TL;DR: Solea fits companies that want AI to run scheduling and phones instead of hiring more office staff. FieldRoutes fits established mid-market operations that want a mature platform with strong recurring-route tools. PestPac fits enterprises that need multi-branch management and termite compliance depth. Every rating and price below is sourced, so each claim can be checked.
What’s the core difference between Solea, FieldRoutes, and PestPac?
The core difference is who operates the software. FieldRoutes and PestPac are systems office staff run: the software optimizes routes and stores customer data, and a human dispatcher and CSR work the tools all day. Solea is an AI-native platform where AI employees do that work: an AI receptionist answers calls, texts, and web chats around the clock and books jobs, and an AI scheduler builds routes and re-optimizes them in real time as the day changes.
When is FieldRoutes the better choice?
FieldRoutes is the better choice for established companies running 5 to 50 technicians on dense recurring residential routes, with office staff in place to operate it. It holds a 4.2/5 rating from 337 Capterra reviews (Capterra, 2026), has strong bulk recurring-schedule tools, and is owned by ServiceTitan, so it is not going anywhere.
Buyers should know the costs going in. FieldRoutes does not publish pricing, third-party reports place the base at $199 to $350+ per month with implementation fees from $1,300 (QuoteIQ, 2026), and contracts run 12 months minimum. Reviewers also describe a learning curve: one owner on Capterra put it plainly, writing “we’re Pest Control operators, not IT techs.” Small, non-technical teams should budget real onboarding time.
When is PestPac the better choice?
PestPac is the better choice for large and multi-branch operations that need depth in billing, commercial accounts, and termite compliance. WorkWave states that more than 65 of PCT Magazine’s Top 100 pest companies run on PestPac (WorkWave, 2026), and no other platform matches its WDO inspection and regulatory tooling.
The tradeoffs show up in its 3.9/5 Capterra rating across 255 reviews (Capterra, 2026). Reviewers most often cite the dated interface, the module-based pricing where features cost extra, and setup complexity. PestPac rewards companies with back-office staff who can master it, and punishes small teams who can’t.
When is Solea the better choice?
Solea is the better choice when the problem being solved is office workload, not software features. If the owner or office manager is the one answering calls, juggling the route board, and chasing follow-ups, Solea replaces that work rather than providing a better tool to do it manually. The AI receptionist answers and books around the clock, the AI scheduler backfills cancellations automatically, and both run inside one CRM with billing, chemical tracking, and a technician app.
How to make this decision in one afternoon
Three checks separate the right choice from an expensive mistake, and all three fit into a single afternoon of calls.
First, count office hours, not features. Track one week of time spent answering phones, reworking the route board, and chasing follow-ups. Under 10 hours per week, a staff-operated platform like FieldRoutes or PestPac works fine. Over 20 hours, or if missed after-hours calls are going to voicemail, the automation-first option pays for itself fastest.
Second, demand the all-in number. Ask every vendor for total first-year cost: base subscription, every module needed, implementation fees, and contract length. Quote-only pricing hides the gap between the advertised product and the working setup, and reviewers of both incumbents cite add-on costs as the most common surprise.
Third, run the same test in every demo. Request a Saturday booking, then reschedule it, then cancel a mid-day job and watch what happens to the route. The platform that completes all three without a human stepping in is the one that will hold up during peak season. The one that needs a dispatcher for each step is a tool, not an employee, and should be priced against staff time accordingly.
Book demos with all three, run that test, and the decision usually makes itself.






