We tested every major plumbing estimating platform in 2026 — service, commercial, mechanical, and industrial — and ranked them on plan takeoff, pipe schedule pricing, fixture counting, fitting takeoff, and how well they handle real plumbing drawings. Here are the seven that hold up under production use.
Last updated: May 2026. Pricing and plumbing-specific features verified directly with each vendor.
See plumbing-specific features, pricing, and use cases before reading the detailed reviews
| Software | Best For | Plumbing-Specific Features | Pricing | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BuildVision AI | AI takeoff for plumbing plans | Auto pipe + fixture takeoff + DFU/fixture-unit calc | Custom pricing | 4.8/5 |
| Trimble Estimation MEP | Large commercial plumbing contractors | PHCC labor units + extensive pipe assembly library | $3,000+/yr per seat | 4.4/5 |
| FastPIPE (FastEST) | Industrial and commercial pipe takeoff | Specialized pipe spool + fittings calc | $2,000+/yr | 4.2/5 |
| McCormick Plumbing | Service and small commercial plumbers | Pre-built plumbing assemblies + supplier feeds | $1,500+/yr | 4.3/5 |
| QuoteSoft Pipe | Mechanical contractors with pipe focus | Detailed pipe schedule pricing + spool drawing | $2,500+/yr | 4.1/5 |
| Wendes Mechanical | Plumbing-mechanical multi-trade shops | Plumbing + HVAC mechanical assemblies | $2,200+/yr | 4.2/5 |
| AccuBid Pro (Trimble) | Established commercial plumbing teams | Audit trail + pipe and fixture libraries | $3,000+/yr per seat | 4.3/5 |
Looking for a broader category roundup? See our best construction estimating software guide. For trade-specific workflows, explore electrical, HVAC, and construction takeoff roundups.
Best for: AI-powered takeoff for plumbing plans across service, commercial, and mechanical
BuildVision AI is the strongest plumbing estimating tool on this list because it solves the single hardest part of plumbing estimating: the takeoff. Upload a plumbing plan and within minutes you have pipe runs by size and material, fixture counts by type, fittings derived from pipe routing, water and sanitary DFU calculations, and a quantity takeoff with PHCC labor units pre-applied. What takes 6-10 hours of manual counting on a moderate commercial plumbing bid finishes in under 30 minutes.
The platform separates pipe by system (domestic water, sanitary, vent, storm, gas, hot water), recognizes fixtures from the plan symbol legend (water closets, lavatories, sinks, urinals, floor drains, hose bibs, hub drains), and identifies fittings at branches and direction changes. The DFU and fixture unit calculations are automatic — you do not manually count fixtures and look them up in the table; the AI does it. Output flows directly into BOQ generation and a branded proposal.
BuildVision AI is best suited for plumbing contractors who bid five or more projects a month — at that volume, the time savings on takeoff alone justify any reasonable cost. Smaller occasional bidders may not need the AI workflow and could be better served by McCormick Plumbing. The platform is newer than Trimble MEP or AccuBid, so its plumbing-specific assembly library is still expanding, but the core AI takeoff capability is unmatched. See the takeoff workflow for technical details.
Pricing: Custom pricing based on bid volume and team size. See pricing for details.
Best for: Large commercial plumbing contractors with deep mechanical scope
Trimble Estimation MEP (the renamed AutoBid Mechanical product line) is the dominant plumbing estimating platform for large commercial plumbing contractors and mechanical multi-trade shops. The assembly library is the deepest in the category, covering domestic water, sanitary, storm, vent, gas, hot water, and specialty systems (medical gas, chilled water, hydronic). PHCC labor units are tightly integrated, and the platform supports complex multi-system bids with thousands of line items.
Strengths include detailed pipe and fitting libraries by system, automatic fitting takeoff from pipe routing, DFU and fixture unit calculations, and tight integration with Trimble's broader mechanical product line (including SysQue for BIM modeling and Pipe Designer for shop drawings). The bid management module supports multi-estimator collaboration with audit-grade change tracking.
The trade-offs match Accubid's in electrical: Trimble Estimation MEP is expensive ($3,000+/year per seat with annual maintenance), the learning curve runs 4-8 weeks before estimators are fully productive, and there is no AI-driven plan takeoff. The interface is closer to enterprise software than to a modern cloud product. For mid-to-large commercial plumbing contractors, it is the established benchmark. For shops moving to AI-driven workflows, it is what BuildVision AI is replacing.
Pricing: Approximately $3,000+/year per seat with annual maintenance.
Best for: Industrial and commercial pipe contractors with heavy spool drawing needs
FastPIPE is part of FastEST's industrial mechanical product family and is built specifically for pipe contractors handling commercial mechanical and industrial process piping. The pipe and fitting takeoff is the most detailed in the category, supporting spool drawing, weld counts, and complex pipe routing in 3D space.
Industrial pipe estimators value FastPIPE for handling large pipe sizes (4-inch and up), specialty materials (stainless, alloy steel, copper-nickel for marine applications), brazed joints, and weld takeoff with NDE (non-destructive examination) requirements. The fitting libraries cover ASME/ANSI standard fittings, weld fittings, threaded fittings, and grooved fittings (Victaulic). For a process plant or industrial plumbing-mechanical bid, FastPIPE is the right tool.
The downsides are real: FastPIPE is desktop-based, the interface is dated, the learning curve is steep, and it is overkill for residential or service plumbing. There is no AI takeoff. For pure industrial or heavy commercial pipe contractors, FastPIPE is a strong specialty choice. For contractors with mixed scopes including residential or service work, a more general plumbing tool plus industrial-specific assemblies usually serves better.
Pricing: Starting around $2,000/year per seat. Industrial assembly modules included.
Best for: Service shops and small-to-mid commercial plumbers who want strong assemblies without enterprise pricing
McCormick has been a mainstay in plumbing estimating for decades, particularly with service contractors and small-to-mid commercial shops. The plumbing platform ships with a comprehensive assembly library, PHCC labor units, and supplier price feeds from major plumbing distributors (Ferguson, Hajoca, Morrison, Winsupply). Pricing is meaningfully lower than Trimble MEP or AccuBid, which makes it accessible to plumbing contractors doing $1M-15M in annual revenue.
Strengths include strong residential and commercial assembly libraries (water, sanitary, vent, gas), well-organized service work templates for water heater replacements, repipes, and small commercial bids, and live supplier pricing through several major distributor portals. The bid output is clean and audit-ready. McCormick's service-specific features — flat-rate pricing, recurring maintenance estimates, quick-quote tools — are stronger than what general estimating tools offer.
The downsides are an interface that has not modernized significantly, no AI takeoff, and a workflow that relies on manual data entry from plans. McCormick lags Trimble MEP on the deepest commercial assemblies (medical gas, hydronic, complex industrial). For a service shop or small-to-mid commercial plumbing contractor, McCormick is excellent value. For heavy commercial or industrial work, you will likely outgrow it.
Pricing: Starting around $1,500/year for the base platform. Add-on modules for advanced commercial features extra.
Best for: Mechanical contractors with a heavy pipe focus across commercial and light industrial
QuoteSoft Pipe is a specialized mechanical and plumbing estimating tool that focuses heavily on pipe takeoff and pipe schedule pricing. The platform is well regarded among mechanical contractors who do a mix of commercial plumbing, hydronic heating, chilled water, and light industrial pipe work. The pipe schedule pricing is particularly strong, supporting localized pricing by region, supplier, and pipe specification.
Mechanical estimators value QuoteSoft Pipe for its detailed pipe and fitting libraries (carbon steel, stainless, copper, PEX, PVC, CPVC), spool drawing integration, and the ability to model pipe routing in detail. The labor unit handling supports both PHCC and custom shop labor with productivity factors. The bid output is detailed and audit-traceable.
The downsides are a learning curve that runs 3-5 weeks, an interface that feels heavier than newer cloud products, and the lack of AI-driven plan takeoff. Pricing runs $2,500+/year per seat. QuoteSoft Pipe has a loyal user base of mid-sized commercial mechanical contractors, but it sits in a competitive middle ground — less powerful than Trimble MEP for the largest jobs, more complex than McCormick for service work. It is the right tool for mechanical pipe specialists.
Pricing: Starting around $2,500/year per seat.
Best for: Plumbing-mechanical multi-trade shops bidding plumbing and HVAC together
Wendes is a long-running mechanical estimating tool that covers both plumbing and HVAC in a single platform. For mechanical contractors who bid both trades together — common in commercial new construction and tenant improvement work — Wendes simplifies the workflow by keeping plumbing and HVAC takeoff in one tool with shared labor units and pricing.
Strengths include unified plumbing and HVAC assembly libraries, ductwork takeoff alongside pipe takeoff, hydronic and chilled water assemblies, and combined bid output that presents both trades in a single proposal. For multi-trade mechanical shops, this saves the workflow overhead of running two separate estimating tools.
The downsides are that being a generalist mechanical tool means Wendes is not the deepest at any single trade. Plumbing-specific features (DFU calc, gas piping detail) are less developed than in dedicated plumbing tools. HVAC-specific features (ductwork sheet metal SF, T&B) are less developed than in dedicated HVAC tools. There is no AI takeoff, and the interface is dated. For multi-trade mechanical shops who value workflow consolidation over per-trade depth, Wendes is a reasonable choice.
Pricing: Starting around $2,200/year. Plumbing and HVAC modules can be licensed separately or together.
Best for: Established commercial plumbing teams with mature estimating processes
AccuBid Pro is the plumbing-focused product from Trimble's AccuBid line, sister product to AccuBid Anywhere on the electrical side. AccuBid Pro is built for established commercial plumbing estimating teams who have mature internal processes and want a tool that supports detailed audit trails, multi-estimator collaboration, and audit-grade bid history.
Strengths include detailed pipe and fixture libraries, full PHCC labor unit integration, supplier pricing across major plumbing distributors, and tight integration with Trimble's broader mechanical product family. The audit trail is best-in-class — every change to a bid is logged with timestamp, estimator, and reason. For commercial plumbing teams where bid traceability and post-award analysis matter, AccuBid Pro is appropriate.
The trade-offs match Trimble Estimation MEP: AccuBid Pro is expensive ($3,000+/year per seat), the learning curve is steep (4-8 weeks), and there is no AI takeoff. The interface feels enterprise-heavy. AccuBid Pro and Trimble Estimation MEP are increasingly seen as part of the same product family, with overlapping capabilities. For new buyers, BuildVision AI's AI takeoff plus a dedicated plumbing assembly library is often a more efficient choice. For teams already on AccuBid Pro, the migration cost is real.
Pricing: Approximately $3,000+/year per seat with annual maintenance.
Side-by-side plumbing-specific feature comparison across all 7 platforms
| Feature | BuildVision AI | Trimble MEP | FastPIPE | McCormick | QuoteSoft | Wendes | AccuBid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI plan takeoff | |||||||
| Auto fixture count | |||||||
| Pipe schedule pricing | |||||||
| Fitting takeoff | |||||||
| DFU / fixture unit calc | |||||||
| Gas piping support | |||||||
| PHCC labor units | |||||||
| Live supplier pricing | |||||||
| Cloud + mobile access | |||||||
| Proposal generator |
Five criteria that matter most when evaluating tools for plumbing-specific bidding
Plumbing splits into service, residential, light commercial, heavy commercial, and industrial process piping. Each segment has different fixture counts, pipe complexity, and labor assumptions. Service shops bidding repair and replacement work need flat-rate pricing and quick fixture estimates. Commercial plumbers bidding new construction need DFU calculations, riser diagrams, and water/sanitary/vent/gas takeoffs. Industrial pipe contractors need spool drawing and weld takeoff. A tool built for service work will fight you on a hospital plumbing bid, and the inverse is just as true.
Pipe is the largest single cost on most commercial plumbing bids — copper, PEX, PVC, cast iron, black steel, stainless. Prices move weekly, especially copper. Verify the tool ships with current pricing for your local supplier base, or pulls live pricing through portal integrations (Ferguson, Hajoca, Morrison, Winsupply). Tools with a generic "1-inch copper - LF" line item force you to phone-shop pricing every bid. Tools that pull live pricing from your distributor save 1-3 hours per bid and prevent margin loss from stale costs.
On a typical commercial plumbing bid, fittings represent 20-35% of material cost. Manual tools force you to count fittings off the plan one at a time, which is the most error-prone part of plumbing estimating. The best tools either auto-derive fittings from pipe takeoff (estimating 2.5 fittings per 10 feet of pipe based on system type) or extract fittings directly from the plan when symbols are present. DFU (drainage fixture unit) and water fixture unit calcs are mandatory for any commercial plumbing bid where the plumbing engineer expects size verification on stacks and mains.
Many plumbing tools treat gas piping as an afterthought, with limited fitting libraries and weak pressure-drop calculations. If your shop bids gas work — whether residential furnaces, commercial kitchen gas, or medical gas — you need a tool with proper gas pipe sizing tables, regulator and valve fitting libraries, and pressure-drop verification. Medical gas (oxygen, vacuum, nitrogen) requires NFPA 99 compliance and specialized pipe (Type L copper) with brazed joints and certified labor. Verify the tool handles your gas scope before committing.
Demos always look smooth on the standard test plans. The real test is bidding a plumbing project you have already completed and delivered, where you know the actual pipe footage, fitting count, fixture material spend, and labor hours. Run the new software on the original plans, compare its output to your actual costs, and look at variance by category. A tool that lands within 3% on pipe and 7% on fittings is reliable. A tool that lands 15-20% off requires manual verification of every line item, which negates the speed advantage entirely.
Most plumbing estimating tools require manual counting of every fixture, every fitting, and every pipe run. AI takeoff reads your plumbing plans and produces fixture counts, pipe runs, and DFU calculations automatically. Try it on a recent commercial bid and compare to your actual quantities — that is the only honest test. Start with the takeoff overview.
A: For active plumbing contractors, BuildVision AI leads on AI-powered takeoff that automatically extracts pipe runs, fixture counts, and fitting requirements from plumbing plans, then applies PHCC labor units to produce a complete bid in minutes. For mid-to-large commercial plumbing contractors who want the deepest assembly library, Trimble Estimation MEP (formerly AutoBid Mechanical) and AccuBid Pro remain industry benchmarks. For service and small commercial work, McCormick Plumbing is a reliable, affordable choice. The right answer depends on bid volume, project complexity, and whether you want AI to do the first-pass takeoff.
A: AI takeoff in BuildVision AI reads plumbing plans by recognizing the symbol legend and pipe routing patterns. It extracts pipe runs by size and material (1-inch copper, 4-inch PVC), counts fixtures by symbol type (water closet, lavatory, sink, floor drain), identifies fittings at branches and elbows, and produces a quantity takeoff with PHCC labor units pre-applied. Accuracy is consistently within 3-5% of manual takeoff on well-drawn plans. Where AI struggles is on hand-drawn riser diagrams, low-resolution scans, or plumbing plans drawn in non-standard symbology. In those cases, AI provides a fast first pass and the estimator finishes verification.
A: Not necessarily. Most modern plumbing estimating tools (BuildVision AI, Trimble MEP, McCormick) handle both residential and commercial scopes with the same platform. The differences are in the assembly library — residential focuses on standard fixture sets, simple PEX/copper distribution, and basic DWV. Commercial requires riser diagrams, more complex DFU calculations, larger pipe sizes, gas work, and often medical gas or specialty systems. If your shop is purely residential under $250K bids, lighter tools like McCormick or EBM-style products work fine. If you do any commercial over $500K, you need a tool with full DFU calc and assembly depth.
A: PHCC (Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors Association) labor units are the closest thing the plumbing industry has to a standardized labor benchmark, similar to NECA labor units in electrical. They are reasonably accurate for new commercial construction but can be 20-40% off for service work, retrofits, or congested mechanical rooms. The right approach is to start with PHCC stock units, then adjust by labor factor based on your shop's actual productivity by job type. Tools that lock you into stock PHCC produce estimates that win bids you cannot deliver. Verify the tool allows custom labor unit overrides before committing.
A: Pricing ranges widely. McCormick Plumbing starts around $1,500/year. FastPIPE by FastEST runs $2,000+/year for industrial pipe takeoff. Wendes Mechanical is around $2,200/year for plumbing-mechanical multi-trade shops. QuoteSoft Pipe runs $2,500+/year. Trimble Estimation MEP and AccuBid Pro start around $3,000/year per seat and scale up significantly. BuildVision AI offers custom pricing based on bid volume and team size. For most plumbing contractors doing 5-15 bids per month, expect $1,500-4,000 per year on dedicated estimating software, with the time and accuracy savings paying back the cost on the first three bids.
A: Yes, but you will work harder. General estimating tools (PlanSwift, STACK, ProEst) handle plumbing fine but treat it as one trade among many. They lack PHCC labor units out of the box, do not auto-calculate DFU or fixture units, and have shallow plumbing-specific assembly libraries. You will spend hours building your own plumbing assemblies and manually applying labor units. For occasional plumbing work as part of a multi-trade scope, a general tool is fine. For shops doing primarily plumbing, dedicated plumbing estimating software saves enough time to pay for itself within a few bids.
BuildVision AI reads your plumbing plans and produces pipe runs, fixture counts, and DFU calculations automatically — with PHCC labor units already applied. Try it on a real bid and see the difference.
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