Launching today

Quotira
Let clients price their own project on your site
8 followers
Let clients price their own project on your site
8 followers
Quotira lets service businesses (landscapers, painters, cleaners, web designers) embed a price calculator on their website. Visitors configure their project, see an instant estimate, and leave their details. No more back-and-forth quoting.









How does it handle custom jobs that don't quite fit the calculator options, like when a client has something unique that doesn't match the predefined choices?
@meral25451 Great question, this is exactly the scenario I designed for, because no calculator covers 100% of real-world jobs. Quotira gives you a few layers of control here:
1. you can show estimates as a price range instead of a fixed number (you set the margin yourself, so €100 with a 15% margin displays as €85-€115), which leaves room for the unique aspects of a job.
2. For the truly custom cases, you can set rules per question: if a client picks a specific option, enters a value above a certain threshold, or gives a particular answer, the calculator switches to 'price on request' instead of showing a number. So a job that doesn't fit the standard options never gets a misleading estimate, but you still capture the lead and everything they filled in, so you know exactly what they need before you even talk to them.
The way I think about it: the calculator's job isn't to price every project perfectly, it's to qualify. Standard requests get an instant ballpark; unusual ones land in your inbox with full context. Are you asking from the perspective of a service business? Curious what kind of jobs you had in mind.
Does the calculator handle custom inputs like unusual room shapes or service add-ons that don't fit predefined options, or am I limited to the templates you set up?
Good question@osman251491, the templates are just a starting point, not a limitation. Every template is fully editable: you can add, change, or remove questions and steps, adjust the pricing logic behind each answer, and build in your own options (like service add-ons with their own price impact). And if you'd rather not start from a template at all, you can build a calculator completely from scratch with your own rules. For genuinely unusual inputs, like an irregular room shape that's hard to capture in dropdowns, you have two options: add an open input field (e.g. total m² instead of predefined sizes), or set a rule so that specific answers switch the result to 'price on request' while still capturing the lead and everything they filled in. So the short answer: the templates save you time, but they never box you in.
What kind of service are you thinking of setting one up for?