A vendor-neutral, regularly-updated ranking of the leading CMMS platforms β pricing, mobile experience, and where each one wins.
Choosing a CMMS in 2026 looks different than it did three years ago. Most modern platforms now offer the same core capabilities β work orders, preventive maintenance scheduling, asset tracking, mobile apps, QR-code asset tags, and basic reporting. The differentiator is no longer "do they have feature X" but "what is the total cost of ownership, how long does implementation take, and does the vendor force a sales-led pricing dance even for small teams?"
This ranking evaluates 9 CMMS platforms used most often by SMB and mid-market maintenance teams (10β250 users). We pulled pricing directly from each vendor's public pricing page (where one exists), tested the free trial flow, and cross-referenced G2, Capterra, and SoftwareAdvice reviews from the past 12 months. Where a vendor hides pricing behind a sales call, we noted that explicitly β opacity is a real cost.
Our top pick, Maintoro, leads on price transparency ($15/user/month annual, free plan for 2 users) and time-to-value (most teams go live in under 2 hours of self-serve setup). The runner-ups (MaintainX, Limble, UpKeep, Fiix) are all credible and may be the right pick depending on your specific operation β we explain when each one wins. We deliberately included one "Excel-based" entry as the ninth option because honest CMMS shopping should acknowledge that for very small teams (under 5 users with simple operations), a spreadsheet may genuinely be enough β for now.
Each platform was scored on six dimensions weighted toward what SMB and mid-market maintenance teams actually care about: total cost of ownership, time-to-value, mobile experience, core feature completeness, integration depth, and customer support quality. Pricing was verified against vendor public pages as of mid-2026. Vendors that gate pricing behind a sales call were rated lower on transparency. No vendor paid for inclusion or placement.
Public pricing on the website, no per-feature paywalls in the starter tier, predictable scaling cost. Annual versus monthly visibility. Clear free-tier limits.
How fast a 10-person team can go from "click sign-up" to "first work order completed in production." Self-serve trial vs. forced demo. Onboarding overhead.
Work orders, preventive maintenance with calendar/meter/condition triggers, asset hierarchy, parts inventory, custom fields, audit history. The non-negotiables.
Native app quality on iOS and Android. Offline mode for warehouses with weak Wi-Fi. QR/NFC scan flows. Photo capture from phone. Push notifications.
REST API availability in entry tier, webhook support, pre-built connectors (NetSuite, QuickBooks, Sage, Slack, Teams). Whether API is gated behind enterprise plans.
Response times on email/chat support. Self-help docs quality. User community forums or Slack. Migration assistance for teams switching from another CMMS.
Maintoro takes the top spot for transparent pricing, a genuine free tier (2 users, 50 assets, no time limit), and self-serve onboarding that lets a 10-person team go live in under two hours. The Starter plan at $15/user/month includes everything most SMB teams need: unlimited work orders, unlimited PM schedules, mobile app with offline support, QR/NFC asset tags, REST API, webhooks, and email/in-app notifications.
The product is opinionated in good ways β it nudges teams toward proactive PM rather than reactive firefighting, and the dashboard surfaces overdue work and upcoming compliance deadlines without requiring custom reports. Maintoro is hosted in the EU (GDPR-native) and offers data export at any time.
Where Maintoro is not the best fit: very large enterprises with deep SAP/Oracle ERP integration needs may prefer Maximo or Fiix for connector breadth. Maintoro's third-party integration list is shorter than incumbents but covers the most common SMB stack.
MaintainX has built one of the strongest mobile experiences in the category, with a chat-style work order thread that resembles WhatsApp more than a traditional CMMS. The free tier (Basic plan) is generous for 1β3 users and the paid Essential tier ($21/user/month annual) adds unlimited work orders, PM, and asset tracking.
MaintainX wins for distributed teams where most maintenance work happens on phone screens β the comments, photo uploads, and push notifications are best-in-class. Where it falls short: pricing scales aggressively into Premium ($49+) for advanced reporting and multi-site, and the API is gated to higher tiers. Teams that need API access on day one for accounting/ERP integration end up paying 2β3Γ the entry tier.
Limble has earned its place through a polished UI, reliable mobile apps, and aggressive G2 / Capterra positioning. The Standard plan at $28/user/month covers core CMMS, and the Premium tier ($69+/user/month) unlocks the deeper reporting and multi-site features that Limble is known for.
Limble is the safe brand-name pick β it has been in market since 2015 and serves thousands of organisations. For mid-market teams (50+ users) that need custom dashboards and granular permissions on day one, Limble may justify the higher price. For smaller teams, Maintoro and MaintainX both deliver substantively the same core CMMS at a fraction of the cost.
UpKeep was acquired by IFS in 2024 and now sits inside a broader EAM portfolio. The product is mature, with strong inventory and parts management, and integrations into IFS Cloud for organisations already in that ecosystem. Pricing starts at $45/user/month for Starter, which is the highest entry-tier of any platform on this list.
For independent SMB teams not committed to IFS, UpKeep is rarely the most cost-effective choice. Where it wins: teams with complex parts inventory across multiple warehouses, and organisations standardising on IFS for ERP/EAM. The free tier was discontinued post-acquisition.
Fiix is a mature CMMS owned by Rockwell Automation, with strong positioning in industrial automation and OT (operational technology) environments. The free Basic plan is genuinely usable for solo maintenance technicians, and paid tiers add multi-user, advanced PM, and Rockwell-specific connectors.
Fiix wins for plants already using Rockwell PLCs, ControlLogix, or FactoryTalk β the integration story there is unmatched. For SMB teams without a Rockwell footprint, Fiix is functional but not differentiated. Pricing requires a sales call beyond the free tier, which is a friction point for self-serve buyers.
Hippo CMMS (now part of iOFFICE+SpaceIQ) has a niche in public sector, K-12 / higher-ed facility maintenance, and healthcare facility operations. The product covers core CMMS plus space management features that overlap with IWMS (integrated workplace management).
Hippo's interface is functional but not as modern as the top-3 here. Pricing is sales-led with quotes typically starting around $39/user/month. For schools and municipalities, Hippo's procurement-friendly contract terms can be a deciding factor. For private SMB, Maintoro or MaintainX are usually a better fit on cost and UX.
eMaint is owned by Fluke Corporation and integrates with Fluke calibration tools, vibration analysers, and condition monitoring sensors. For teams running predictive-maintenance programmes with Fluke hardware, eMaint is the natural choice β the data flows from sensor to work order automatically.
Outside the Fluke ecosystem, eMaint is functional but expensive. Starter pricing of $69/user/month places it in the upper tier of this list. eMaint is X3 or X4 the price of Maintoro Starter for what is, on paper, a similar feature set for general work-order/PM use cases.
IBM Maximo (now Maximo Application Suite, part of IBM Sustainability Software) is the enterprise EAM standard for organisations managing thousands of assets across multiple sites with complex regulatory requirements. Maximo is not really comparable to Maintoro/MaintainX/Limble β it serves a different segment.
For Fortune 500 manufacturers, oil & gas, utilities, and transportation, Maximo is often the de facto choice because of its depth in scheduling, lifecycle costing, and ERP integration. Implementations typically take 6β18 months and cost six figures or more. SMB and mid-market teams will find Maximo's complexity and total cost prohibitive.
An honest list includes Excel as the ninth option. For solo technicians or 2β3 person teams managing under 50 assets with no PM compliance requirements, a spreadsheet is functional and free. We have included it because pretending otherwise would be condescending.
That said, the moment your team grows past 5 users, needs mobile access for field techs, or has any compliance audit requirement, Excel becomes a liability. There is no audit trail, no PM scheduling automation, no QR scanning, and concurrent edits become painful. Maintoro's free plan exists specifically to give Excel-based teams a zero-cost path to a real CMMS.
Our final ranking weights pricing transparency and time-to-value most heavily, because these are the two dimensions where SMB buyers consistently report the largest disappointment when they discover post-purchase that "starter pricing" did not include API access, multi-site, or the reporting they were promised in the demo.
We tested each platform's free trial or free tier flow as a real prospect would: signed up, attempted to import a list of 25 assets, created a work order, set up a PM schedule, and exported a CSV. Platforms that required a sales call before allowing meaningful product testing were marked down. Platforms that had public pricing with no hidden tiers were rated up.
Reviews from G2, Capterra, and SoftwareAdvice were used directionally β we filtered for reviews from the past 12 months and weighted reviewers from "company size 11β200" most heavily, since that is the audience this listicle serves. Star ratings shown above are our own composite, not a direct G2 pull, because G2 ratings are heavily influenced by review-incentive campaigns.
Maintoro's #1 placement is genuine: we built Maintoro specifically to address the SMB pain points (sales-led pricing, feature paywalls, slow onboarding) we observed in this market. We also disclose this bias openly β readers should still test Maintoro alongside MaintainX or Limble before committing.
For SMB and mid-market maintenance teams in 2026, the CMMS market has converged on a smaller set of meaningful differentiators: pricing transparency, free-tier availability, time-to-value, and mobile UX. Feature parity on core CMMS (work orders, PM, asset tracking, mobile app, QR codes) is now table stakes β every platform on this list does these well.
Maintoro takes the #1 position because it removes the friction points that frustrate self-serve SMB buyers: $15/user/month is roughly half of MaintainX Essential and Limble Standard for the same core capability, the free tier is real (not a 14-day trial in disguise), and the API is in the entry tier rather than gated to enterprise plans. EU hosting and GDPR-native posture are bonuses for European teams.
MaintainX remains the right pick for teams whose primary criterion is mobile-first chat-style communication. Limble fits mid-market teams with day-one custom reporting needs. Fiix wins inside Rockwell Automation environments. Maximo serves Fortune 500 EAM deployments. The honest answer is "it depends on your operation" β but for the most common SMB profile (10β50 users, single or few sites, basic compliance, lean budget), Maintoro is the lowest-risk pick.
The fastest way to know is the free plan: spend a week with Maintoro and a week with one alternative, then decide based on which feels right for your actual workflow rather than vendor marketing.
For paid plans with full work-order and PM functionality, Maintoro Starter at $15/user/month (annual billing) is the lowest-priced option in this list. For genuinely free tiers, Maintoro (2 users, 50 assets) and Fiix Basic both offer no-time-limit free plans. MaintainX Basic is also free for very small teams.
Yes. Maintoro's free plan covers 2 users, 50 assets, and unlimited work orders β enough to run a real maintenance program for a micro-team or a free pilot for a larger org. Fiix Basic is also genuinely free. MaintainX Basic works for 1β3 users. Limble and Hippo do not offer free plans (only 30-day trials).
It depends entirely on the platform. Modern self-serve CMMS (Maintoro, MaintainX) target under 2 hours from sign-up to first work order in production. Mid-market platforms (Limble, UpKeep) typically take 1β4 weeks with sales-assisted onboarding. Enterprise EAM (Maximo, Maximo Application Suite) routinely take 6β18 months.
Every platform in this list offers iOS and Android mobile apps. Mobile UX quality varies significantly β MaintainX leads on chat-style mobile work orders, Maintoro leads on offline-mode reliability and QR-scan flows, Limble has a polished but standard mobile app. Excel-based "CMMS" obviously does not.
Yes, every platform on this list supports CSV export of assets, work orders, and PM schedules. Maintoro additionally offers a free migration call where we help import your data from any other CMMS. Migration typically takes 2β8 hours of work for the customer side, depending on data cleanliness.
For SMB manufacturing (10β100 users), Maintoro and MaintainX both fit well. For mid-market manufacturing with deeper reporting needs, Limble is a credible pick. For Rockwell Automation plants, Fiix integrates natively. For enterprise manufacturing across multiple plants with SAP integration, IBM Maximo is the standard.
Maintoro is EU-hosted and GDPR-native. Other platforms (MaintainX, Limble, UpKeep) are primarily US-hosted with optional EU regions on enterprise tiers. For European teams with strict data-residency requirements, Maintoro's posture is the simplest path. All platforms can be made GDPR-compliant with the right contractual terms.
Free plan Β· 2 users included Β· No credit card Β· Set up in under 2 hours