/tire-suite
- Ratchet+Wrench — "Tekmetric Releases Tire Management Software Add-On"
- Mitchell 1 Manager SE — https://mitchell1.com/manager-se/
- Tire Review — "Mitchell 1 Enhances Manager SE Shop Management System"
- Shopmonkey Pricing — https://www.shopmonkey.io/pricing
- Sunbit Merchant Benefits (Auto) — https://sunbit.com/merchant-benefits/auto/
- QuickBooks Online Pricing — Intuit official, https://quickbooks.intuit.com/pricing/
- NerdWallet — "QuickBooks Pricing 2026"
- Gusto Pricing — https://gusto.com/product/pricing
- Podium Pricing — https://www.g2.com/products/podium/pricing
- Tire Business — Mitchell 1 + PartsTech catalog integration coverage
- Modern Tire Dealer — Mavis Tire / Tire Discounters operator interviews
- NHTSA Tire Registration Rule (49 CFR 574) — Federal DOT registration requirement