Comparisons
Square Invoices Alternatives for Solo Trades (2026)
·7 min read

Square Invoices is genuinely popular, and for good reason: it's free, it's built by one of the biggest payments companies around, and if you already take cards through Square, the invoicing is a no-brainer add-on. You can send a clean invoice, take a card payment, and see the money land — all without a monthly fee.
But here's the catch that catches solo trades pros: Square is a payments company, and its invoices are a payments product. Sending the invoice and taking the card is the part Square is great at. The part that actually eats your time — following up on the invoices that didn't get paid — is a manual feature tacked onto a payments app, not the thing the product was built to do for you.
This guide is for the solo plumber, electrician, or HVAC tech using Square Invoices (or considering it) who keeps finding that the getting paid part — not the charging-fees part, not the card-processing part — is where things fall through the cracks.
What Square Invoices is great at
- Actually free to use. No monthly plan. If you never take a card payment through it, you pay nothing.
- Tight with Square payments. If you have a Square reader or use Square for POS, invoices flow into the same money pipeline and balance.
- Fast card collection. Customers tap pay, the card runs, and it's reconciled. For a card-paying customer, it's smooth.
- Estimates, recurring invoices, a mobile app. Solid, practical features for running the billing side of a small service business.
If your customers mostly pay by card and you're already in the Square ecosystem, Square Invoices is hard to beat on price. The friction isn't in the invoicing — it's in everything that happens after the invoice goes out and the customer hasn't paid yet.
Where Square Invoices falls short for a solo pro
- Reminders are manual, not automatic. Square can send a payment reminder, but you're the one deciding who, when, and how often. There's no built-in cadence that just runs — before the due date, on the due date, then 3, 7, 14, 30 days overdue — without you.
- It's a payments product first. The whole experience is optimized toward getting the customer to pay by card through Square (where Square earns its fee). If your trades customers pay by check or Venmo — and most do — that optimization isn't really working for you.
- Card fees add up. "Free" means no monthly fee, not no cost. A few hundred card payments a year at 2.9% + 30¢ each is real money — often more than a flat $14–19/mo tool.
- No real follow-up tracking. You can see whether an invoice is paid, but Square doesn't tell you whether the customer even opened the email, or flag an invoice that's been sitting unread so you can act on it before it goes stale.
None of this makes Square Invoices bad. It makes it a payments tool whose follow-up is a side feature — and follow-up is the side feature that decides whether you actually get paid.
How Square Invoices compares on the follow-up that matters
| Tool | Invoicing | Automatic follow-up | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Square Invoices | Yes | Manual reminders (you set them up) | Free + card fees |
| Wave Invoicing | Yes | Manual reminders | Free (paid add-ons) |
| Housecall Pro | Yes | DIY (configure cadences) | ~$59/mo+ |
| Jobber | Yes | DIY (configure cadences) | ~$69/mo+ |
| FieldNudge | Yes | Yes — runs the whole cadence for you | $14–19/mo flat |
Pricing reflects each vendor's published plans as of mid-2026 — verify current numbers on their sites before you commit. Card-processing fees vary by how the payment is taken (online card, manual entry, bank transfer) and change over time.
Wave Invoicing
The other big free option. Wave bundles invoicing with basic bookkeeping, which appeals if you also want a simple P&L. But on follow-up it's the same story as Square: free invoicing, manual reminders, and the assumption that you will remember to chase the overdue ones — which is exactly the step that tends not to happen.
Housecall Pro
A full field-service platform — scheduling, dispatch, CRM, online booking — with invoicing and payments built in. It can send payment reminders, but like any platform, you're the one setting up the cadences and templates. Powerful if you're growing a crew; a lot of overhead if you're solo.
Jobber
Similar shape to Housecall Pro: a field-service platform aimed at small, growing service businesses. Great scheduling and quoting; the payment follow-up is something you configure rather than something that runs on its own.
FieldNudge
FieldNudge takes the opposite bet from Square: instead of being free and making money on every card payment, it's a flat $14–19/mo and never touches your customer's money. What it does is send clean invoices and then run the entire reminder cadence for you — polite nudges before the due date, on the due date, then at 3, 7, 14, and 30 days overdue — until the check arrives. When it does, you tap one button in an email and every reminder stops.
It doesn't do scheduling, dispatch, bookkeeping, or card processing. If you already have Square or Venmo for collecting money, FieldNudge is the layer that sits underneath and makes sure the invoice actually gets paid — without you becoming the debt collector.
How to choose
- Your customers pay by card and you're already on Square. Stay on Square Invoices. The free + card-fee model is a good deal when the card volume is there. Just be honest about whether you're actually following up.
- You want free invoices and a simple P&L. Wave. Same free-invoicing story, plus basic bookkeeping.
- You're hiring a crew and want a full platform. Housecall Pro or Jobber. You'll configure the reminders yourself, but the rest earns its keep.
- Your real problem is that invoices sit unpaid because no one follows up. That's the gap FieldNudge fills. Keep whatever you use to collect money, and let FieldNudge run the follow-up for you.
The mistake isn't using Square Invoices. It's assuming that because the invoice went out, the follow-up will happen on its own. With a payments product, it won't — that part is still on you, unless something is doing it for you.
Common questions
Is Square Invoices really free?
Yes — there's no monthly fee to create and send invoices. Square makes its money on card-processing fees when a customer pays by card online (roughly 2.9% + 30¢ per payment). If your customers pay by cash, check, or Venmo, you pay Square nothing. The trade-off is that the free product is built to route payments through Square.
Can Square Invoices send automatic payment reminders?
It can send reminders, but they're a manual feature you set up inside a payments product — not an automated follow-up system that runs a cadence for you. You configure who gets reminded and when. Most solo pros never finish that setup, which is why overdue invoices still slip through.
Does FieldNudge take a cut of my customer's payment?
No — and that's the point. Your customer pays you directly however they always have (check, Venmo, Cash App, or your own card link). FieldNudge never touches the money. You just pay a flat $14–19/mo for the invoicing and the automatic follow-up.
Can I keep using Square and just add better follow-up?
Yes. A common setup is a payment tool you already use (Square, Venmo, your bank) for collecting the money, paired with FieldNudge to send the invoices and relentlessly chase the unpaid ones until the check arrives. They do different jobs.
Stop chasing invoices yourself.
FieldNudge sends polite, automatic payment reminders on your behalf until the check arrives — then you tap one button to mark it paid. Free for 30 days or 30 invoices.