You searched for "door knocking app" because you need something that works today. Not next quarter. Not after a three-week onboarding cycle. You have a list of addresses, a team of reps, and doors that need to get knocked. The right app should make that process faster, not slower.
The problem is that the door-to-door sales software market has gotten bloated. Some tools are built for 500-person enterprise teams with six-figure budgets. Others were designed for political campaigns and feel awkward when you try to use them for home services or solar sales. And a few are genuinely good but bury their pricing behind a "request a demo" wall, which tells you everything you need to know about who they think their customer is.
We tested seven of the most popular door knocking apps on the market in early 2026. We signed up, imported real address lists, sent reps into the field, and tracked what actually worked. Here is the full breakdown.
| App | Price | Best For | Mobile App | Offline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CanvassLite | $99/mo flat | Speed & simplicity | Web app (no download) | Yes |
| Spotio | ~$39–$79/user/mo | Enterprise field sales | iOS & Android | Partial |
| SalesRabbit | $29/user/mo | Solar & home services | iOS & Android | Yes |
| D2D CRM | $40/user/mo | D2D sales teams | iOS & Android | Yes |
| Repsly | Custom pricing | Retail & field execution | iOS & Android | Yes |
| Badger Maps | $58/user/mo | Route planning | iOS & Android | Partial |
| Knock CRM | $35/user/mo | Small D2D teams | iOS & Android | Yes |
Full transparency: CanvassLite is our product. We built it because we ran a door-to-door team and couldn't find a tool that was fast enough to set up, simple enough for new reps to use without training, and affordable enough to justify for a team under 20 people. We will be honest about what it does well and where it has gaps.
What sets it apart is speed. You sign up, paste or import your address list via CSV, share an invite link with your reps, and they start knocking. There is no app to download — it runs in the mobile browser. Most teams are in the field within 10 to 15 minutes of creating an account. Each address shows as a color-coded pin on a map. Reps tap, log the outcome, and move on. If they lose cell service, visits queue locally and sync automatically when the connection returns.
For managers, the dashboard shows real-time field activity: who is out, what doors have been hit, and what the outcomes look like. You can draw territories (turfs) on a map, assign reps, run canvass sessions, and export everything to CSV. There is also a built-in team chat with push notifications, which means you do not need a separate group text thread.
Pricing is flat, not per-user. Starter is $99/month for up to 5 reps and 1,500 addresses. Growth is $199/month for 15 reps and 10,000 addresses. Pro is $399/month for 50 reps and 300,000 addresses. There are also one-time Season Pass options starting at $399 that give you 12 months without a recurring subscription. For a 10-person team on the Growth plan, you are paying about $20/person/month — a fraction of what per-user tools cost.
Where it falls short: No native mobile app (it is a progressive web app), no CRM integrations beyond CSV export, and no built-in lead scoring or pipeline management. If you need Salesforce sync or a full sales funnel tracker, CanvassLite is not trying to be that. It is focused purely on the field operation.
Spotio is the most feature-rich door knocking platform on the market. It offers territory management, lead generation data (they call it Lead Machine), sales pipeline tracking, route optimization, performance analytics, and integrations with Salesforce, HubSpot, and other major CRMs. If you manage 50 or more reps across multiple regions, Spotio has the horsepower to handle it.
The mobile app is polished. Reps can drop pins, log visits, take photos, capture e-signatures, and track mileage. Managers get leaderboards, activity feeds, and custom reports. The platform also offers multi-touch sequences so you can combine door knocks with follow-up emails and calls inside one workflow.
The downside is accessibility. Spotio does not publish pricing — you have to go through a sales demo. Industry estimates put it at $39 to $79 per user per month depending on the tier, and some features (Lead Machine, integrations) cost extra. For a team of 10, expect to pay $400 to $800/month or more. Setup also takes 1 to 2 weeks because you need to configure territories, import data, connect your CRM, and train the team. For a small crew that just needs to knock doors this week, Spotio is overkill.
SalesRabbit has been in the D2D space since 2013 and has built a loyal following in solar, pest control, roofing, and home security. Its standout feature is the Digital Proposals tool, which lets reps build and present proposals right at the door. For solar teams, it integrates with Aurora for satellite-based roof qualification and offers weather overlay data to help reps decide when and where to knock.
The territory management is strong. Managers draw boundaries on a map, assign areas to reps, and track coverage percentages in real time. Gamification features like leaderboards, badges, and contests can help keep competitive sales teams motivated. The base plan starts at $29/user/month, but most teams end up adding modules for lead data, digital contracts, or advanced analytics, which pushes the total cost higher.
Where it struggles: Per-user pricing adds up fast. A team of 15 at $29/user is already $435/month before add-ons. New users also report that the platform has grown complex over the years — the learning curve is steeper than the marketing suggests, and some features feel bolted on rather than integrated. If you are not in solar or home services, the app will feel like it was built for someone else, because it was.
D2D CRM (Door to Door CRM) is built specifically for door-to-door sales teams and has strong roots in the pest control and alarm industries. It combines mapping, lead management, contract signing, and team tracking into one platform. The mobile app lets reps see color-coded pins by status, log interactions, and move through a structured sales pipeline from first knock to closed deal.
One of its strongest features is the area management system. Managers can assign entire neighborhoods, track which reps have hit which blocks, and see heat maps of activity. It also has a built-in contract and document signing flow, which is valuable for teams that close deals at the door rather than setting appointments.
Pricing is approximately $40/user/month, though exact costs vary based on team size and contract terms. Setup takes a few days, and the interface, while functional, is not the most modern-looking. If your workflow is "knock, pitch, close, get a signature," D2D CRM handles that loop well. If you mostly just need to track visit outcomes and move fast, it may be more tool than you need.
Repsly is technically a field execution platform rather than a pure door knocking app, but many D2D teams use it because of its strong mobile capabilities and flexible data collection. It was originally designed for CPG (consumer packaged goods) field teams visiting retail locations, which means it excels at structured form-based data capture, photo verification, and scheduled route management.
If your reps need to fill out detailed forms at each stop — not just "answered" or "not home" but multi-field surveys, compliance checklists, or condition assessments — Repsly handles that better than most apps on this list. It also has time-and-attendance tracking, mileage logging, and strong reporting dashboards for managers.
The catch: Repsly uses custom, quote-based pricing, so you will need to talk to their sales team. Reports suggest plans start around $25 to $35/user/month, but actual costs depend on modules and team size. The platform is also not designed specifically for residential door knocking, so the mapping and territory features feel less intuitive than purpose-built tools like SalesRabbit or CanvassLite. If you are knocking residential doors to sell solar or run a political canvass, Repsly will feel like a general-purpose tool that you are bending to fit your workflow.
Badger Maps takes a different approach. Instead of being a full canvassing platform, it focuses on route optimization and territory visualization. You import your leads or accounts, see them plotted on a map, and Badger builds the most efficient driving route between them. It integrates with Salesforce, HubSpot, Microsoft Dynamics, and other CRMs, pulling in account data so you can see customer information right on the map.
For outside sales reps who spend their day driving between scheduled appointments — not cold-knocking every door on a street — Badger Maps is excellent. It saves real time on routing and helps reps prioritize which stops matter most based on deal stage, last contact date, or account value.
Where it does not fit: Badger Maps is priced at $58/user/month (Business plan), with an Enterprise tier that adds team features. Offline support is limited — you need connectivity for routing and map data. More importantly, it is not built for the "hit every door on the block" style of canvassing. There is no walk-list view, no door-to-door outcome tracking, and no territory assignment system for managing a team of canvassers. If your workflow is appointment-based outside sales, Badger is a strong pick. If you are doing residential door-to-door, look elsewhere.
Knock CRM is a newer entrant in the D2D space, built to be a simpler and more affordable alternative to platforms like SalesRabbit and Spotio. It focuses on the basics: map-based lead tracking, door knock logging, territory management, and team activity feeds. The interface is clean and modern, and setup is faster than most competitors — typically under a day.
At approximately $35/user/month, Knock CRM sits in a reasonable price range for small teams. It has offline support, which is critical for reps working in areas with poor cell coverage. The mobile app is straightforward: see your pins, knock, log, move on. For teams that do not need proposal tools, contract signing, or CRM integrations, Knock CRM covers the fundamentals without the clutter.
The trade-off is depth. Knock CRM does not have the advanced analytics, gamification, or integrations that more established players offer. Reporting is basic. If you grow past 20 to 30 reps, you may outgrow it. But for a small team that wants something functional and affordable without the enterprise complexity, it is worth a look.
After testing all seven platforms, a few things became clear about what separates a good door knocking app from a frustrating one.
Here is something the software companies do not talk about: a significant percentage of door-to-door reps quietly stop using whatever app their manager picks. They go back to pen and paper, or they just knock doors from memory and log results at the end of the day (if they log them at all).
This happens for three consistent reasons:
If your reps have stopped using the current tool, the answer is almost never "more training." The answer is a simpler tool.
There is no single best door knocking app for every team. But here is how to narrow it down quickly:
The most important thing is to stop evaluating and start knocking. Every day your team spends comparing feature matrices is a day they are not in the field generating revenue. Pick the tool that fits your budget and team size, run it for a week, and adjust from there. Most of these platforms offer free trials, so the cost of testing is just your time.
14-day free trial. No credit card required. Import your list and start knocking doors in under 10 minutes.
Start Free Trial