Tech Stack for Auto Detailing Shops in 2027
Direct Answer
The stack that actually runs a 2027 auto detailing shop is Mobile Tech RX for estimates, packages, and ceramic-coating photo logs ($119–$299/mo), Urable or Jobber for scheduling and CRM ($45–$166/mo or $39–$210/mo), Square POS + Appointments for tap-to-pay and online booking ($0–$49/mo + 2.6% + 15¢), QuickBooks Online Plus for books ($115/mo), and Gusto for payroll once you hire ($49/mo + $6/employee).
If you can only buy one piece of software, buy Mobile Tech RX — it is the only tool on this list built specifically for detailers, with VIN scanning, before/after photo binders per vehicle, and ceramic-coating warranty tracking baked in.
Why Auto Detailing Operates Differently
Auto detailing is not a generic home-services trade. The job is vehicle-specific, photo-heavy, and chemical-heavy in a way that breaks most field-service software.
Three operational realities define the stack:
- Every job is a unique VIN with a paint condition that must be documented before chemicals touch it. A scratch you didn't photograph at intake is a scratch you caused at 4pm. Mobile Tech RX built its entire app around this — you scan the VIN, the year/make/model auto-fills, you walk the car snapping 8–12 photos, and the binder is locked with a timestamp. Generic CRMs like HoneyBook or Jobber Core can attach photos to a job but they don't structure them per-panel.
- Ceramic coatings carry 2–10 year warranties that you have to honor. When you sell a customer a $1,200 Gtechniq Crystal Serum Ultra or $1,800 IGL Kenzo package in 2027, you are signing up to document application conditions, cure time, batch numbers, and annual inspections for the next decade. Lose that record and the warranty manufacturer voids the claim — you eat the redo at $600–$1,400 in labor.
- Pricing is package-based, not hourly. A Stage 2 paint correction is $650 flat regardless of whether it takes your tech 9 hours or 14. Software has to support tiered packages with add-ons (engine bay, headlight restoration, pet hair, smoke removal) and pricing by vehicle class (sedan / mid-SUV / full-size / truck / exotic). Square Appointments alone struggles with this; you need Mobile Tech RX or Urable to model the menu correctly.
A plumber's stack will technically run a detailing shop. It will also lose you $15k–$40k a year in mispriced ceramics, missing intake photos, and chargebacks you can't fight without the before-photo. Detailer-native software is not a luxury.
Core Stack
The 2027 working stack is five to seven pieces of software. Below are the picks an owner-operator actually buys.
1. Mobile Tech RX — $119/mo Starter, $189/mo Standard, $299/mo Pro (unlimited users)
This is the detailer-native operating system. VIN scanning auto-populates year/make/model, the Pricing Calculator prices a job by vehicle size class, and the Photo Binder organizes intake/in-progress/completion shots per panel. Ceramic-coating shops use the Notes + Photos module to log coating batch numbers, ambient temperature, and humidity at application — the warranty proof you'll need if a customer claims a failure 18 months in.
Mobile Tech RX integrates with QuickBooks Online for invoice sync and processes credit cards inside the app at 2.85% + 30¢. Starter is 1 user; Pro is unlimited users and the right pick for any shop with 3+ techs.
2. Urable — $45–$166/mo (Solo / Standard / Pro)
The other detailer-native option. Urable is built around the Good / Better / Best quote engine and the Service Plan / Maintenance Bucket funnel — when a customer accepts the "Best" tier, they're auto-enrolled in a monthly or quarterly maintenance plan that re-bills automatically.
For shops that sell ceramic maintenance plans at $59–$129/mo recurring, Urable's recurring-billing logic is cleaner than Mobile Tech RX. Pick Urable if your business model leans heavy on coatings + maintenance recurring revenue; pick Mobile Tech RX if you do more one-off detail jobs.
3. Jobber — $39/mo Core, $119/mo Connect, $210/mo Grow
Not detailer-native, but the route optimization is best-in-class for mobile detailing shops covering a metro. Jobber's Connect plan adds online booking, automated payment reminders, and a client hub the customer logs into. Mobile detailers running 2–4 trucks across 30+ stops/week typically pair Jobber for routing with Mobile Tech RX for vehicle-level documentation — or, more commonly in 2027, replace Jobber with Urable's routing module and consolidate to one tool.
4. Square POS + Appointments — Free POS + $29–$49/mo Appointments + 2.6% + 15¢ in-person
The card terminal at the front desk. Square Terminal hardware is $299 one-time and processes tap-to-pay at 2.6% + 15¢. Square Appointments Free tier handles 1 location with online booking; Plus ($29/mo) adds Google Calendar sync and no-show fees; Premium ($69/mo) adds payroll integrations.
For shops that already run Mobile Tech RX or Urable, Square is the payment-acceptance backbone — you use it as the terminal, not the scheduling system.
5. QuickBooks Online Plus — $115/mo (2027 price after 13% YoY increase from $99 in 2026)
The book of record. Plus is the right tier for any detailing shop because it supports class tracking (separate revenue by service category: paint correction, ceramic, interior, PPF) and location tracking (separate P&Ls per shop). Mobile Tech RX and Urable both sync invoices and payments to QBO automatically.
Simple Start ($35/mo) does not support class tracking and is too thin; Essentials ($65/mo) is the floor for a real shop.
6. Gusto — $49/mo Simple + $6/employee, $80/mo Plus + $12/employee
Payroll. The moment you hire your first W-2 detailer at $18–$28/hr, Gusto runs payroll, files taxes, and handles new-hire reporting. Gusto's time-tracking is included in Plus, which matters because detailers often work shifts that cross overtime thresholds during a busy summer.
7. NiceJob or Podium — $75–$399/mo
Review-request automation. NiceJob starts at $75/mo, Podium at $399/mo Core. Pick one.
Detailing is a Google-Maps-driven business — 78% of new customers find shops via local search, and shops with 4.8+ stars and 200+ reviews book 3–4× the volume of shops at 4.4 with 40 reviews. The software automates the post-job text asking for a review.
Real Operators
Five named shops and what they actually run in 2026–2027:
- Attention to Detail (Phoenix, AZ) — runs Mobile Tech RX Pro as the daily driver, QuickBooks Online Plus for books, Square Terminal for in-shop payments, and NiceJob for review automation. Owner Kevin Davis has cited the MTR photo binder as the single tool that ended dispute chargebacks at his three-bay shop.
- Top Coat Garage (Denver, CO) — ceramic-coating specialty shop running Urable Pro for the Good/Better/Best quote engine and recurring $89/mo Maintenance Bucket billing. Pairs Urable with QuickBooks Online Essentials and Stripe instead of Square (lower processing rates on stored cards).
- Detail Authority (Tampa, FL) — mobile-only operation with 3 trucks, runs Jobber Connect for routing across the Tampa metro, Mobile Tech RX Standard on each tech's iPad for vehicle documentation, Gusto Plus for the 5-person crew, and Square Terminal Mobile for curbside payment.
- Esoteric Auto Detail (Columbus, OH) — high-end exotic detailer specializing in $8,000–$15,000 full PPF + ceramic packages. Runs a custom HubSpot CRM ($20–$1,200/mo) instead of detailer-native software because their sales cycle averages 14 days and needs deal-pipeline reporting. Books in QuickBooks Online Advanced ($235/mo).
- Auto Concierge (Austin, TX) — 6-location franchise running Mobile Tech RX Enterprise (custom pricing, roughly $1,200/mo for the group), QuickBooks Online Advanced, Gusto Premium for 40+ employees, and Podium for review and webchat across all locations.
Integration
The five-system stack must connect or it becomes a re-keying job that eats 6–10 hours/week of admin.
The required integrations in 2027:
- Mobile Tech RX → QuickBooks Online: native two-way sync. Invoices, customers, and payments flow automatically. Set this up day one — manually re-entering 60+ invoices/week is the single biggest reason shops fall behind on books.
- Urable → QuickBooks Online: native, same as above. Urable also pushes recurring maintenance-plan charges as recurring invoices in QBO.
- Square → QuickBooks Online: native integration via the Sync with Square app. Daily sales totals post as a journal entry; itemized transactions are available if needed.
- Gusto → QuickBooks Online: native. Each payroll run posts a journal entry with wages, taxes, and employer contributions split correctly.
- Mobile Tech RX → Square Card Processing: MTR's in-app payments run on its own processor at 2.85% + 30¢. Shops that want Square's lower 2.6% + 15¢ in-person rate generate the MTR invoice, then ring it on the Square terminal — slightly clunky, but $2,000–$4,000/year in processing savings for a shop doing $400k+ in revenue.
- CARFAX Service Network: free for shops that submit qualifying service records. Detailers get added to a customer's CARFAX Service Report as a "service provider visit" which builds local trust and feeds inbound referrals.
The integration choke point is photos. Photos taken in Mobile Tech RX stay in Mobile Tech RX — they do not push to QuickBooks or your accountant. Treat MTR as the system of record for vehicle documentation, and QuickBooks as the system of record for money. Don't try to merge them.
Failure Modes
Five ways operators screw up the stack in 2027:
- Using a plumber CRM and hoping. Jobber Core at $39/mo looks cheaper than MTR at $119/mo. Then you sell a $1,400 ceramic and have no batch-number log when the customer claims streaking 16 months in. You lose $700 in labor redoing it and refund the $1,400. The detailer-native software paid for itself for 18 months on that one dispute.
- Letting QuickBooks slip past 30 days behind. Sync is automatic, but reconciliation is not. Shops that don't reconcile their bank feed weekly end up with 6+ months of un-categorized transactions at tax time, paying their CPA $1,500–$3,500 to clean it up. Block 45 minutes every Friday.
- Running everything through personal Venmo / Cash App. Customers will offer; some operators take it. The IRS gets a 1099-K at $600/year, your books don't see the revenue, and your insurance carrier denies the claim when an incident happens off-the-books. All payments through Square, MTR card processing, or Stripe — period.
- Skipping intake photos because "it's just a wash." A $45 maintenance wash can generate a $2,400 paint-respray claim if the customer says you caused a swirl. No intake photos, no defense. The 90 seconds it takes to photo-binder every car saves one $2,400 claim every 18 months statistically.
- Letting the review engine sit idle. Shops buy NiceJob at $75/mo and never connect the post-job text trigger. Result: 0 new reviews in 6 months despite 400 completed jobs. Configure the trigger on day one or cancel the subscription.
- Mixing personal and business payroll. Owner-operators paying themselves out of the business checking account without running it through Gusto create a tax mess. Run owner pay through Gusto as a W-2 (S-corp) or as an owner draw documented in QBO — never as a casual transfer.
Budget
Realistic 2027 monthly software spend by shop size:
Solo operator (1 person, 1 bay or 1 truck) — $220–$320/mo
- Mobile Tech RX Starter: $119
- Square Appointments Free + Square Terminal in-person processing: $0/mo + 2.6%
- QuickBooks Online Essentials: $65
- NiceJob Starter: $75
- Optional: Urable Solo instead of MTR Starter at $45/mo (cheaper, less photo-binder depth)
- No payroll (sole prop or single-member LLC)
Small shop (1–3 bays, 2–6 employees) — $520–$780/mo
- Mobile Tech RX Standard or Pro: $189–$299
- Urable Standard (if used alongside or instead): $99
- QuickBooks Online Plus: $115
- Gusto Simple: $49 + $6 × 5 = $79
- Square Appointments Plus: $29
- NiceJob Grow or Podium Starter: $149
- Misc apps (Slack Free, Google Workspace Business Starter at $8.40/user): $30–$50
Multi-location (4–10 locations, 25–60 employees) — $1,400–$2,400/mo
- Mobile Tech RX Enterprise: ~$1,200 (custom)
- QuickBooks Online Advanced: $235
- Gusto Plus or Premium: $180 + $12–$22/employee = $480–$1,500
- Podium Core: $399
- Google Workspace Business Standard: $16.80/user × 30 = $504
- BambooHR or similar HRIS: $150–$400
Total IT spend across all tiers should land at 2.5–4.5% of revenue. A shop doing $600k/yr ($50k/mo) running the small-shop stack at $700/mo is at 1.4% — under-spending. A shop at the same revenue spending $3k/mo on software is at 6% — over-spending unless they're using HubSpot for a long sales cycle.
30 / 60 / 90 Day Rollout
Days 1–30 — Foundation. Start the Mobile Tech RX 14-day free trial. Build out your service menu (interior, exterior, full detail, paint correction Stage 1/2/3, ceramic coating tiers, PPF if applicable) with per-vehicle-class pricing. Sign up for QuickBooks Online Plus and connect your business bank account.
Order a Square Terminal at $299 and connect it to a Square account — leave Square Appointments on the Free tier for now. Migrate your customer list (export from spreadsheet, import to MTR). Goal by day 30: every car coming through the shop has a VIN-scanned intake photo binder.
Days 31–60 — Operations. Hire payroll: enroll Gusto Simple if you have any W-2 employees, including yourself in an S-corp. Set up class tracking in QuickBooks Online Plus — create classes for Interior, Exterior, Paint Correction, Ceramic Coating, PPF, and Retail.
Every invoice from MTR should sync with the correct class. Turn on the NiceJob post-job review-request trigger. Reconcile your first month of bank transactions in QBO — block 45 minutes Friday afternoon and do not skip.
Days 61–90 — Optimization. Build the ceramic coating warranty SOP: for every coating job, the tech logs in MTR Notes — product name, batch number, ambient temp, humidity, cure time, customer signature on warranty acceptance. Audit a random sample of 20 photo binders from the prior 60 days — any missing intake or completion shots get flagged and the tech is retrained.
Pull the Profit & Loss by Class report from QBO and identify which service category has the best margin (typically ceramic at 62–72% gross margin vs. Interior at 38–48%). Adjust marketing spend accordingly.
FAQ
Q: Can I just run my whole detailing shop on Square Appointments instead of buying Mobile Tech RX or Urable? You can, and a handful of solo operators do. You'll lose VIN auto-population, vehicle-class pricing, panel-by-panel photo binders, and ceramic warranty logs.
For a solo at <$100k/yr revenue doing mostly maintenance washes, Square Appointments + QBO Simple Start is workable at $35/mo total software. The moment you start selling $800+ ceramics, switch to MTR or Urable.
Q: Mobile Tech RX or Urable — which one wins in 2027? Both are detailer-native, both are good. Mobile Tech RX has the stronger photo binder and mobile-tech-on-site workflow. Urable has the stronger recurring maintenance-plan billing and Good/Better/Best quote engine.
Coating-heavy shops with maintenance plans lean Urable. High-volume detail shops with lots of one-off jobs lean Mobile Tech RX. Shops doing $300k+/yr sometimes run both — Urable for sales, MTR for ops — but that's overkill under $300k.
Q: Is QuickBooks Online really worth $115/mo when QuickBooks Self-Employed is $25? For a real shop, yes. Self-Employed is Schedule-C only, doesn't support class tracking, doesn't sync with MTR or Urable, doesn't issue 1099-NECs to subcontractors, and doesn't separate business location P&Ls.
If you're a sole proprietor running a side detailing business under $50k revenue, Self-Employed is fine. Anything past $80k revenue or 1+ W-2 employees, you need QBO Plus.
Q: How much should I expect to pay in card processing fees per year? For a shop doing $400k/yr with 85% card volume ($340k card revenue), Square's in-person 2.6% + 15¢ runs roughly $10,200/yr at an average ticket of $185. Mobile Tech RX's in-app 2.85% + 30¢ on the same volume runs $12,200/yr — a $2,000/yr premium for the convenience of charging in-app.
Many shops generate the MTR invoice and ring it on Square to capture the lower rate.
Q: Do I need separate software for ceramic-coating warranty tracking? No. Mobile Tech RX and Urable both handle it inside the existing subscription via Notes and Photo modules. Some shops also upload the signed warranty PDF to a dedicated Google Drive folder per customer as redundancy — free with Google Workspace.
The warranty paperwork from Gtechniq, CQuartz, Modesta, or IGL is handled in the brand's own dealer portal; you log application data in MTR/Urable.
Sources
- Mobile Tech RX Pricing & Plans (official)
- Mobile Tech RX Software Reviews & Pricing — Capterra 2026
- Urable CRM Software for Auto Detailing — Vehicle Care
- Urable Quote-to-Invoice Workflow for Detailing Care Plans
- Jobber Pricing — official plans page
- Jobber Auto Detailing Software product page
- QuickBooks Online Pricing — Intuit official
- QuickBooks Online Price Increase Analysis — Steph's Books 2026
- Square Appointments Pricing & Plans
- Square Auto Shop Software
- Gusto Pricing, Plans & Fees 2026 — official
- Top 8 Softwares For Mobile Detailing In 2026 — QuoteIQ