If you run an IT MSP and you've quietly Googled ConnectWise alternative at some point, maybe after a frustrating support call or a renewal that felt one-sided, you're not alone. ConnectWise has been the go-to PSA for MSPs for over a decade. But it's also the tool MSPs bring up most when they call us looking to switch.
MSPs are under real pressure right now. Costs are up. Clients push back on price increases. The PSA market has split into tools that either simplify your business or add to the pile. The reasons MSPs leave legacy PSA platforms isn’t usually one big thing. It's the billing gap, the add-on costs, the contract terms, the support experience. Each one is manageable. Together, they make the cost of switching feel smaller than the cost of staying.
Here's what's driving the shift, what to look for in a ConnectWise PSA replacement, how the top alternatives compare, and how to pick the right one the first time.
We have to give credit where it's due: ConnectWise built this category. It created the playbook that every PSA after it has borrowed from, built one of the tightest communities in the channel through IT Nation, and ran MSP operations at a scale no one else had touched. When owners asked their peers what to use, ConnectWise was the answer for a long time, and for good reason.
Over time, that changed:
The market shifted at the same time:
When the same complaints show up across dozens of different shops, it's not a coincidence. It's a product problem. Here's what we keep hearing.
It's rarely one thing. It's a slow build of smaller problems until staying feels more painful than switching.
ConnectWise takes weeks to implement and needs a dedicated admin just to keep running. The UI feels dated compared to the other tools your team uses every day. MSPs in community forums say you need a CW-certified admin on staff just to keep it working. That's a real cost most shops don't budget for upfront.
Legacy PSA providers typically don’t publish pricing. You negotiate, sign a multi-year contract, and find out what things really cost at renewal. Want integrated payments? That's ConnectBooster, a separate product. Need quoting and CPQ? That's ConnectWise Sell, another separate product. MSPs regularly report paying far more than they expected once the add-ons stack up.
Automate (the RMM ConnectWise got through LabTech) hasn't seen much real development in years. MSP forums describe it as a maintenance-mode product. Meanwhile, NinjaOne and others are shipping real automation features and better alerting. If you built your RMM stack around Automate, you're paying for a tool that's falling behind.
Even with ConnectWise fully set up, invoices don't come from it. Most MSPs on Legacy PSA providers still run billing through QuickBooks or something similar. Tickets in one place, money in another. Every month someone reconciles the two. Every month there's a chance something slips: an unlogged hour, a device not on contract, a charge that never made it to the invoice. That's a lot of chances to leave money on the table.
MSPs under 25 seats say they feel pushed to the back of the queue. As legacy PSA providers like ConnectWise have grown, the fast, direct support smaller shops used to get has gotten harder to find. When you're a small team and the tool breaks, waiting days for help isn't an inconvenience. It affects your customers.
None of these are rare complaints. They're what MSPs tell us over and over. And when they start shopping for a ConnectWise alternative, they tend to want the same things.
Most MSPs don't start with a detailed requirements list when evaluating a legacy PSA provider alternative. But when you talk to enough of them, the same needs keep showing up.
Not a PSA plus a billing tool plus an RMM plus a payment add-on. One system where a closed ticket triggers an invoice, where a dispatched tech shows up on a GPS map, where a signed quote turns into a recurring charge. Every extra tool in your stack is another place for something to fall through the cracks. MSPs who've dealt with that long enough aren't willing to accept it anymore.
A lot of PSA vendors lead with ticketing and treat billing as secondary. MSPs don't see it that way. If the invoice doesn't match what your tech did, nothing else matters. They want billing that lives inside the PSA, not synced from QuickBooks, not pulled from a separate tool, not reconciled by hand every month.
For any MSP running technicians outside the office, scheduling & dispatch are the part of the demo that matters most. These aren't premium features for enterprise accounts. They're table stakes, and they come up consistently as the most-requested capabilities when MSPs evaluate a ConnectWise alternative:
After years of custom contracts and surprise renewals, MSPs want to know what something costs before they get on a sales call. Vendors who publish their pricing are getting a much warmer reception right now.
More MSP owners are thinking about what their business looks like without them running every detail. The right PSA makes it easier to hand things off, whether to a manager or a buyer someday. Tools that can't support that aren't making the shortlist.
Rev.io started as a billing platform for telecom and internet providers, companies billing complex recurring services at high volume where errors have real consequences. Over the last several years, Rev.io built that billing engine into a full PSA, adding field service, ticketing, dispatch, inventory, payments, and RMM. The platform is AI-native from the ground up — not a legacy tool with AI retrofitted on top. Billing was never an afterthought. Neither was automation.
We're seeing legacy PSA provider customers come over in growing numbers. Rev.io does what they've been asking for: billing that's native, a field service workflow that's complete, and payments with no separate add-on required. Here's how the two platforms compare.
When a tech closes a ticket, logs time, or completes a job, Rev.io's billing engine picks it up automatically. No monthly export. No manual bridge between service data and invoices. ConnectWise routes most billing through QuickBooks or a separate system — meaning someone on your team is reconciling two platforms every month. With Rev.io, that step doesn't exist.
Legacy PSA providers were built for managed IT. If you bill for VoIP, internet, or cloud services on top of that, you need a separate billing system. You're sending separate invoices and asking clients to reconcile two documents from the same vendor. Rev.io handles all of it in one place — IT, VoIP, internet, cloud — one contract, one invoice. That's not a feature. It's why Rev.io exists.
Integrated payment processing is built into Rev.io. ConnectWise requires ConnectBooster, a separate product at separate cost, to handle collections. From closed ticket to collected payment, Rev.io is one system. There's no third-party middleware, no additional contract, and no reconciliation layer between what was invoiced and what was collected.
For MSPs running technicians in the field, scheduling & dispatch are where demos get won or lost. Rev.io ships all of these live — not on the roadmap:
5. Built for what's next, not patched to keep up
Most PSA platforms were built for a different era. AI features are being added to infrastructure that was never designed for them. Rev.io was built AI-native from the start, meaning automation, smart workflows, and real-time intelligence are part of how the platform operates, not layered on after the fact. For MSPs thinking about where their business needs to be in five years, that architecture difference matters more than it might seem today.
ConnectWise isn't the only option worth knowing. The ConnectWise competitors that come up most often in MSP evaluations are Autotask, HaloPSA, and SuperOps. Here's how they actually compare.
Cloud-native, solid on ticketing and workflow automation, and a natural hub if you're already running the Kaseya ecosystem (Datto RMM, IT Glue, Kaseya 365). For IT-only MSPs deep in the Kaseya stack, it's a reasonable ConnectWise alternative if you stay within that ecosystem. Where it falls short:
Has a strong reputation for good reason. The UI is the best of any PSA we've seen. Pricing is all-inclusive with no hidden modules. They ship features quickly and integrate well with RMMs, M365, and IT Glue. As a ConnectWise alternative for IT-only shops, HaloPSA is worth a close look. Where it falls short:
Newer and built around AI from the start. It combines PSA and RMM in one product, uses Monica AI to help with ticket handling, and has a clean, modern interface. It's faster to get up and running than ConnectWise or Autotask. For small IT-only shops under 50 techs who want a simple ConnectWise alternative with AI built in, it's a solid option. Where it falls short:
The right ConnectWise alternative depends on what you actually do. A 10-tech managed IT shop has a different shortlist than a 75-tech MSP billing VoIP and internet. Figure out which one you are before you start demos.
Switching to a legacy PSA alternative is a real project. Onboarding, retraining, data migration — none of it is quick. The goal is to pick right the first time. Here's how to do that.
Before you open a demo, write down the five to seven things your current PSA does wrong. Those are the actual reasons you're shopping. Keep that list in front of you in every demo session. It's easy to get distracted by clean UI or impressive AI features when the real decision comes down to billing or field dispatch capabilities that haven't been shown yet.
Billing gaps are invisible to techs and obvious to finance. The person who runs your invoicing or does your month-end reconciliation should sit in on at least one demo and ask the questions that matter to them. If the vendor can't answer those questions confidently, that's your answer.
If you have mobile techs, don't accept a description of GPS, dispatch, and inventory features. Watch it run. Ask to see a tech dispatched, a serialized unit pulled from inventory and assigned to a site, and a ticket closed that triggers an invoice. If the demo skips any of those steps, ask why.
The specific question is: "What does migration from ConnectWise look like, step by step, and what do we lose in the process?" A vague or general answer is a red flag. Vendors who have done this migration successfully can answer it precisely.
Implementation fees, training, migration support, integration fees, per-user overages: none of it is standardized. Get every line item documented before you commit. The number you sign for should have no surprises in it.
You'll live with this platform for years. Find out where they're putting their development time. Are they building toward AI automation, better billing, and field service? Or are they mostly maintaining what they have?
If you're still reconciling billing by hand every month, paying for ConnectBooster and ConnectWise Sell on top of your base PSA license, or watching Automate fall further behind while your techs work around it — that overhead adds up. MSPs are reporting a widening gap between revenue growth and actual profitability, and a fragmented tool stack is one of the biggest reasons why. More MSPs shopping for a ConnectWise alternative aren't just tired of the platform. They're tired of paying for the gaps.
Rev.io PSA was built for exactly this. Billing is native. Payments are native. Field service, dispatch, and inventory are all in one place. If you're ready to stop bridging the gap between what your techs do and what gets invoiced, it's worth a look. Request a demo.