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Construction CRM software UK: a buyer's guide for 2026

How to choose construction CRM software in the UK. What to look for, what to avoid, real prices, and why most generic CRMs miss the basics that UK construction businesses actually need.

By Complys·04 May 2026·10 min read

If you run a UK construction business and you have started looking at CRM software, you have probably noticed two things. First, the choice is overwhelming. Second, almost none of the options are designed with construction in mind. This guide walks through how to actually evaluate construction CRM software for a UK trade or contracting business in 2026, what features genuinely earn their place, what to ignore, and what real prices look like.

What construction CRM software actually does

Construction CRM software is meant to track every customer, every quote, every job, every communication and every follow-up across the lifecycle of a building project. In a UK construction context that means tracking enquiries from main contractors, homeowners, developers and architects; producing branded quotes; tracking which quotes get accepted and which get lost; logging the calls, emails and site visits along the way; and connecting all of this to the operational side of the business (workers, RAMS, materials, plant).

The reality is that most software marketed as "construction CRM" only does the first half of this. They handle quotes and customers fine. The compliance, RAMS, worker management and site operations side is left to other tools. The result is the average UK trade business ends up running three or four separate systems just to ship a single job.

The buying decisions to think through first

Before evaluating any specific software, settle four things internally.

1. Trade-only or trade and contractor

If you are a trade business (scaffolders, electricians, roofers, plumbers etc.) the CRM needs to handle outbound enquiries to main contractors, ongoing relationships with regular contractors, and direct-to-public work where applicable. If you are a principal contractor managing subcontractors, the CRM needs subcontractor compliance tracking, project management, gate access control and worker time tracking. The two are different jobs. Some platforms (including Complys) handle both. Most generic CRMs handle neither well.

2. UK-only or international

UK construction has specific compliance requirements that international CRM software does not understand. CHAS, SMAS, SafeContractor, Constructionline, CITB, CISRS, NICEIC, Gas Safe, NFRC. UK insurance requirements (PL, EL, contractor all-risks). UK CDM 2015 Regulations. UK CIS tax rules. UK Building Safety Act. If your CRM does not know what any of these acronyms mean, it cannot help you with the part of the business that actually wins UK contracts.

3. Per-user or per-business pricing

This single decision makes a 10x difference to total cost over time. Per-user pricing punishes growth. A 5-person business pays £100/month, a 25-person business pays £500/month, a 100-person business pays £2,000/month for the same software. Per-business pricing (one flat rate regardless of users) aligns with how trade businesses actually scale. Always check.

4. Mobile-essential or desktop-essential

Construction work happens away from desks. If your team is mostly in offices, generic desktop-first CRMs work. If your team is mostly on sites, in vans or at jobs, you need a CRM where the mobile experience is the primary one and the desktop experience is the bonus. Most generic CRMs got their mobile apps as an afterthought. It shows.

The features that genuinely matter for UK construction

Quote-to-job workflow

An accepted quote should automatically create a job with the customer details pre-filled, the scope linked, the workers suggested by skill and proximity, and a folder ready for RAMS, toolbox talks, daily reports and photos. Generic CRMs make you do all of this manually for every job. Construction-focused tools do it automatically because that is how construction actually works.

Branded hosted quotes with compliance attached

The way you win UK construction work in 2026 is to send quotes that include your live insurance certificate, your CHAS or SMAS accreditation, your worker passports, your testimonials, and your last completed similar job. A construction CRM should produce a hosted public quote page (with a unique URL the customer can open on their phone) that bundles all of this together. This single feature is the difference between a quote that gets junked and one that gets accepted.

Customer email integration with deliverability

Send from your real Gmail, Outlook or business email - not from a generic noreply@ address that gets junked. Track when the customer opens the quote, how many times they came back to read it, when they accepted or declined. Building a paper trail of communications is essential when a dispute happens months later, and the paper trail has to live with the customer record, not in a separate inbox somewhere.

Compliance documents on every customer

Insurance certificates, accreditations, RAMS, training matrix, worker passports, vehicle compliance, training certificates - all live records linked to every customer. When the customer asks for proof, send it in two clicks. When the document is about to expire, get reminded automatically. When you onboard a new contractor, share the lot via one secure link.

RAMS generation built in

Most UK construction work requires a Risk Assessment and Method Statement before work begins. A construction CRM that generates RAMS in 30 seconds (rather than asking you to spend an hour with Word and a template) is one of the highest-leverage features available in 2026. AI-generated RAMS, customised to your scope, ready to download and share, with an audit trail of what was sent when.

Worker management and training matrix

Every worker has CSCS cards, qualifications, training certificates, possibly DBS checks, possibly Sentinel cards (for rail). All of these expire. A construction CRM should track every worker's compliance status, alert you 60 days before any document expires, and let you allocate workers to jobs based on which qualifications match. Generic CRMs treat workers as a static field on a customer record. Construction CRMs treat them as living records.

Site time tracking

If your workers do shift work on sites, the CRM should let them clock in via QR code or geo-fenced location, log start time and end time, and roll the data up into timesheets automatically. This single feature eliminates the friction of weekly timesheet collection and connects the time worked directly to the project profitability.

Reporting that proves work happened

Daily site reports, photos with geotag and timestamp, toolbox talks signed off on phones, scaffold inspection records, vehicle defect reports - all stamped and stored. This becomes the Golden Thread audit trail that the Building Safety Act demands and that commercial clients increasingly insist on for major projects.

Real UK construction CRM prices in 2026

  • Procore: Enterprise pricing only, typically £100,000+/year for medium contractors. Built for big commercial projects, overkill for most UK trades.
  • SimPRO: £80 to £150 per user per month. Trade-focused, no compliance side. Strong on jobs and invoicing, weak on safety paperwork.
  • Tradify: £15 per user per month. Quote-and-job focused, no compliance.
  • Fonn: £45+ per user per month. Project management focused. Compliance management bolted on.
  • Buildertrend: $499/month minimum (US pricing, weak UK fit).
  • HubSpot: £15 to £75 per user per month depending on tier. No construction features.
  • Salesforce: £20 to £150+ per user per month. Construction add-ons exist but expensive.
  • Complys: £30 to £99 per month, flat rate for the whole business regardless of user count. Includes CRM, compliance, RAMS, worker passports, GPS clock-in, vehicle management. Built specifically for UK construction.

The right comparison is not "what does the cheapest tier cost" but "what is the total cost when our business is at 5 users, 15 users, 30 users". Per-user pricing models scale to surprising numbers fast.

Red flags when evaluating construction CRM software

Specific things that should make you walk away from a vendor:

  • "Implementation services" required. If a CRM cannot be set up by you in an afternoon, it is too complex.
  • Annual contract only. Locked-in pricing without a meaningful trial almost always means the product is not strong enough to retain customers month-to-month.
  • "Custom build" needed. Means the standard features do not actually fit construction.
  • Marketing automation as a headline feature. Trades businesses do not need email drip sequences, they need to send quotes and not lose them.
  • No mobile app screenshots. Vendor knows their mobile experience is weak.
  • Demo only, no free trial. They want to talk you into it because the product cannot speak for itself.
  • UK case studies that look generic. Real construction case studies talk about specific customers, specific projects, specific value won.

Why Complys fits UK construction

Complys was built by a working scaffolder (DDC Scaffolding in Devon) for UK trade businesses. Every feature exists because a construction business actually needed it. The CRM lives alongside compliance tracking, RAMS generation, worker passports, GPS clock-in, vehicle compliance, training matrix, and quote sending - all in one platform.

Per-business flat-rate pricing (no per-user fees regardless of team size). Mobile-first because trades work happens on sites. UK-specific compliance built in (CHAS, SMAS, SafeContractor, Constructionline, CDM 2015, NFRC, NICEIC, Gas Safe, CISRS - all understood). 90-day free trial with full feature access, no card needed.

Read more about the CRM features or start the free trial to evaluate it on a real customer this week.

Frequently asked

How long does it take to roll out construction CRM software?

For most UK trades businesses, the answer is "an afternoon". Import your customer list as CSV, set up your branding, send your first quote. Anything that takes longer than a week is selling complexity for its own sake.

Can construction CRM software replace Sage or Xero?

Not entirely. The cleanest workflow keeps Sage or Xero for accounting and uses the CRM for everything before payment lands (quotes, jobs, customer records, communications). The two systems should integrate (Complys is building Xero integration) but neither should try to be the other.

Do principal contractors need different software than trades?

The functional needs are different (subcontractor management vs main contractor enquiry tracking) but the underlying CRM is the same. Complys offers separate signup paths for trades vs contractors, with the right feature set surfaced for each, on the same platform.

Is on-premise construction CRM software still relevant?

No. Cloud CRM has won for reliability, mobile access, and continuous updates. Anyone selling on-premise construction software in 2026 is selling a maintenance contract, not a product.

Related guides

Construction CRM that includes the compliance side

Complys is built for UK construction. CRM, RAMS, worker passports, GPS clock-in, compliance tracking - all in one platform from £30/month for the whole business. 90-day free trial.