CompanyCam Review 2026: Is it Worth $19/User?
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Your technicians take photos. They take photos of the leak, the roof damage, and the finished job. But where do those photos go?
Usually, they sit in a WhatsApp group chat or clutter up your tech's personal iPhone camera roll. This is a liability nightmare.
CompanyCam promises to fix this. But is it worth adding another monthly subscription?
Overall Winner: CompanyCam (The CYA Tool)
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Why CompanyCam exists
CompanyCam solves one problem: Organization. Every photo taken in the app is instantly uploaded to the cloud and tagged to a specific address/project.
The Killer Feature: "Before and After" Slider
With one click, you can generate a shareable link that shows the homeowner a slider of their dirty roof vs their clean roof. It is a powerful sales tool.What we liked
- GPS-stamped photo documentation for legal protection
- Unlimited cloud storage for photos and videos
- Seamless 'Before & After' marketing tool
Room for Improvement
- High per-user monthly cost for large teams
- Redundant if your CRM already has a robust photo tool
The Cost: $19/User/Month
This adds up. If you have 10 techs, that's $200/mo just for photos. Is it worth it?
- Yes: If you do Insurance Work (Roofing/Restoration) where documentation is required for payment.
- No: If you are a plumber doing service calls. Jobber's built-in photo tool is free and good enough.
Integration: Does it play nice?
CompanyCam integrates with Jobber and Housecall Pro. When you take a photo in CompanyCam, a link appears in the Jobber job note. It works well, but it's an extra step.
Final Verdict
Don't buy CompanyCam on day one.
Start with Jobber. Use their free photo tool. Only upgrade to CompanyCam when you lose a dispute because you couldn't find a photo or when your insurance carrier starts demanding better documentation.
Pro Tip: If you're a roofer, CompanyCam isn't an option—it's a requirement. The $19/mo is nothing compared to a $10,000 denied insurance claim due to poor 'before' photos.