Curbsight vs RoofLink
RoofLink is a roofing CRM with storm overlays and a rep-traced measurement tool, sold by SalesRabbit. Curbsight opens on a territory where every property is already scored 0-100 — hail swaths joined to each roof, measurements computed automatically, owner phones a tap away — and runs the same job cycle on the other side.
RoofLink is the closest thing on this list to Curbsight's category: a roofing CRM (owned by SalesRabbit since late 2024) with canvassing maps, NOAA storm overlays, an included rep-traced satellite measurement tool, SRS material ordering, and profit-based commission tracking. The differences are in how much the software does for you. RoofLink shows storm overlays on a map; Curbsight scores every property 0-100 — fusing hail exposure with roof age, owner status, and value — flags swath-confirmed roofs, counts down claim windows, and fires predictive alerts before the storm lands. RoofLink's reps trace roofs by hand to measure them; Curbsight's measurements arrive automatically and the estimate drafts itself. RoofLink's map shows assessor homeowner names; Curbsight adds skip-traced phone numbers on demand. And RoofLink's pricing is genuinely hard to pin down (see below), while Curbsight's is published and flat.
Feature comparison
| Feature | Curbsight | RoofLink |
|---|---|---|
| Lead scoring | 0–100 per property — roof age × hail × owner status × value, before the first knock | No native scoring; propensity data via the SalesRabbit integration (demographics) |
| Storm intelligence | Radar hail swaths joined per roof, swath-confirmed flags, claim-window countdown, predictive 'hail inbound' alerts | NOAA/NWS hail + wind overlays on the map (5-year lookback) |
| Roof measurements | Computed automatically per property; estimate self-drafts | Included DIY tool — rep traces the roof on satellite imagery; EagleView/Hover as paid integrations |
| Owner contact data | Owner names included + skip-traced phones on demand | Assessor homeowner names on the map; no built-in phone reveals |
| Canvassing + gamification | Knock tracking, streaks, achievements, leaderboards, live team map, route optimization | Territory maps + status pins; deeper canvassing via the SalesRabbit bundle |
| Job pipeline + CRM | Editable-stage pipeline, jobs born property-enriched | 7-step roofing pipeline (Target → Collect) |
| Invoicing + QuickBooks | Invoicing + online homeowner payments + QuickBooks Online sync | Invoicing, field payments, financing; free QuickBooks sync |
| Material ordering | Supplier-ready material orders from the job | SRS ordering from the bid |
| Back office | Time clock, incentives, commission pay engine, team KPIs, AI coach | Profit-based commission tracking (flagship feature) |
| Published pricing | Flat, public: $29/seat canvassing · $500–$5,000/mo intelligence tiers | Contradictory as of July 2026 — $400/user (pricing page) vs $120–160/user (FAQ + SalesRabbit bundle page) |
What RoofLink does well
RoofLink earns the comparison. It's a genuinely roofing-shaped CRM: a pipeline modeled on the roofing job cycle, an included measurement tool with no per-report fees (reps trace the roof on satellite imagery), NOAA storm overlays with hail and wind history, SRS material ordering straight from the bid, field payments, free QuickBooks sync, and commission tracking built around job profit — which is the correct thing to track commissions against. Since the SalesRabbit acquisition in late 2024 it also slots into a broader canvassing ecosystem.
Where the difference shows
The difference is the direction of the work. In RoofLink, the software displays and the human decides: the map shows storm overlays and homeowner names, and reps work out which houses matter, then trace each roof by hand to measure it. In Curbsight, the deciding is the product: every property arrives scored 0-100 — hail exposure fused with roof age, owner status, and value — swath-confirmed roofs are flagged and re-ranked, claim windows count down per property, predictive alerts fire as storms approach, and measurements are already computed when the rep opens the estimate. Over a thousand doors, 'the data is on the map' and 'the map already did the math' are different products.
- Scoring, not overlays: a storm overlay tells you where it hailed; a score tells you which of those 4,000 roofs to knock first
- Automatic measurements: no tracing step between the knock and the estimate
- Skip-traced phones on demand — assessor names alone don't ring
- Predictive alerts: your team knows before the storm lands, not after the overlay updates
- A published price list — flat tiers, no quote dance
The SalesRabbit question
RoofLink standalone is a CRM; the canvassing muscle comes from bundling it with SalesRabbit Pro — which brings the SalesRabbit economics with it (per-seat pricing that stacks: the bundle page lists $160/user/month, plus whatever the rest of your stack costs). Curbsight doesn't split the product: the scored map, the canvassing layer with gamification and a live team map, the CRM, the estimates, and the back office are one platform on one bill. There is no second product to bundle.
- You want the territory scored before the first knock, not just storm overlays to interpret
- You want measurements and estimates to happen automatically instead of rep-traced per roof
- You want owner phone numbers, not just assessor names on pins
- You want canvassing, CRM, and back office in one product instead of a CRM-plus-SalesRabbit bundle
- You want pricing you can read off a page
- You're already deep in the SalesRabbit ecosystem and want the CRM that's native to it
- Profit-based commission tracking is the feature you're buying for
- You prefer rep-traced measurements you fully control, with EagleView/Hover integrations for ordered reports
- Your market isn't live on Curbsight yet and you need scored-territory depth today — though new counties stand up in days on request, so ask first
Pricing
RoofLink's pricing is contradictory across their own properties as of July 2026: their pricing page lists $400 per user per month with a one-time $1,500 setup fee, while their FAQ quotes $120 per user with volume discounts, and SalesRabbit's bundle page lists $120/user standalone or $160/user bundled with SalesRabbit Pro. Whichever quote you get, it's per-seat — a 10-rep team is 10 subscriptions. Curbsight's pricing is published and flat: the Knocker canvassing line is free to $75/seat (no minimums, no setup fees, no contracts), and the intelligence tiers include seats — Starter $500/mo (3 seats), Pro $1,500/mo (10 seats, 20 territories, 6,500 phone reveals, the full CRM + estimates + invoicing + QuickBooks sync + back office), Enterprise $5,000/mo uncapped. A 10-rep team on Pro is $150/seat all-in — against $120–400/seat for the CRM layer alone, before the canvassing bundle.