Cleaning software · Residential maid services

Priced for a solo maid service, adopted by thousands: the ZenMaid install base broker lists leave blank.

ZenMaid is the bootstrapped scheduler for residential maid and house-cleaning services. The install base is a wide, shallow long tail of owner-run shops that generalist databases skip because the firmographics look thin and the ARPU stays small. If you sell into cleaning operators, this is the account list with the named owner already on every row.

Category pick for residential maid services5 ZenMaid alternatives mappedOwner contact on every record
$19 to $49

flat monthly price per company

ZenMaid does not scale per user or per maid, so revenue per account stays small and the customer count grows wide instead of deep. That shape is the whole point of the list.

~2013

bootstrapped and independent

Founded by Amar Ghose and Arun Devabhaktuni and run as a profitable remote-first SaaS, with no outside funding. That keeps the focus on owner-run cleaners, not enterprise franchise systems.

4

countries in the footprint

US, Canada, the UK, and Australia. English-speaking residential maid services, not enterprise commercial janitorial. The buyer is the owner-operator, not a corporate procurement seat.

Source: Orbital data team, June 2026 snapshot.

$19-$49

flat monthly range per company

i
1-10

cleaners in the typical shop

i
5

alternatives in the displacement set

i

The top alternatives

Top ZenMaid alternatives.

Five tools come up most often when an owner-run cleaning shop outgrows ZenMaid or evaluates a switch. One is a direct same-category competitor. Four are broader field service platforms that pull cleaning operators when the shop branches into adjacent home services.

#AlternativeCategoryWhere it fits
1Launch27Cleaning CRMBooking and CRM software built for cleaning companies. The closest head-to-head with ZenMaid in the residential-cleaning category, with online scheduling and recurring jobs.
2JobberField serviceBroader home-services CRM that catches cleaning operators when the shop branches into lawn, handyman, or pressure washing alongside the maid book.
3Housecall ProField serviceAll-in-one home-services platform, popular when an owner wants payments and online booking baked into the scheduler. Pulls cleaning shops past the 10 cleaner mark.
4WorkizField serviceDispatch-led field service tool with stronger phone and call-tracking features. Comes up where the cleaning shop runs a heavier call center.
5ServiceM8Field serviceJob management for trades and home services, strong outside the US, especially in Australia and the UK. Often the alternative an international ZenMaid shop tests against.

Source: Orbital data team, June 2026 snapshot. Alternatives reflect Orbital’s read of the residential-cleaning category. Company-level usage is detected per record on demand by the tech stack agent.

Who buys this data

Janitorial supply, cleaner-payroll, and bonding-insurance vendors selling into ZenMaid shops.

This page is for the teams selling into ZenMaid’s customers, not the maid services using ZenMaid. The buyer universe is narrow and specific: cleaning supply and microfiber distributors, janitorial wholesale reps, residential-cleaning franchise recruiters, 1099 payroll platforms, instant-pay lenders, and insurance brokers writing janitorial liability. If that is your motion, a current list of ZenMaid users with the owner on every row is the input you have been asking for.

SuppliesCleaning chemicals, microfiber, paper goods, and PPE distributors selling by the case
WholesaleJanitorial wholesale reps stocking the 1-to-10 cleaner shop
FranchiseMolly Maid and MaidPro corporate teams recruiting owner-operators to convert
Payroll1099 payroll and cleaner-scheduling-payout platforms for multi-crew shops
CapitalInstant-pay lenders advancing against booked recurring routes
InsuranceBrokers writing janitorial liability and surety bonds for owner-run shops

The long version

Detail, on demand.

ZenMaid sits in residential cleaning. The buyer is the owner-operator of a small maid service, not a franchise corporate office. A ZenMaid shop tends to run 1 to 10 cleaners, takes recurring weekly or biweekly bookings, and works on flat-rate or hourly pricing for residential clients in a defined service area.

Named ZenMaid customers in the public sample: Serene Clean, House Mum Services, All Spruced Up Cleaning Co., 25th Hour Cleaning, Haus Maids, Misse’s Clean, Ethereal Cleaning, Excellent Quality Cleaning, The Mess Masters, and Bella Cleaning Inc. Those ten operator names are testimonials and case studies ZenMaid publishes; they are the visible floor, not the ceiling. Orbital builds the full operator list per request, with the owner on every row.

The footprint spans the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia. Buyer titles are owner, founder, or operations lead at a shop paying 19 to 49 dollars a month for its scheduler. That price point tells you why the list is wide instead of deep, and why a broker file built on enterprise janitorial logos misses the actual buyer.

Orbital is a custom agent platform, not a scraped list that went stale on delivery. The ZenMaid customer file is built per pull, the same way Orbital builds owner lists across long-tail home-service verticals.

What runs on every record

  • Tech stack agent. Crawls a company’s site and detects whether it runs ZenMaid on demand, so the list is current when you pull it. Stale broker files are out.
  • Owner finder. Names the owner or decision-maker at each maid service and confirms them on LinkedIn. The owner is the buyer at a 1 to 10 cleaner shop, not a procurement seat.
  • Email waterfall. Returns a work email and checks deliverability, so the AE team is not burning sender reputation on bounces.
  • Phone intel. Adds a dial-or-skip read on each row. Useful for the cleaning vertical, where a real phone still beats most inbox channels.
  • ICP score. Grades each ZenMaid account A to D against your fit formula. The full install base is small enough that the top quartile is a workable quarter for one rep.

The result is a worklist of ZenMaid customers filterable by state, service area, and fleet size, with a named owner and a working number on every row. See the sample before you pay for it.

Do not buy this if any of the following are true.

You only sell at enterprise revenue tiers. A 1 to 10 cleaner shop paying a flat monthly rate for its scheduler will not write a six-figure annual check on day one. Save your budget and call us when an enterprise-only motion needs a different layer.

You sell to homeowners directly. Consumer cleaning data, lead-gen sites, and end-user booking apps want the residential household database, not B2B owner contacts.

Your motion only fires above $100k ACV. The ZenMaid universe is wide and shallow on purpose. If your unit economics require six-figure landings, the long tail of owner-run cleaners will not pencil out. The mid-market cleaning chains might, and we can ship that overlay separately.

You need real-time license or bonding status. State licensing and bonding boards publish that, with renewal windows that move daily. Orbital refreshes monthly, which is the right cadence for prospecting and the wrong cadence for compliance gatekeeping.

We believe

A generalist B2B database selling you a “ZenMaid customer list” is selling you franchise logos and a stale scrape, not the owner who pays the monthly bill.

If you ask a generalist B2B database for a ZenMaid customer list, you usually get back two things, both wrong. Either a scraped file that went stale the day it shipped, or an enterprise account list that flatters the public franchise systems and loses the owner-run shops that actually pay for ZenMaid every month. Neither one is the buyer.

The first problem is freshness. ZenMaid customers come and go fast. A 1 to 10 cleaner shop opens, books two recurring routes, churns within a year, gets replaced by another shop, and the broker file does not know. A list crawled six months ago is a list of strangers by the time it reaches the AE. The Orbital tech stack agent crawls each company’s site on demand and re-checks ZenMaid presence at pull time, which is the only cadence that survives this vertical.

The second problem is the owner. ZenMaid’s buyer is the owner-operator, not a procurement seat. The owner of a 1 to 10 cleaner shop rarely has a polished LinkedIn presence, often does not work from a corporate email domain, and never reports up to a corporate buyer. Generalist databases skip these rows because the firmographic signal looks weak. Orbital is built for exactly this layer.

The third problem is the shape of the universe. ZenMaid is bootstrapped, priced flat at 19 to 49 dollars per month per company, and built to win the long tail. There is no enterprise logo wall to anchor against. If your vendor motion is built around five enterprise logos, that shape will not help you. If your motion is built around hundreds of owner-run cleaners with a named buyer and a working number, this is the only list that has it.

Questions

Before you ask sales about the ZenMaid dataset.

Who are ZenMaid customers and how many are there?

Orbital maps owner-run residential maid services running ZenMaid across the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia, concentrated in shops with one to ten cleaners on a flat 19-to-49-dollar monthly plan. The install base is wide and shallow by design: low ARPU per account, high shop count, the kind of long-tail SMB list a broker file leaves as blank rows.

Can I get a list of companies that use ZenMaid?

Yes. Orbital's tech stack agent crawls a company's site and detects whether it runs ZenMaid on demand, so the list is current when you pull it. Each row arrives with a named owner, a verified work email, and a phone number. You filter by state, service area, or fleet size, then export.

What are the best ZenMaid alternatives?

The closest direct alternative in the residential-cleaning category is Launch27. Jobber, Housecall Pro, Workiz, and ServiceM8 are broader field service platforms that pull cleaning operators when the shop grows past 10 cleaners or branches into adjacent home services. Which fits depends on operator size and service mix.

When is the ZenMaid customer dataset the wrong fit?

Three cases. First, if you sell only at enterprise revenue tiers, a 1 to 10 cleaner shop will not write a six-figure check on day one. Second, if you sell to homeowners directly, you want consumer data, not B2B owner contacts. Third, if your motion only fires above 100,000 dollars in annual contract value, the ZenMaid long tail will not fit your unit economics.

See the ZenMaid customer dataset before you pay for it.

Tell us the states, service areas, or shop sizes you want. We send a free sample of around 100 verified owner records you can check against your own pipeline, no commitment, no email-list back-and-forth.

Get the sample