A solo real estate agent in 2026 can credibly replace half a brokerage’s tech stack with six tools, a notebook, and about $200 a month. The hard part is picking the right six. This guide compares the CRMs and adjacent tools that solo agents actually use in 2026 — what each is best for, the published price, and the specific gotcha most round-up articles skip.
Distinctive data point for 2026: Wise Agent’s Solo tier still bundles a separately-licensed transaction module in the base price — the only sub-$35/month CRM in this comparison that does. If you don’t need dotloop’s MLS-specific integrations, Wise Agent can collapse two line items into one.
Our picks, in order
CRM + Lead Gen
BoldTrail (kvCORE)
All-in-one CRM, IDX site, and lead-gen under one subscription and one monthly bill. The most complete solo offering in this comparison — you pay the most because it replaces the most.
General CRM
HubSpot CRM
The 'grows with you' CRM. Free tier is genuinely usable for contact management; Starter at $20/mo unlocks marketing automation, scheduling, and email sequences. The pick if you expect to add an assistant in year two.
Sales Pipeline CRM
Pipedrive
Pure pipeline CRM. A kanban-per-stage board matches how most salespeople actually think. Fastest to set up, easiest to maintain hygiene on at 10-30 concurrent leads.
RE-Native CRM
Wise Agent
RE-native workflows out of the box — transaction checklists, closing-gift automation, drip campaigns keyed to '30 days to close.' The under-the-radar pick for agents who want real-estate-specific automation without building it from scratch.
Transaction Management
dotloop
Transaction management leader for agents closing deals at volume. E-signature, document routing, broker-compliance workflows. You'll want this once you hit 5+ active transactions.
Video Email
BombBomb
Video email differentiator. Solo agents who send a 45-second personalized video instead of a templated follow-up reliably see higher open and reply rates — a pattern that's held for five consecutive years.
How we chose
Every tool in this guide meets three conditions: published pricing we can link to, active use by solo agents (verified in G2, Capterra, and r/realtors), and either an affiliate program or a direct signup we can track. We re-verify pricing monthly — see the stamps in the meta strip and at the bottom of every article.
What we skipped
We left out tools without published solo-tier pricing, team-first platforms where the solo plan is a subset afterthought, and anything that required a sales call to access a price. If a vendor won’t publish a monthly rate, we can’t include it in a comparison.
Next steps
Pick one CRM from this list, sign up this week, and give yourself 30 days to put 50 real contacts into it. If the CRM survives that test, it’s your CRM. If it doesn’t, you’ll know why — and the next one on the list is usually the right move.
For a longer-form explanation of the process behind every pick, see Methodology.