EagleView Pricing: What You’ll Actually Pay in 2026

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Written by Matt Richardson

April 2, 2026

Quick Answer

EagleView doesn’t publish pricing on its website. Based on user-reported data from Capterra and Software Advice reviewers, standard roof reports run $15–$38 each, while premium reports (like the Bid Perfect) can hit $87. The EagleView One subscription platform is entirely quote-based — you’ll need to call sales to get a number. For most mid-volume roofing contractors running 15+ jobs per month, the subscription path will save money over pay-as-you-go ordering.

✓ Verified current — April 2026

EagleView pricing is one of the most searched — and least transparent — topics in roofing software. The number one question contractors ask before pulling the trigger on aerial measurements is simple: what’s this actually going to cost me per job?

The frustrating answer: EagleView won’t tell you until you talk to their sales team. Their pricing page is essentially a contact form. So we did the next best thing — we dug through 43+ verified user reviews on GetApp, Capterra, and Software Advice, and talked to contractors who use the platform daily.

This guide breaks down every EagleView pricing detail we could verify, explains who gets the best value, and tells you exactly when the per-report cost stops making sense. If you want our full platform evaluation, check out our complete EagleView review.

RSG Verdict

EagleView remains the industry standard for aerial roof report accuracy and 3D measurement tools, but the lack of transparent pricing and high per-report costs hurt smaller contractors. Coverage gaps for newer homes and properties with heavy tree obstruction can also be a dealbreaker for some operations. Mid-to-high volume roofing companies will find strong ROI through the EagleView One subscription. Everyone else should compare alternatives carefully.

9.0

RSG GoldIndustry-standard aerial measurement reports
EagleView — RSG Score Breakdown9.0/10

Ease of Use7.5Features9.5Pricing Value6.5Support7.5Roofing-Specific9.0

RSG Gold

EagleView Pricing in 2026: The Short Answer

There are two ways to buy EagleView reports, and the pricing structure differs significantly between them. Here’s what we know as of April 2026:

Pay-as-you-go reports: User-reported costs range from $15–$38 per standard report, with premium reports reaching up to $87. These figures come from verified reviewers on Capterra, GetApp, and Software Advice — not from EagleView’s own pricing page, which publishes no dollar figures.

EagleView One subscription: Entirely quote-based. EagleView describes it as a “flexible subscription tailored to each customer’s usage.” You’ll need to contact their sales team for a number. No published rate card exists.

Watch Out Every dollar figure in this guide is user-reported from review platforms, not vendor-confirmed. EagleView’s pricing page does not list prices. We recommend confirming current rates directly with EagleView before making purchasing decisions.

The per-report cost is determined by roof size in squares for residential jobs, while commercial properties get one flat price regardless of building size. This distinction matters — if you’re primarily doing residential work, your costs will fluctuate based on property measurements. Commercial roofing contractors get more predictable per-job costs.

EagleView One Subscription Pricing: What We Know

EagleView One launched in June 2025 and replaced the old static PDF report model with an interactive 3D property model. In March 2026, CEO Piers Dormeyer hosted a virtual Star Event announcing the platform now covers the entire building exterior — walls, windows, doors, and roof penetrations — not just the roof.

The subscription plan is described by EagleView as offering three key benefits: predictable costs, scalability as your usage grows, and automatic access to new features as they ship. For roofing contractors specifically, there’s one detail worth highlighting — existing roofing subscribers now get roof penetration measurements included at no additional cost. That used to be a separate line item.

What you get with EagleView One includes:

  • Interactive 3D property model (not just a flat PDF)
  • Full roof measurements including pitch, waste factor, and squares
  • Complete exterior property measurements — walls, windows, and doors (added March 2026)
  • Roof penetration measurements (now included for roofing subscribers)
  • Ultra-high resolution ortho and oblique imagery
  • Mobile app measurement ordering (the app received a stability update in February 2026 addressing crashes in measurement details, photo uploads, order checkout, and quotes)

The shift from per-report pricing to a flexible subscription model suggests EagleView is trying to lock in higher-volume customers with predictable monthly spend. If you’re ordering 20+ reports per month, the subscription almost certainly beats pay-as-you-go. The breakeven point depends on your specific quote, so push the sales team for exact numbers before committing.

Pro Tip When you call EagleView for a subscription quote, ask specifically about volume tiers. Contractors who’ve been through the process report that the initial quote is rarely the best offer — push back with your monthly report volume as leverage. Also ask whether the quote includes siding takeoff capabilities or just roofing.

EagleView Per-Report Pricing: What Contractors Are Actually Paying

If you’re not ready for a subscription or you’re running a smaller operation, pay-as-you-go report ordering is your other option. Here’s what the eagleview pricing per report looks like based on verified user reviews:

Report Type Reported Cost Range Best For
Standard Roof Report $15–$38 Basic residential bids, insurance supplements
Premium / Bid Perfect Report Up to $87 Detailed residential bids requiring high accuracy
Commercial One-Price Report Flat rate (not publicly disclosed) Commercial jobs — one price regardless of building size

The wide range on standard reports ($15–$38) reflects the residential per-square pricing model. A small ranch house costs less than a 60-square multi-gable colonial. Multiple reviewers on Capterra describe the per-report cost as “steep for smaller jobs,” which tracks — paying $38 for a report on a $3,500 repair job eats into margins fast.

The Bid Perfect report deserves special attention. At up to $87 per report, it’s EagleView’s most detailed offering. But here’s a complaint we’ve seen from multiple contractors: at least one reviewer reported that EagleView’s Bid Perfect report consistently underestimated shingles needed — by 6 squares on one job — and was then told the premium report (costing up to $87) would have been more accurate. That’s an expensive upsell lesson to learn on a live project.

For residential vs commercial pricing, the math is straightforward. Residential contractors pay based on roof size in squares. Commercial contractors pay one flat rate per property. If you’re doing mixed residential and commercial work, factor both pricing structures into your monthly budget before choosing between subscription and pay-as-you-go.

EagleView Plan Tiers Explained: Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum

One of the most common searches we see is “eagleview bronze vs platinum plan” — and honestly, the information available is thin. EagleView has historically offered Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum plan tiers, but specific pricing for each tier is not publicly listed. With the shift to EagleView One’s subscription model, it’s worth asking whether these traditional tiers still exist in the same form.

Based on how the tiers have historically been structured, and what review platforms like Capterra and SoftwareFinder report, here’s our best understanding of who each tier targets:

Plan Tier Likely Best Fit Expected Report Volume
Bronze Solo contractors, low-volume shops Under 10 reports/month
Silver Growing teams, 2–3 sales reps 10–25 reports/month
Gold Mid-size roofing companies 25–50 reports/month
Platinum High-volume or multi-location operations 50+ reports/month
Watch Out We cannot confirm current dollar amounts for any tier. These business-size recommendations are based on typical SaaS tiering logic and contractor feedback — not vendor-confirmed details. When you contact EagleView sales, ask specifically whether traditional Bronze/Silver/Gold/Platinum tiers still apply under the EagleView One subscription model, or whether pricing is now fully customized.

Here’s our recommendation by business type: if you’re a solo contractor doing fewer than 10 jobs per month, start with pay-as-you-go and test whether the per-report cost justifies the time savings. If you’re running a team with multiple sales reps producing 20+ estimates per month, the subscription plan almost certainly makes more sense — the predictable monthly cost alone is worth it for budgeting.

For multi-location roofing operations, push for the highest tier and negotiate aggressively. High-volume accounts have the most leverage, and EagleView’s sales team knows that losing a 100-report-per-month account hurts.

Does EagleView Offer a Free Trial?

Yes. EagleView does offer a free trial with no credit card required. This is a detail that gets buried on aggregator sites but is critical for contractors on the fence — you can try the platform before committing any money.

EagleView does not offer a permanently free version. Once the trial ends, you’ll need to choose between pay-as-you-go reports or a subscription plan.

Our advice: don’t waste the trial on a simple gable roof. Run a report on one of your more complex upcoming jobs — a steep-pitch, multi-facet roof with dormers and penetrations. That’s where you’ll see whether EagleView’s accuracy and detail justify the cost for your typical work. If the report nails a complex roof, it’ll handle your simple jobs fine. Test the ceiling, not the floor.

What’s New in EagleView for 2026: Features That Affect the Value Equation

EagleView has shipped some significant updates in early 2026 that directly affect whether the pricing makes sense for your business. Here’s what matters:

Complete Exterior 3D Property Intelligence (March 2026): The headline feature. EagleView One now delivers walls, windows, and doors measurements alongside roof data — all inside an interactive 3D property model. EagleView claims 98.77% accuracy derived from ultra-high resolution ortho and oblique imagery. If you’re doing siding, window replacement, or full exterior work alongside roofing, this is a major value-add that could replace a separate siding takeoff tool.

Roof Penetration Measurements Included: Existing roofing subscribers now get roof penetration measurements at no additional cost. This used to be extra. If you were paying for it separately, your effective per-report cost just dropped.

EagleView Labs: EagleView launched an AI innovation hub under Dr. Dylan Kesler, signaling continued platform investment. For pricing, this matters because the subscription model gives you access to new features as they ship — so your subscription value should increase over time without cost increases.

Mobile App Fix (February 2026): The February 13 update fixed crashes affecting measurement details, photo uploads, order checkout, and quotes. Before this update, contractors reported the app was unreliable enough that teams had to pre-order reports the day before — killing the ability to order on-site during inspections. This should be resolved now, but worth verifying during your free trial.

Futureview East (September 2026): EagleView expanded its training conference into two events — Futureview East in Louisville, Kentucky (September 22–25, 2026) and Futureview West in 2027. If you’re a subscriber, these events offer hands-on training that can help you extract more value from the platform. The expansion suggests EagleView’s customer base is growing fast.

EagleView vs. Hover: Pricing and Use Case Comparison

This is the comparison every roofing contractor wants. EagleView and Hover approach property measurements from completely different angles, and the right choice often depends on your market — not just your budget. For our deep dive, see EagleView vs Hover: Aerial Measurement Compared.

Feature EagleView Hover
Measurement Method Aerial/satellite imagery Contractor-taken smartphone photos
Pricing Model Per-report ($15–$87) or subscription Per-report or subscription (varies)
Best For Existing homes with satellite coverage ✓ Newer construction, tree-obstructed properties
Accuracy Claim 98.77% ✓ Varies by photo quality
No Site Visit Needed Yes — order remotely ✓ No — requires on-site photos
Full Exterior Measurements Yes (March 2026 update) ✓ Yes
Works on New Construction No — requires existing imagery Yes ✓
Tree Obstruction Handling Problematic — may block imagery Better — photos taken from ground ✓
G2 Rating 3.8/5 (13 reviews) Varies

Here’s the practical reality from contractors: EagleView fails on two specific property types. Newer homes without available satellite imagery simply can’t be measured — the data doesn’t exist yet. And heavily tree-obstructed properties produce unreliable results. Contractors on Capterra report having to switch to Hover or manual methods for roughly half their reports in some markets.

Our recommendation: don’t treat this as an either-or decision. The smartest roofing contractors we’ve seen use EagleView as their primary tool for established neighborhoods and keep Hover in their back pocket for new construction and wooded properties. The combined cost of both tools is still less than the cost of one measurement error on a large job.

If you’re looking for a more budget-friendly alternative to either, take a look at our Roofr review — it’s worth considering for contractors watching every dollar.

Is EagleView Worth the Cost? Real ROI for Roofing Contractors

Let’s put actual numbers to this. Say you’re a mid-volume residential contractor bidding 20 jobs per month. At the high end of standard per-report cost ($38), you’re spending $760/month on EagleView reports.

Now consider the alternative. A single measurement error — like the 6-square underestimate one reviewer reported on a Bid Perfect report — means a material reorder, crew downtime, and potentially a callback. Six squares of architectural shingles is roughly $600–$900 in material alone, plus labor delay costs. One bad measurement per month and you’ve already burned through your EagleView budget in lost margin.

Here’s the cost-benefit breakdown:

  • 20 reports/month at $38 each: $760/month
  • Time saved per job (no ladder, no tape): ~45 minutes × 20 jobs = 15 hours/month
  • Cost of one 6-square measurement error: $600–$900+ in materials, plus labor delay
  • Faster bid turnaround: Same-day estimates instead of scheduling a site visit first

For contractors running 15–20+ residential jobs monthly, EagleView pays for itself by eliminating even one or two measurement mistakes. The time savings alone — no climbing ladders, no driving to properties just to measure — frees your sales team to close more deals.

But here’s the flip side. If you’re a smaller operation doing 5 jobs per month, that’s $190/month in reports for work you could measure by hand in a few hours total. The ROI math gets shaky fast. And if you’re in a market with lots of new construction or heavy tree cover, you’ll be paying for EagleView and still climbing ladders on the jobs where aerial measurements aren’t available.

Bottom line: EagleView delivers the strongest return for mid-to-high volume residential roofing contractors working in established neighborhoods. The cost is harder to justify for very small operations, rural contractors, or markets heavy on new construction.

EagleView Integrations: CRM and Estimating Software Compatibility

EagleView’s value multiplies when it plugs directly into your existing workflow. The two most commonly cited CRM integrations among roofing contractors are AccuLynx and JobNimbus.

The EagleView AccuLynx integration is particularly popular — measurements flow directly from EagleView into AccuLynx for proposal generation, eliminating the double-entry that eats up admin time. If you’re already using AccuLynx as your CRM, this integration alone can save 10–15 minutes per estimate.

A few integration details worth knowing:

  • The CRM integration pulls property measurements directly into your estimating workflow
  • EagleView One’s subscription model may provide broader integration access than pay-as-you-go — confirm this when getting your quote
  • The Esri partnership (now 20 years running) matters primarily for government and utility customers, not typical roofing contractors
  • Mobile app measurement ordering (the app received a stability update in February 2026 addressing crashes in measurement details, photo uploads, order checkout, and quotes) means your sales reps can trigger reports from the field without logging into a desktop CRM

Integration capabilities are one area where EagleView’s higher price point starts to make sense over cheaper alternatives. When your roof report data flows automatically into your CRM, then into your material order, then into your proposal — the per-report cost becomes a rounding error compared to the workflow efficiency gains. We cover the full roofing software ecosystem on Roofing Software Guide, including how these tools connect.

Honest EagleView Complaints: What Contractors Don’t Love

We give EagleView a Pricing Value score of 6.5/10 for good reason. Here are the specific complaints that keep coming up across G2, Capterra, GetApp, and Software Advice reviews:

What Contractors Love

  • Most accurate aerial measurements available — 98.77% accuracy claim backed by the industry’s largest imagery dataset
  • No site visit required for established properties — order from your desk
  • Full exterior 3D property intelligence (March 2026) covers walls, windows, doors, and roof in one report
  • Strong CRM integration with AccuLynx and JobNimbus saves significant admin time
  • Roof penetration measurements now included at no extra cost for subscribers

What Contractors Don’t Love

  • High per-report cost: $15–$38 is steep for smaller jobs, and multiple reviewers question whether “the benefits outweigh the price differential” on low-margin work
  • Coverage gaps: Newer homes without satellite imagery are unusable, and tree obstructions force contractors to switch tools on roughly half their reports in some markets
  • Measurement variability: Reviewers on Capterra note results are “sometimes a little light and sometimes a little too heavy,” causing material shortages or overages
  • Upsell pressure: Contractors report being told the standard report was insufficient after it underperformed — and that the $87 premium version would have been better
  • Customer service hold times: At least one reviewer reported waiting 1 hour and 18 minutes on hold with no resolution
  • Pre-paid report problem: When a customer cancels, contractors are stuck with a pre-paid EagleView report on a home they no longer need — no refund mechanism mentioned
  • App reliability (pre-February 2026): Crashes and slow delivery forced teams to pre-order reports a day in advance, though the February 2026 update addressed some of these issues

The coverage gap issue deserves emphasis because it directly impacts your effective per-report cost. If EagleView can only measure 50–60% of your leads, you’re maintaining two measurement systems — paying EagleView’s premium for the jobs it can handle and still climbing ladders (or paying Hover) for the rest. Factor that into your ROI calculation.

EagleView Solar Pricing

For contractors who also do solar work, EagleView offers solar-specific reports that include roof orientation, shading analysis, and panel layout data. Solar pricing follows a similar model to roofing — per-report or subscription through EagleView One — but specific dollar figures for solar reports are not publicly available.

The March 2026 update adding full exterior measurements is particularly relevant for solar contractors, since wall and roof orientation data affects panel placement calculations. If you’re cross-selling roofing and solar, the subscription plan likely covers both use cases — but confirm with sales whether solar reports require a separate pricing tier or are bundled.

EagleView Commercial Pricing

Commercial roofing contractors get a simpler pricing model: one flat price per commercial property, regardless of building size. This is a significant advantage over the residential per-square pricing model, especially for large commercial roofs where a per-square rate would be expensive.

The commercial one-price report structure means your cost is predictable whether you’re measuring a 10,000 square foot strip mall or a 200,000 square foot warehouse. We couldn’t verify the specific flat rate — like everything else with EagleView pricing, you’ll need a sales conversation. But the structure itself favors high-volume commercial contractors who can amortize the cost across large projects.

What Contractors Are Asking

“What happens if EagleView’s report is wrong and I come up short on materials — do they cover the difference?”

Based on user reviews, EagleView does not appear to offer a measurement guarantee that covers material shortages. One contractor reported being 6 squares short on a job using the Bid Perfect report, and EagleView’s response was to recommend the more expensive premium report going forward. Always build your own waste factor buffer on top of EagleView’s numbers — most experienced contractors add 10–15% beyond what the report suggests.

“Can I get a refund on a report if my customer cancels the job?”

This is a sore point in user reviews. Contractors report being stuck with pre-paid reports when customers cancel, with no clear refund process. Before committing to a batch of pre-paid reports, ask your EagleView rep specifically about their cancellation and refund policy. On the subscription model, this is less painful since you’re paying for access rather than individual reports.

“Is it faster to just use a drone than pay $38 for an EagleView report?”

Drone measurements are cheaper per job once you own the equipment, but the time math doesn’t always work out. By the time you fly the drone, process the imagery, and generate a report, you’ve spent 30–45 minutes on a single property. EagleView lets you order from your desk in under 2 minutes. If you’re bidding 15+ jobs per month, that time difference adds up to full business days. Drones make more sense for contractors doing fewer than 5 jobs monthly.

“How long does it take to get an EagleView report back after ordering?”

Turnaround times vary, but contractors report same-day to next-day delivery for most standard residential reports. The pre-February 2026 app issues had some teams pre-ordering reports the day before inspections to account for delays. After the app update, turnaround should be more reliable, but during storm season or high-demand periods, expect potential delays. Don’t promise a customer a same-day estimate until you know the report is in hand.

“Should I use EagleView or just get GAF QuickMeasure since it’s cheaper?”

GAF Roofing’s QuickMeasure is a solid budget alternative, and we cover it in our GAF QuickMeasure vs Roofr comparison. EagleView’s advantage is the depth of data — full 3D property intelligence, detailed roof pitch and waste factor calculations, and the new walls/windows/doors measurements. If you only need basic squares and a roof diagram, QuickMeasure may be enough. If you’re building detailed proposals with material lists and waste calculations, EagleView justifies the premium.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does an EagleView report cost?

Based on user-reported data from Capterra and GetApp reviewers, standard EagleView roof reports cost $15–$38 per report, with premium Bid Perfect reports reaching up to $87. EagleView does not publish official pricing — these are contractor-reported figures. Residential pricing is based on roof size in squares, while commercial jobs are one flat price.

What is the difference between EagleView Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum plans?

EagleView has historically offered tiered subscription plans scaled by report volume and feature access, from Bronze (entry-level, low volume) through Platinum (high-volume, full features). Specific pricing for each tier is not publicly available. With the launch of EagleView One’s flexible subscription model, these traditional tiers may have been restructured — contact EagleView sales to confirm the current plan structure.

Does EagleView offer a free trial?

Yes, EagleView offers a free trial with no credit card required. There is no permanently free version — you’ll need to choose a paid plan after the trial ends. We recommend using the trial on a complex roof to properly evaluate accuracy before committing.

How accurate are EagleView roof measurements?

EagleView claims 98.77% accuracy derived from ultra-high resolution ortho and oblique imagery. However, Capterra reviewers note that measurements can be “sometimes a little light and sometimes a little too heavy,” and one contractor reported a Bid Perfect report underestimating by 6 squares. Accuracy is highest on established homes with clear satellite imagery and lowest on properties with tree obstructions or recent construction.

How does EagleView compare to Hover for roofing contractors?

EagleView uses aerial and satellite imagery and doesn’t require a site visit, making it faster for bidding. Hover uses contractor-taken smartphone photos and works better on newer homes or tree-obstructed properties where EagleView’s imagery isn’t available. Many contractors use both tools depending on the property type. For a full breakdown, see our EagleView vs Hover comparison.

Is EagleView worth it for roofing contractors?

For mid-to-high volume residential contractors (15+ jobs per month), EagleView typically pays for itself by eliminating measurement errors and saving hours on site visits. For smaller operations doing fewer than 5–10 jobs monthly, the per-report cost may exceed the time saved. Contractors in markets with heavy new construction or tree cover will face coverage gaps that limit EagleView’s usefulness.

What integrations does EagleView support?

EagleView integrates with major roofing CRMs including AccuLynx and JobNimbus, allowing measurement data to flow directly into proposal generation workflows. The platform also has a longstanding partnership with Esri for GIS data, relevant for government and utility customers. EagleView One’s subscription model may include broader integration access than pay-as-you-go — confirm the current list with sales.

EagleView Pricing: Final Verdict and How to Get a Quote

Here’s the straight answer on EagleView pricing in 2026: you have two paths, and neither comes with a publicly listed price tag.

Path 1 — Pay-as-you-go: $15–$38 per standard report, up to $87 for premium reports (user-reported figures). Best for low-volume contractors or those evaluating the platform before committing to a subscription.

Path 2 — EagleView One subscription: Quote-based, flexible subscription tailored to your usage volume. Best for roofing contractors ordering 15+ reports per month who want predictable costs and access to all new features including 3D property intelligence.

EagleView earns our RSG Gold rating because the property measurements and aerial measurement technology remain the industry standard. The 9.5 Features score reflects the March 2026 expansion to full exterior coverage. But the 6.5 Pricing Value score is real — the lack of transparent pricing, high per-report costs for small jobs, and upsell pressure on report tiers drag down the value proposition for smaller contractors.

Who should buy EagleView: Mid-to-high volume residential roofing contractors working in established neighborhoods who need fast, accurate roof reports to close more deals.

Who should look elsewhere: Very low-volume contractors, those in markets heavy with new construction or tree cover, and operations with tight per-job margins. Check out our Roofr vs EagleView comparison for a more affordable alternative.

To get a quote: contact EagleView directly through their pricing page. Ask specifically about EagleView One subscription tiers, the free trial, and whether your CRM (AccuLynx, JobNimbus, or otherwise) is supported. And push on price — the first number they give you isn’t always the final number.

RSG Verdict

EagleView is the gold standard for aerial roof reports, now expanded to full exterior 3D property intelligence. The pricing isn’t transparent and the per-report cost stings on small jobs, but for contractors running 15+ estimates per month, the accuracy and time savings deliver clear ROI. Start with the free trial, push for a competitive subscription quote, and keep a backup tool for properties EagleView can’t reach.

9.0

RSG GoldBest for premium aerial measurements


Matt Richardson - Founder of Roofing Software Guide.
Expert Evaluator

About Matt Richardson

Matt is the founder of Roofing Software Guide and a 12-year veteran of the roofing and exteriors industry. After scaling his own multi-crew operation, he launched RSG to help contractors navigate the "SaaS noise" and find tools that actually protect their profit margins. He specializes in CRM workflow audits and estimating accuracy.